ITA
AWAK is a former Commissioner in the government of incumbent Governor
Godswill Akapbio, in Akwa Ibom State. despite serving Akpabio as a
Commissioner. he descended on his former boss heavily in this interview
stating that the Governor has been folling the nation over his
development of the state. excerpts
Akwa Ibom State is
reputed to be the richest state in Nigeria today. Considering the massive cash
inflow into the State, how would you assess the performance of the State
government so far? Is this figure commensurate with the level of development in
the state?
Ita Awak: You may not believe it, but I tell you that there is massive hunger in Akwa Ibom State. Like everybody knows, the annual revenue profile of Akwa Ibom State equals that of Lagos State. As a matter of fact, from 2007 till date, it will be interesting to know that Akwa Ibom State is one of the States that has grossed up to or about 2 trillion naira. Such vast volume of money has never entered this state since the creation of this state in 1987. It may also interest you further that what Akwa Ibom state grosses annually from the Federation Account equals the total amount of money that accrues to all the Igbo-speaking states of the South Eastern zone. It does appear also that it is equal to the total amount of money received by all the Hausa-Fulani North Eastern states put together. As a matter of fact, in this year’s budget, what we have is about 500 billion, which is about 4 times the total amount of money that Cross River State is budgeting for this year. So what are we trying to say? In terms of the revenue we have received compared to our recorded development, there is a wide gap. As it is, Akwa Ibom State is known to be one of the richest states in the country, but the vast majority of the people of Akwa State are pauperized, the economic class in Akwa Ibom state has been reduced to executive beggars. Put differently, we have a political and business class in Akwa Ibom State that have been “almagirized” by the policies of government, completely isolated and excluded from benefitting from government patronage in terms of contracts etc. Put bluntly, we have grossed massive volumes of money over the last 7 years or so, yet we have marginal evidence of it in Akwa Ibom State. We don’t see them in the quality of life and living of the vast majority of Akwa Ibom people. It is not reflected in the economic profile of our state nor in the turn- over of indigenous Akwa Ibom businessmen. It is a tragedy, a supreme tragedy that we can have this huge amount of money, yet it is not reflected in an improved standard of living of Akwa Ibom people. It will be interesting to know what the current poverty index of Akwa Ibom State is, but I know for sure that there is hunger in this state. Very, very saddening, indeed. Thank you very much.
But the Governor keeps talking of “Uncommon Transformation” of Akwa Ibom State. He said that he has changed Akwa Ibom people, and that Akwa Ibom will never be the same again. How then do you justify this statement with what you have just said?
Ita Awak: Thank you very much. In all fairness to my good
friend, the Executive Governor of Akwa Ibom State, Obong Godswill Obot Akpabio,
he has to all intents and purposes recorded some measurable structural
development within the Uyo metropolis. Please note that Uyo metropolis only
constitutes just one local government of the 9 Local Governments that make up
Uyo Senatorial District. This hyperbolized claim about uncommon transformation
can also be seen in a section of Ikot Ekpene Senatorial District where my dear
Governor hails from. That is where you see this so-called uncommon
transformation. But, have you taken a ride through Eket Senatorial District? It
may interest you to know that the petrodollar that drives the economy of Akwa
Ibom State all comes from Eket Senatorial District. When you get into Eket
Senatorial District, what accosts your sight is the glaring and soulful
evidence of uncommon neglect. Then, when you now go to the Oro Nation, where I
come from, you will see stark reality of criminal marginalization of both the
natives and the communities. Further, when you get into the 31 LGAs of Akwa
Ibom State, all you see is evidence of neglect, plunder and uncommon roguery.
That is what is going on in Akwa Ibom State. So, like I said, this talk about
uncommon transformation is a media hype and an obscene glamourization of under
achievement. My friend, let me emphasize that the uncommon transformation is
restricted to only a section of Uyo Senatorial District, predominantly the Uyo
metropolis, and also a section of Ikot Ekpene Senatorial District where the
Governor hails from. We see the dualization of some federal roads in the Uyo
and Ikot Ekpene Senatorial Districts, but that is the end of the story. The
federal roads in Eket Senatorial District and particularly, the roads in the
Oro nation section of Eket Senatorial District have been completely abandoned
by the State government. Is this what you call uncommon transformation of a
state? We are not having uncommon transformation in Akwa Ibom State. For you to
honestly claim that the so-called transformation taking place in Akwa Ibom
State is uncommon, it must be that this transformation equals 4 times the
recorded achievements of Cross River State within the same time period in terms
of infrastructural, human, educational and industrial development. It is
important we make these comparisons, considering the indisputable fact that our
annual resources from the Federation Account is about 4 times that of Cross
River State. Similarly, for you to honestly claim that we have uncommon
transformation there must be evidence to show that what we have achieved so far
equals four times what the whole of the south eastern states have done for the
same period of time, because what we have grossed in terms of revenue within
the past six years equals what all the South Eastern states have received
within the same period. If it does not equal, then there is a very serious
contradiction which exposes the lie of this talk of uncommon transformation. We
do not have uncommon transformation in Akwa Ibom State, what we have in Akwa
Ibom State is a bloated exaggeration of the small achievements we have recorded
over time. It is a glamourization and celebration of mediocrity. That’s what we
have here.
