Six months ago when Chief Willie
Obiano mounted the saddle of leadership in Anambra State, there was
understandable anxiety among Ndi Anambra. The outgoing governor Peter Obi’s
humble disposition and outstanding performance had left people wondering if
anyone else could sustain the tradition of excellence he had established in the
state, let alone improve upon it. This is in spite of the former governor’s
assurances during the campaign days that he was confident that whatever he had
achieved in government would be surpassed by the man he had anointed to succeed
him.
Six months down the road, the facts
of Obiano’s stewardship are there for all to see. The ex-banker had signaled
his intention to turn things around in Anambra in his prophetically titled
inaugural address – Expanding the Frontiers of Excellence. In that document, he
had sought to not only expand the frontiers of excellence but to enlarge the
realms of possibility. And the facts are here with us in just six months. The
most glaring of these facts is that for the first time in living memory,
Anambra State has almost attained a crime-free status. For more than four
decades, Onitsha, the economic engine-room of Nigeria’s South East was a
metaphor for crime and unnamable absurdities. People who are familiar with
Onitsha can easily recall the era of the first and second Boys Oh Yeahs down to
the Bakassi Boys days, the Derico days and a host of other regimes of the
underworld in Onitsha. These periods in history made Onitsha synonymous with
violent crime, stripping it of the promise it once held as the literary
publishing capital of West Africa which it firmly established with the era of
the once famous Onitsha Market Literature. For close to four decades; Onitsha
was an anathema of sorts; a taboo to decent folks. But Obiano’s Operation
Kpochapu has changed that narrative in just six months.
In a recent encounter with Engr
Emeka Okwuosa, an oil magnet and a prominent indigene of the state, he calmly
observed that “what Ndi Anambra need is security. Give us security and leave
the challenge of developing Anambra State to us.” It would seem that Governor
Obiano had this in mind before he assumed leadership of the state. He figured
out that if he could fix Anambra’s security worries, then everything else would
follow. He also knew that without a secure Anambra, his Four Pillars of
Development (namely, Agriculture, Industrialization, Trade & Commerce and
Oil & Gas) for Anambra State would amount to nothing. And now that he has
found the formula for cleansing Anambra of crime and criminals, the outcome has
been quite impressive.
It is indeed remarkable how,
Obiano’s vision has started to show so early in the life of the administration.
One of the earliest signs of what could happen in the New Anambra State under
Obiano is the massive investment inflow that the state has witnessed in the
last few months. On April 14 this year, the Anambra State Investment Promotion
and Protection Agency (ANSIPPA) came into being when the bill proposing it was
signed into law by the Anambra State House of Assembly. In a very short time, the
agency has justified Obiano’s background as an investment banker with
statistics his fellow governors would envy. On September 8 this year, ANSIPPA
received its first approval from the Anambra State Executive Council to sign
seven MoUs with prospective investors that will change the investment landscape
of the state. Over the next couple of weeks, ANSIPPA will sign MoUs across key
sectors like Agriculture, Tourism and Transportation that will attract a total
of $382m (N62.3bn) in investments to Anambra State. On Friday last week, the
agency signed two MoUs with Joseph Agro Industries Ltd and Cardinal Developers
Trust Ltd valued at $220m. ANSIPPA estimates that by the end of December this
year, Anambra would be $1.5bn richer in investments arising from another five
MoUs that are in line to be signed. In all, the body has received over 120
proposals from investors who have shown serious interest in doing business in
Anambra State. Obiano has done all these in just six months. What will be the
investment outlook of Anambra state in four years?
Already, one of the investors,
Coched Farms Project, a subsidiary of the Coscharis Group has moved into the
state. It has rented an office along the Enugu-Onitsha Expressway, hired some
workers and mobilized to its farm settlement in Anaku. At the moment, Coched is
bringing in improved varieties of seeds from different parts of the world and
testing them to establish which variety is most suitable for the soil of
Anambra State. On its part, the state government has moved in to build the capacity
that would support the impending agricultural revolution. Accordingly, the
state has successfully midwifed the formation of 1,874 cooperative societies
that will catalyze the revolution. The members of these cooperatives will be
trained and prepared in modern technics of mechanized farming. The Ministry of
Agriculture has acquired 100 tractors for the same purpose while arrangements
are on to acquire more land for large scale farming.
Obiano’s giant strides in
agriculture are understandable. Agriculture is one of the pillars of his
administration. But the governor has shown as much hunger for success in other
areas as well. Another remarkable feat is in the area of Internally Generated
Revenue (IGR) which has increased from an average of N700m that the
administration inherited to an impressive N1bn at the moment. Knowing how
averse the people are to the payment of taxes and levies, the marginal increase
in IGR in the period under review is quite significant and commendable.
The governor has also shown a lot
of foresight in the way he has handled Trade and Commerce, another pillar in
his economic blueprint for the state. The overall vision for the sector is that
Anambra should be among Nigeria’s top-3 in trade and commerce and among the
top-5 industrialized states in the country. To achieve this, the administration
is at the verge of setting up three ultra-modern markets in Ogbunike, Umunze
and Awka respectively. At the same time the partnership with the Organized Private
Sector (OPS) has resulted in the formulation of a 10-year Industrial Revolution
Plan for Anambra State. On completion, these markets will shoot up the revenue
base of the state and create more headroom for the growth of the local economy.
As is the case with security, the
governor is also fully aware that without tackling the challenge of power
supply head-on, his industrial vision for Anambra State would remain a pipe
dream. As a result, he set up a Special Committee on Power Supply headed by Mr.
Chike Okonkwo who came highly recommended as the leader of the Distributing
Power Business of General Electric Company in sub-Saharan Africa. He charged
the Committee to “Provide an accurate estimate of current power supply,
consumption and projected demand in the state across various consumer groups
and recommend suitable power generation and supply solutions, taking into
consideration, Anambra State’s climate, environment, landscape and scale of
development.” The Committee has nine months to prove its relevance. The
governor also set up special committees on other key areas including Oil &
Gas, Education, Agriculture and Vigilante groups among others.
Obiano has made tremendous progress
in the area of building consensus among the citizenry. His recent tour of the
21 local governments attracted huge crowds at every stop to underscore his soaring
popularity. His consultation with the various stakeholders has been extensive
and thorough as he reaches out to traditional rulers, corporate moguls and kingmakers
across the state to deepen democracy and encourage participatory governance.
He has also kept an eye on the
software of governance. At the event marking his first 100-days in office, the
governor launched a new cultural identity for Ndi Anambra which came complete
with an anthem, an emblem, a flag and a set of moral values that will keep Ndi
Anambra on their toes. He is obviously aware that just about any governor can
build roads and bridges but it takes a focused and pragmatic leader to attempt
to rebuild the moral and socio-cultural fabric of any society.
Now, people have always cautioned
that it is too early to sing Governor Willie Obiano’s praises. While that may
be so, one wonders how else to react to anyone who puts up his kind of performance
in just six months.
James Eze, writes from Ifite, Awka
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