My task today is to
compare and contrast two illustrious sons of the Niger Delta Region. They are
Rotimi Amaechi and Godswill Akpabio. Maybe I shouldn’t have added
‘’illustrious’’ because they have illustrated very little outside
self-aggrandizement.
Amaechi literally came
from nowhere to become so rich and powerful. Before 1999, his entire life and
livelihood had been defined by Dr. Peter Odili, who was Rivers
State governor between 1999 and 2007
and owns Pamo Hospital where Amaechi had worked as a
public relations officer before his astronomic rise to Speakership of the
Rivers State House of Assembly.
*Amaechi and Akpabio |
Akpabio may be a little deeper, but I shall
return to him presently.
Both Amaechi and Akpabio were born in the
early 60s, went to universities in different locations within the Niger Delta
region; Port Harcourt
and Calabar which are about 250 kilometres apart, and studied English and
law respectively. Two of them have been active players in the ongoing democratic
dispensation which started in 1999. Between 1999 and 2007, Amaechi as the
Speaker of the Rivers State House of Assembly was the number four citizen of
the state after the Governor, Deputy Governor and Chief Judge. In the same
period, I suppose, Akpabio was a commissioner in Akwa Ibom State under former Governor Obong Victor
Attah.
At the end of that dispensation, both men
upscaled to become governors of their respective states under turbulent
circumstances. Amaechi’s bid for the governorship was actually k-legged until
the judiciary got things straightened out for him. Regarding Akpabio, Victor
Attah had wanted another successor, specifically his son-in-law, but failed
spectacularly to swing things around in spite of his incumbency powers.
In a way, therefore, both men, Amaechi and Akpabio, had their hard nuts cracked
for them by a benevolent spirit. Knowing this, why they forgot to be humble is
what is baffling. Amaechi actually swaggers like a local chief. He seems not
interested in cultivating elevated attitudes. He talks big and brash and thinks
all matters can be settled in the battlefield. In any case, he is not afraid of
battles. He fights his enemies from dawn to dusk and back to dawn, and to
finish too. He is not like many others who quarrel in the day and make peace in
the night. Although he touts some deep Catholic faith, he seems to believe more
in his methods than in God’s time. And so far and good, his armour has not
failed him. Overall, Amaechi is a man of action and single face.
Before I say anything about Godswill Akpabio,
I would like to confess that circumstances had brought us together in our
formative years and I know him a little deeper than I know Rotimi Amaechi. We
were together at the University
of Calabar for four
years; between 1983 and 1987. He was in the Faculty of Law while I was in the
Faculty of Arts. His politics started from school when he was elected clerk of
the Students Parliament.
Back in school then, he was just manifesting.
And what marked him out was his soft oratory amid smiles. He called his
schoolmates ‘’my sons’’ and ‘’my daughters’’ in a manner that invoked
admiration instead of contempt. To him, every sidebar engagement was also an
opportunity to filibuster in an apparent display of his oratorical prowess. Even
at that early age, Akpabio, an Annang, knew that given the demographic
configuration, he did not stand a good chance in the campus power game outside
his Ibibio brothers and sisters. He had latched on to them to make headway. And
since then, he has been latching on to people, things and situations to have
his way.
Our paths crossed again in Lagos
at the meetings of the University
of Calabar Alumni Association .
Boisterousness is another trademark of Godswill Akpabio. He has the capacity to
induce entropy to offset an existing order and then reorganise within the
resultant disorder to achieve his purpose and move on. At our Alumni meetings
in Sheraton, Ikeja, Lagos ,
he would enter with an overwhelming ambience that made the rest of us appear
shorter than the common platform. He seemed relatively buoyant as company
secretary of EMIS, a private telecom company. He would pick the bills just like
that and then speak to the group with the finality of a paymaster. When the
time came to change the leadership of the alumni association, he brought so
much to bear, not necessarily in terms of cash, but with his mesmerising
sophistry. Before anyone could articulate a counter move, he had had his way
and moved on.
When he was a governor, I had met Akpabio a
couple of times although each time he maintained a cold distance as if to say
he attended Oxford University in the UK ,
while I attended the University of Calabar in Nigeria . Not even the Unical
solidarity catch-word of ‘’Malabite’’ to which the addressee would respond
“action/asksion’’ could elicit in him the right enthusiasm. It was his own way
of creating defences against sundry acquaintances.