Let’s get into the
politics of transition or politics of succession. Very soon, we will have party
primaries and in one year, we will have general elections in the country. Akwa
Ibom State is getting prepared to elect a successor to Governor Akpabio. The
most current situation is that the Executive Council of Akwa Ibom State has
recently nominated three persons…..
Ita Awak: (interjects)…Is it the duty of the Executive
Council of Akwa Ibom State to tell Akwa Ibom people whom to vote for? When has
it become the function of the Executive Council of any state in this country to
decide those that are to go for election? For me, this is the height of
absurdity. This is very absurd and unfortunate. The business of the state
executive council of any rational honest government is to articulate, execute,
and evaluate government policies in such a way and manner that the greater
majority of the people of that state benefits from the activities of
government. When we were privileged to serve in the executive council of this
state, it was not our business to deliberate or even go to the absurd level of
shortlisting those who were to contest as Governor Attah’s successor. It was
chiefly our business to struggle for resource control and join our Governor
Obong Victor Attah in articulating such enduring developmental projects such as
the Akwa Ibom International Airport, the Ibom Independent Power Plant, Ibaka
Deep Sea Port, and the Science and Industrial Incubation Center. Indeed, I am
proud to be a part of those who contributed to the resource control struggle
that has today made us one of the richest states in Nigeria.
Concerning the so called endorsement you asked earlier, for
me, what is playing out if I am to psychologically analyse the mind of my
Governor is that he appears to be trying the Ibori experiment in Akwa Ibom
State. I’ll tell you the Ibori experiment. When Ibori was getting to the end of
his tenure, and you know that back then Delta state was the richest in the
country. What Ibori did was to hide from the people his own preferred candidate
who was his cousin, the present Governor of Delta State, Uduaghan. So, from his
cabinet, Ibori threw money to some of his cabinet members encouraging them to
posture as gubernatorial aspirants. Just at the critical time, when those
people needed more money and resources to see through their aspirations, the
pipe went dry. It was here that Ibori now came up with his joker, unveiling his
preferred candidate, Uduaghan, leaving those people napping like fish out of
water. I think that is what my good friend Akpabio is trying to do in Akwa Ibom
State. Infact, we have not heard the last of this twists and turns about a
successor. Trust me, he is still tinkering with it, and at the appropriate
time, I’m sure he will come up with another person. I can assure you that we
have not heard the last of it. And any Oro person that thinks that Governor
Akpabio is supporting him should remember that Godswill Obot Akpabio as
Governor of this state in 2011 when we were going for the second term election,
called the whole of Mbo LGA and other Traditional and political leaders of Oro
Nation and asked us to go and return Mrs Alice Ekpeyong for a second term as
member of the State House of Assembly, assuring us that he was going to correct
the injustice and imbalance by using his political influence to make Mrs Alice
Ekpeyong, an Oro woman, the Speaker of the State House of Assembly. The
Governor lied to us because he did not make good his promise. I think that any
Oro person that believes that Governor Akpabio is going to support him to
succeed him in 2015 is living in a fool’s paradise and is in for a very rough
ride. They will be deceived eventually. It is for this reason that I implore
them to be very circumspect with whatever encouraging whisperings they may be
getting from my good friend, Governor Akpabio.
Sir, you are from the
Oro Nation and recently, a former Commissioner of the State who is also from
Oro said in an interview that the former Secretary to the State Government, Mr.
Umana Okon Umana, is the stumbling block preventing an Oron man from becoming
Governor in 2015. Do you share this sentiment?
Ita Awak: (Chuckles). I assure you that Umana Okon Umana is
not, has never been and will never be a stumbling block to the gubernatorial
aspiration of Oro people as far as 2015 is concerned. The truth of the matter
is that any honest and averagely intelligent person, I repeat, any honest and
averagely intelligent person would not fail to recognize the simple fact that
the only stumbling block between the Oro natives and the Hilltop mansion in
2015 is my good friend, Obong Godswill Obot Akpabio. I repeat, and very
strongly so, that the only person that has invoked himself as the apparition
that stands between the Oro people and the Hilltop mansion in 2015 is the
present Governor, Obong Godswill Obot Akpabio. Let me explain what I mean.
