Two months after the inauguration of Chief
Willie Obiano as the governor of Anambra State, the word on the street
is that a wind of change is blowing across the state. From the sprawling
commercial city of Onitsha to the industrial hum in Nnewi and from the
rich agricultural belt of Ayamelum and Anam to the increasingly
ambitious spread of Awka, the frenzy is the same;
Anambra is on the
rise! It is fascinating how a state that was once a resting place for
dying dreams has suddenly emerged as Eastern Nigeria’s new garden of
hope. We shall examine all that but first; the hard truth!
Until
former governor Peter Greg Obi wrestled victory away from the talons of
power mongers in 2006, Anambra State dominated national and
international headlines for the wrong reasons. For a state that has
produced some of the best storytellers on the continent, Anambra
corporate narrative found expression between the bizarre and the
grotesque.
For some strange reasons, the state that produced the
great Zik of Africa (Right Honourable Nnamdi Azikiwe) and some of black
Africa’s most iconic figures seemed not to know what to do with itself.
Of course there were occasional sparkles of individual excellence here
and there as Anambra’s many gifted sons and daughters never cease to
astonish the world, but group aspirations and cohesive pursuit of common
goals were non-existent. The absence of a strong and purposeful
leadership at the center for almost 20 years of the existence of the
state was glaring. In the aftermath, Anambra began to wear the sordid
looks of a dysfunctional sphere where kidnappers, armed robbers and all
people of duplicitous inclinations plied their trade without restraint.
Lawlessness grew in scope and variance in Onitsha and environs as
visitors dreaded finding themselves in the ancient commercial city for
whatever reason. As a result, the state took a plunge from the
socio-economic ladder. Trade and commerce which once boomed alongside
promising industrial clusters began to shrink. A climate of fear hung in
the air! There was a collective wringing of hands in utter exasperation
as Ndi Anambra wondered where the rain began to beat them.
But
with the emergence of Peter Obi, Okwute Ndigbo, as governor, Anambra
State began a bold climb out of the abyss. In a rather poignant way,
Obi’s landmark struggle to retrieve his electoral mandate from the
courts redirected the attention of Ndi Anambra to the importance of
seeking redress through the right organs of state. Remarkably, the
former governor was to follow up this trail-blazing effort with a solid
achievement in laying the institutional and structural foundations for
the emergence of a new Anambra State. Of all his legacies, however, the
one that posterity will probably never forget Governor Obi for will be
his role in ensuring a peaceful handover of power in the state and also
in restoring the missing sense of equity and balance by working for the
emergence of a governor from the hitherto neglected Anambra North
senatorial constituency. But if morning tells the day, Ndi Anambra will
most likely thank Governor Obi for choosing Chief Willie Obiano as his
successor.
The reason for this is simple. Since he took the
statutory oath of office on Monday, March 17, 2014, Chief Willie Obiano
has left no one in doubt that he was not only in office but in power.
His surefooted strides as the 4th governor of democratic Anambra have
restored the confidence of the people in the ability of government to
play its overriding role as the protector of its citizenry and the
father of all, regardless of political and ideological leanings. Obiano
showed immediate signs of a competent leader who had been mulling over
the task on his hands long before he assumed power when he named a cast
of competent Anambrarians as his principal staff. Among them are the
former Secretary to the State Government, Mr. Oseloka Obaze, Howard
University professor, Joe Asike and mercurial banker and economist, Mr.
Willie Nwokoye who were named as Secretary to the state government,
chief of staff and principal secretary, respectively. With the trio,
Obiano took up the gauntlet of drawing a new paradigm for his fast-paced
campaign to reposition Anambra State for the leadership of the south
East region that had waited for it all this while.
Obiano’s first
week in office was full of extensive consultations and consensus
building as he met with the security chiefs, members of the legislature,
members of the judiciary, traditional rulers, the council of elders,
the leaders of town unions, representatives of donor agencies, leaders
of the church, principals and proprietors of schools, leaders of
vigilante groups, leaders of the healthcare sector, Anambra State
delegates to the National Conference, the Labour Union and of course
Anambra’s long list of industrialists and entrepreneurs who he figured
had a role to play in his plan to industrialize the state. It was a
masterful beginning, comparable to an auspicious opening sequence in a
beautiful orchestra. But it was also one beginning that would turn the
attention of Ndi Anambra to the melody of change that is playing in the
State House, Awka!
Again, Willie Obiano showed his uncanny ability
to read the temperature of society when he divined that for his
administration to have any chance at success at all, he would have to
confront the monster of age old insecurity in the state head-on. And he
did not only do it, he left no one in doubt that Anambra was due for
cleansing. The setting up of a Joint Task Force to weed out criminals
from the state and the organizing of an international summit on security
with Moshe Keinan, world famous Israeli security expert as the
facilitator two weeks after his inauguration has proved the ultimate
game changer. Anambra rose from the two-day summit with a hunger for a
new and enduring rebirth. The ensuing crackdown on criminals, codenamed
Operation Kpochapu, (wipe out) that followed these two events has not
been experienced in Eastern Nigeria before. In the ceaseless blitzkrieg,
notorious arms dealers and the men they arm to rob and kidnap Ndi
Anambra have been rounded up for prosecution. Drug barons and child
traffickers that once reigned supreme in parts of Obosi town have been
arrested and brought face to face with the law. Parts of the state that
had hitherto served as hideaways and havens for kidnappers have been
detected and busted. In what seems like a loud statement of intent,
three houses built by kidnappers and used as holding cells for their
captives in the governor’s home town of Aguleri were pulled down last
Friday, on Chief Obiano’s command. Having begun the cleansing from his
own compound, the governor is subtly telling Ndi Anambra not to allow
their own houses to be overgrown by weeds.
