By Chuks Iloegbunam
Anambra State marked its silver
jubilee on August 27, 2016, emitting rays of brilliant colours that emphasize
the uniqueness of its people as wonderfully crafted by God, continuously
demonstrating to the entire world that they are endowed with the dominant
infrastructures of greatness, unsurpassed pacesetters in all noble walks of
life – the arts, entrepreneurship, leadership, scholarship, the sciences,
sports, statesmanship, etc. How apposite that this land of a blessed people has
as its slogan the revealing title of Light of the Nation! There isn’t any
aspect of national life in which Ndi Anambra do not excel.
|
*Gov Willie Obiano of Anambra State |
Little wonder that Jubilee
Governor Willie Obiano waxed prophetically lyrical in, Please, Let’s Do It Together, his speech to mark the anniversary: “Anambra
state will be the food basket of Africa in the
next 25 years. In the next 25 years, Anambra will not depend on federal
allocation. It will be known as a state that transited to become the Taiwan of
Africa. We are number one among states that were created 25 years ago. We pay
salaries as and when due. We are the safest state, and we have attracted
billions of dollars in investment to the state.”
Yet, Anambra State’s
great future, and the fact that its affairs are currently under the controls
of a pair of capable hands, belies the palpable dangers that lie ahead. The
situation evokes the sort of apprehension that informed the late great poet,
Christopher Okigbo’s writing of his 1966 poem entitled “Come Thunder”, the
first four lines of which go thus:
Now that the triumphant march has
entered the last street
corners,
Remember, O dancers, the thunder
among the clouds…
Now that laughter, broken in two,
hangs tremulous between the teeth,
Remember, O dancers, the lightning
beyond the earth…
The smell of blood already floats
in the lavender-mist of the afternoon.
What seeks Anambra’s negation?
What strives to dim its brilliance and turn the people’s joys into one long,
dark night of bewitched recrimination and retrogression? The answer is
FALSEHOOD. Deliberately manufactured falsehood! Let’s illustrate.
I recently took a telephone call
from an educated friend domiciled in the United States since the 1970s. To
my astonishment, he exhibited a rage uncharacteristic of his calm and urbane
nature. “Obiano will never have a second term of office,” he bawled, swearing
that I had made a fatal mistake by recently accepting appointment as the
Anambra State Governor’s Media Director. On and on he railed, his voice rising
to a crescendo. When I managed to put in a word edgewise, I reminded him that
our friendship mustn’t be confused with the relationship between a
cane-wielding village headmaster and a recalcitrant truant. We were basically
friends. Could he possibly hold his peace and take a listen? He agreed, having
screamed three principal complaints: (1) He had heard that Governor Obiano
ordered soldiers to gun down peaceful IPOB demonstrators. (2) He had read from
a Nigerian-owned, UK-based online newspaper a July 25, 2016 story entitled How Governor Obiano Embezzled N75b In Two Years. (3) He was despondent at another newspaper report that widows had
been “forced from their stalls” and consequently rioted in Onitsha.
I proceeded to provide him with
the correct version of things. Although a national daily had so claimed, there
never was a women’s riot anywhere in Anambra
State including Onitsha. Here are the facts: there is a
street market on the main road that issues into Onitsha
through the Niger
Bridge. It stands on a
land owned by Nath Okechukwu, the boss of Interbau, the road construction
giant. Chief Okechukwu had ceded the land to a younger sister for temporary
business purposes, pending its conversion into his firm’s headquarters. But the
sister had leased it to agents who made an instant vegetable market out of the
land, collecting “landing” fees and rents without remitting any taxes to
government. Every so often vehicles plowed into the market, causing casualties.
The place has no toilets, a veritable eyesore.