Obong Godswill Akpabio was inaugurated into power in the year 2007. I was one
of the ex-Governor Attah’s commissioners that went to congratulate him as one
of us. At that meeting, I recall very sadly that Governor Akpabio embarrassed
us when he announced that Oro people did not support him. But this was a
blatant lie because I know the very pivotal and critical role that Arc. Otu Ita
Toyo, the then State Chairman of the PDP, singularly played in the emergence of
Chief Godswill Akpabio as Governor of Akwa Ibom State in 2007. Chief Otu Ita
Toyo is an illustrious son of Oro. I also know the important role played by the
late Pastor Oyong Asuquo during the primaries that threw up Godswill Obot
Akpabio as one of the top contenders in the primaries. Oyong Asuquo was also
one of the illustrious young men of Oro Nation. In spite of these critical
contributions of Oro sons to his success, Governor Akpabio keeps entertaining
himself with the falsehood that Oro did not support him. By way of
justification, Governor Akpabio, right from day one of his administration,
determinedly excluded Oro sons and daughters from participating and
contributing at the leadership level in his government. Look at it; you can see
it for yourself. There is no Oro man or woman in any position of leadership
either in the executive, judicial, and legislative arm of government; neither
do we head the ruling party. No Oro person is included in the decision making
body of government, the place where decisions are taken as to who enjoys government
privileges and patronage, when and how. This is a far cry from what the Oro
people had when the Ibibios of Uyo Senatorial District were at the helm of
affairs. So, like I earlier said, Governor Akpabio ensured that Oro was
completely excluded from the leadership of his government. For six good years,
Governor Akpabio told everybody that cared to give a listen, that he was not a
product of zoning. He claimed that there was nothing like zoning in Akwa Ibom
State; and that he did not emerge as a governor based on the zoning principle.
This is unfortunate. And for these six years, Obong Godswill Obot Akpabio went
to every length to tell everybody that his successor is going to be Umana Okon
Umana, the engine room of his administration, and a formidable structure was
set up. Go and ask the traditional rulers of Uyo senatorial district and even
traditional rulers of Annang land. They will honestly tell you that Governor
Godswill Akpabio pledged to them that he would return power to the Ibibios of
Uyo at the end of his 8-year tenure and that his successor will be Umana Okon
Umana. Now for whatever reasons best known to the governor, he decided to use a
very shabby and Gestapo manner to remove Umana Okon Umana from government.
Immediately he did that, he replaced Umana Okon Umana with another Ibibio son,
but this time from Eket Senatorial District, a man who has distinguished
himself in the banking sector, as his new SSG. If he loved Oro so much, why
didn’t he pick an Oro man as the new SSG? And from the day he came with the
Onna-Ibibio man, he set up a structure to convass for Udom Emmanuel as his
successor. Now, it may interest you to know, that as I speak, the Chairman of
my own Local Government, Mbo, is one of those that have been directed by
Governor Akpabio to mobilize Mbo to support the new SSG’s gubernatorial
ambition. As a matter of fact, while some prominent Oro people have been asked
to work for Udom Emmanuel, there is the disturbing evidence that the Governor
has also encouraged two Oro men in his government to flex gubernatorial
muscles. Is this not a recipe for confusion and anarchy? In the meantime, there
is a somersault. Our dear Governor Akpabio is a born-again apostle of zoning.
He now wants an arrangee and dubious zoning to Eket Senatorial district. I tell
you, from my point of view, it is patently anti-Oro and very dishonest. You
see, you cannot talk about equity, you cannot talk about fairness, you cannot
talk about unity in Akwa Ibom State if you insist that an Ibibio man from Eket
senatorial district must be the governor in 2015 instead of an Oro person who
is from the third largest ethnic group. It was because of fairness and justice
that Obong Victor Attah encouraged the Ibibios to support the Annangs of the
Ikot Ekpene Senatorial district in 2007 and this is how Chief Godswill Akpabio
emerged. You see, Governor Akpabio has betrayed the Oro people, completely
betrayed the Oro people. When Obong Victor Attah , God bless this great man and
the father of new Akwa Ibom, sat down with members of his own Ibibio ethnic
group, who constitutes 65% of our population in this state, to cede power to
the minority, he ensured that it went to the second largest ethnic group, the
Annang ethnic group. That is how Governor Akpabio benefited. Governor Akpabio has
not followed the example of Obong Victor Attah. If Governor Akpabio had
followed the glorious example of Obong Victor Attah, what he would have done
from day one would have been to properly position an Oro man, just like Obong
Attah positioned him. Obong Attah made him the Director of Contacts and
Mobilization of his reelection in 2003, thereby exposing Chief Akpabio, who was
then a Commissioner, to the cream de la cream of the Akwa Ibom political class.