It is fascinating how in
two months of Obiano, Anambra’s tale of woes has become a piece of
lovely fragment out of a beautiful symphony. Upper Iweka, the postcard
of a dysfunctional Onitsha has now become an idyllic landmark in the
emerging tapestry of a new Onitsha; a city that is fast shrugging off
its old sordid rags and increasingly becoming a city of assorted tastes
and aesthetics. Many thanks to Obiano’s successive urban renewal
campaigns like Operation Keep Anambra Clean, Operation Zero-tolerance of
Potholes and the latest operation to decongest all roads, alleyways and
streets of dead and broken down vehicles which he launched in
partnership with the Federal Road Safety Commission (FRSC), Onitsha is
shedding its rancid rags for colourful garments that will ease its
admission into the list of Nigeria’s picturesque cities. Obiano is
determined to recapture the city of his childhood from the filth and
squalor that have submerged it. But even more important is his avowed
commitment to ensure that the city’s long suffering residents would
sleep with both eyes closed and that their nights would no longer be
pierced by the ratatat of gunfire.
It is heart-warming to see that
Obiano’s campaign has succeeded so far. Criminals have fled Onitsha.
Those who could not flee are either in detention or waiting to be picked
up by the law. Obiano’s campaign has also found resonance with the
people. Mythmakers have since woven a new narrative that reminds one of
the tales from the once popular Onitsha Market Literature. All over
Anambra, stories are told of how Obiano has cleaned up Upper Iweka so
much that if one mistakenly dropped a wad of naira on the street, one
would come back the next day to see the money lying on the same spot,
waiting for one. This might just be one way of measuring success!
Resonance!
Of course, one of the things that never ceases to impress
Ndi Anambra is how in spite of the concerted efforts by the opposition
to distract him with a string of litigations, Chief Willie Obiano has
continued to raise the bar of governance in Anambra State. In fulfilment
of his campaign promise of continuing the great legacies of the Obi
administration, completing the projects that Obi initiated,
commissioning them and commencing a fresh set of his own projects,
governor Obiano has proved to be a man of his words. He has embarked on
an extensive tour to inspect the uncompleted road and other
architectural projects begun by his predecessor and extracted concrete
commitments from the contractors handling those projects to deliver on
schedule. The Agulu Lake Hotel Resort as well as the roads in Awka
North, Ekwusigo and Ogbaru/Atani are great examples. He has also flagged
of the construction of new road projects in Anam, Ayamelum, Nando and
Nteje to open up access to the agricultural belt of the state in
readiness for the revolution his government ignited with the symbolic
flag off of the 2014 Farming Season in a colourful ceremony in Nteje,
Oyi Local Government, on Thursday last week.
Beyond that, Chief
Obiano has also set up the necessary institutions that would guarantee
the success of his administration. Just the other day, he inaugurated
three Boards including the ones for land acquisition, the one for
investment promotion and perhaps most important of all, the Awka Capital
Territory which, charged with the responsibility of turning Awka into a
capital city that reflects the genius and industry of Ndi Anambra.
Of all his public outings since he became the governor of Anambra
State, the Flag off of this year’s Farming Season at Nteje remains Chief
Obiano’s finest hour. Dressed in a straw hat and knee-length boots, the
governor wooed a huge crowd of farmers and agriculturalists that turned
up with diverse farm produce and livestock to demonstrate their
readiness to support the government’s revolutionary bent towards
agriculture. The event had all the trappings of a huge political rally
as farmers chanted his praise from all corners. Fast becoming adept in
the rhetoric of leadership, governor Obiano reminded the farmers that
“from time immemorial, our ancestors judged a man by the strength of his
arm. A man who could not feed his family was regarded as an efulefu! A
failure! That tells us how important farming and agriculture in general
was and will always be to our people…this year, we light up the fire of
our revolution in Agriculture in Anambra state…this year, we shall force
the doors of agricultural productivity open in Anambra State.” With
such carefully chosen words, Obiano successfully ignited the fire of his
new revolution in the hearts of Anambra farmers. But he also raised the
hope for a better day; the hope for a new Anambra! And if as Napoleon
Bonarpate once said, “a leader is a dealer in hope,” Chief Willie Obiano
has truly proved himself one by dispensing hope to Ndi Anambra as he
has done so far.
In all this, the warmth and overwhelming acceptance
of Ndi Anambra must be acknowledged. From the effusive outpour of
affection, commendations and commentaries in the media from well-known
hardliners, Ndi Anambra have shown their resolve to make the Obiano
administration succeed. They have heeded the battle cry he sounded on
the day of his inauguration; his call for healing and love. “Ndi
Anambra, where is the love that once led our people through the extreme
adversities of war? Foremost French philosopher, Victor Hugo reminds us
that, “to love another person is to see the face of God,” he had
declared, March 17 after taking his oath of office, moving the crowd to
the brink of tears. Now, Ndi Anambra have answered him with their warmth
and support. Every notable son and daughter of Anambra have declared
their support from the venerable Francis Cardinal Arinze and female
politician, Uche Ekwunife, to famous industrialists like Cosmas Maduka
of Coscharis Limited down to wealthy opposition figures like Chief
Arthur Ezeh.
What Governor Obiano has done in the last 60 days of
his administration is simple but complex. In proving that governance can
work in the state, he has restored the pride and self-belief of Ndi
Anambra. Like all inspiring figures, Obiano has said to his people, “you
too, can be great again.” And they believe him!
Now, from all
indications, it is morning yet on creation day for Chief Willie Obiano
and his love for Ndi Anambra!
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