In all of the experiences, Akpabio has
remained the same. Ever cheerful even in agony, he is a grand master of
subterfuge. His position is never betrayed by his poise and his real intention
only manifests in the very long run and not in the short run. He desires by
avoidance and perpetually restless in his own power dynamics. Every of his move
is a tactic within a larger strategy to realise an ultimate goal. He may look
left when he actually wishes to move right.
Quite unlike Amaechi, Akpabio cannot stand in
as a reliable right-hand marker in a parade formation. He does not stand fast
in one location and can move in as many directions as there are available paths
to follow and still remain focused on his purpose. It is perhaps the reason why
Obong Victor Attah with all his monumentality could not hold Akpabio in place
in the build-up to the 2007 governorship election in Akwa Ibom State .
While Attah was fighting the PDP establishment
in Abuja to
finish, Akpabio was cultivating big time the same establishment through the
then Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Obong Ufot Ekaette.
He had the acumen to appreciate that under the presidency of Olusegun Obasanjo
with the Kogi-born ‘Garrison Commander’ Ahmadu Ali as PDP chairman, allocations
of party privileges and even rights was done in Abuja and not in the state capitals. He was
correct and the rest is now history.
In the 2015 elections, he was everywhere
campaigning for the PDP and Goodluck Jonathan. On the surface and to all
average observers, he was an excellent party warrior with whom the PDP could
come all out to fight the APC. But somehow, the rumour within concentric
circles of the PDP that Akpabio wasn’t a loyal party man refused to dissolve.
First Lady Patience Jonathan held him in high contempt for no apparent reason
he lamented at one forum. He also confessed that as a governor, now fugitive
former petroleum minister Mrs Diezani Allison-Madueke “refused to see me or
even take my calls.”
The impression he gave was that the hawks in
Aso Rock refocused the heart of Jonathan from acknowledging his (Jonathan’s)
real supporters, which included him (Akpabio). Yet Akpabio’s narrative of
events can hardly be challenged because he enjoys this child-like disposition
that enhances his innocence. Even in contexts where he is the clear villain, he
plays successfully the victim and sustains the lie. He was kind of saying that things
would have turned out differently if he had been made the Director-general of
the Goodluck Campaign Organisation. His listeners believed him and blamed
Jonathan and his wife for their shallow perception and judgment.
Today, both Amaechi and Akpabio have left the
PDP for the APC. The former’s plight was understandable. Amaechi had faced
extinction in the PDP and fled in self-preservation. Consequently, no justice
system, in the social and natural settings, can hold anything against him. He
ran so that he could live to fight another day. What about the latter? Not even
Akpabio himself has been able to say precisely why he left the PDP for the APC.
And because information on his motive is scarce, the conjectures have become
many.
Some are even saying he saw tomorrow and sowed
seeds across party lines, funding the PDP his own party and the then opposition
APC in the last election at the same intensity, and that he waited this long
before re-aligning to have a proper assessment of the new power dynamics under
the APC-controlled Federal Government. Others say a thousand demons including
the Economic and Financial Crime Commission (EFCC) are baying for Akpabio’s
blood in restitution for some wrongdoing. Therefore, his flight from the PDP to
APC is to avoid sudden death.
Whichever, Akpabio in comparison with Amaechi has acted in a far less
honourable way even as both men remain united in their inordinate quest for
self re-validation. Like a chameleon, Akpabio assumes the physical
characteristics of the surrounding environment as a survival strategy. He is
cowardly, self-centred, unstable and less able to work for the resolution of
the issues in the Niger Delta. On the other hand, Amaechi is a lion-heart who
unfortunately preys on his environment and may have nothing standing for him in
the end.
The choice between the two is therefore like a
choice between the devil and the deep blue sea. With deep reflection, however,
the latter seems a better option because it contains the prospects of God’s
intervention. But a date with the devil is sure death.
I have said enough to earn the day. I will now
leave you with the simple task of establishing the Devil and the Deep Blue
Sea between Amaechi and
Akpabio.
*Mr. Ogbodo is the
Editor of The Guardian
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