Not only that, he also assigned him to a strategic Ministry and gave him all
the necessary resources and empowerment to contest the governorship elections.
This crucial gesture Governor Akpabio has not duplicated in favour of any Oro
person. It is because of all this that I say that the only person that stands
between Oro and the Hilltop mansion in 2015 is no other than Governor Godswill
Obot Akpabio. If Governor Godswill Obot Akpabio had wanted an Oro person to
succeed him, right from the first day of his administration, he would have
positioned and given Oro people access to political power. This he did not do
and has not done. Also, he would have cultivated the support and blessings of
the political leadership of the majority ethnic group that facilitated his
ascension to power. That is, the predominant Uyo Senatorial District Ibibios.
He would have done exactly what Obong Attah did, by going to them and
persuading them to support the Oro man. Mark you, no minority person in this
state can be governor without the support and blessing of the predominant Uyo
Senatorial District Ibibios. By alienating, marginalizing and excluding the
political leaders especially of Uyo Senatorial District from his government, my
dear Governor, has unleashed the kind of atavistic ethnic sentiments that is
making it very difficult for an Oro man to succeed him.
So what then do you
propose for the Oro people? Or do you have a particular Oro man you are
supporting for this 2015 Governorship race?
Ita Awak: Listen, in Akwa Ibom State, the Ibibios constitute
65% of the population and they have 14 LGAs spread across the three Senatorial
Districts and they are predominantly in Uyo Senatorial District of 9 LGAs.
Governor Akpabio, who is from the Annang ethnic group, could not have become
the Governor of this state without the support, blessing and encouragement of
chiefly the predominant Uyo Senatorial district. It also follows that, for the
Oro man to become Governor of this state, the Ibibios must bless that venture,
they must support it. Without their support, we cannot unilaterally make
ourselves Governor of this state. Now, because of the current style of
Government, the Ibibios feel alienated. Right now, we have a big crisis on our
hands. All the ethnic groups in Akwa Ibom State are at daggers drawn with each
other. The Ibibios of Uyo Senatorial district are strongly of the view that
since they have been so marginalized, humiliated and embarrassed, they want the
Governorship they gifted to the Annangs back. On the other hand, the Ibibios of
the Eket Senatorial district are curiously asking for equity, when they know
that they are of the same ethnic strand with the Ibibios of the Uyo Senatorial
district. The Ibenos, the Eastern Obolos, and the Ekid of Eket Senatorial
district are also asking that this is their turn to produce the Governor. So
what we have now is an ethnic crisis that must be managed with a lot of
political brinksmanship. So, for my Oro natives, considering the colours of the
time, I think that it is politically pragmatic for us to forge a political
alliance with the predominant Ibibios of the Uyo Senatorial District. It is in
the existential and political interest of my Oro people to do so, that is what
I advocate and that is what I want my Oro brethren to realize. I think, and
nothing has made me to doubt the uncomfortable feeling that I am having, that
it is the determined intention of Governor Godswill Obot Akpabio, to amputate
the Oro ethnic group as the third leg of the tripod. His decision to completely
isolate and exclude the Oro natives from his government is a part of that ploy
to incapacitate us and render us totally irrelevant in the political arithmetic
of Akwa Ibom State. Therefore, the only way we can scuttle and frustrate this
plan and triumph over this insidious design is to be pragmatic enough to forge
a new political alliance with the Ibibios of Uyo so that they form government
in 2015, with the understanding that they would shift political power to Oro
people in 2023. This is what I advocate. I know that this view is radical; I
know that it is painful, but we must stoop to conquer. That is my view as far
as your question is concerned.
Who then do you think
should be held accountable for the underdevelopment of the Oro?
Ita Awak: I have said so. The underdevelopment of Oro is the
handiwork of the Governor. Remember, he said that Oro did not support him.
Second, our Governor has seen the need to use state funds to dualize federal
roads in his own senatorial district; and he gives no regard at all to the
state of complete disrepair of the federal roads in Oro federal constituency.
It is a tragedy. Never in the history of Akwa Ibom State, since the creation of
this state in 1987, has any government so completely marginalized the Oro
people, so pauperized the Oro political class, and so criminally disenfranchised
us. Never!
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