APC explains details behind Wike, Fubara political war

Mr Okocha said the political crisis in the state is due to the unhealthy relationship between the governor and assembly members.

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The Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Rivers State, Tony Okocha has highlighted some of the causes of the political crisis rocking the state.

Speaking in an interview in Abuja on Sunday, October 20, Mr Okocha said the political crisis in the state is due to the unhealthy relationship between the governor and assembly members.

Mr Okocha also blamed the Rivers political crisis on the struggle for political structures by political bigwigs in the state.

He said the seeming crisis in the state was centrifugal, noting that issues of internal wrangling came to a head in the state under its present governor, Siminalayi Fubara.

According to the APC chairman, under Nyesom Wike, the state’s immediate past governor and now the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Minister, the state was a construction site.

This, he said, was because Mr Wike built working bridges and developed other infrastructure across the state and brought in laurels that were due to it.

“Unfortunately for him, he introduced to the political scene somebody he felt was a confidant, who is today, the state governor. He was not a politician.

“He was a civil servant all his life and Wike catapulted him from Deputy Director to Director Finance and Administration and directed that he be posted to the State Government House.

“He was later made Chief of Staff and was promoted a few months after to Permanent Secretary Government House, in charge of finance and was later made the Accountant General.

“Fubara was never in politics, he was just a routine civil servant, but for whatever it is worth, Wike felt he should hand over to a confidant as is normal with Nigerian politicians,” Mr Okocha said.

He added that Mr Wike was able to sell Mr Fubara to Rivers people and spoke for him all through the political campaigns, apparently because he did not know what to say before he was elected.

He said though Mr Fubara had never been a Counselor or Local Government Chairman, his first stint in politics was the highest office in the state because Mr Wike was there for him.

The APC Rivers caretaker committee chairman added that ahead of his election, Mr Fubura feigned loyalty and humility and submitted himself to Wike which turned out to be a decoy at the end of the day.

Mr Okocha added that three months after assuming office as governor, Mr Fubara was convinced by some politicians opposed to Mr Wike to build his political structures out of selfish reasons.

This, he said, brought the state to its current political crisis as Mr Fubara in a bid to build his political structure was destroying his predecessor’s already established structures.

He explained that while Mr Wike could be linked to the political crisis in Rivers, the issue in the real sense, was the state governor versus the Assembly members and the struggle for political structures which was needed by every politician to succeed.

“What sustains every politician in the field is a potent structure and Wike could not sit and watch his political structures which built Fubara and some members of the state assembly destroyed.

“Fubara constituted a clog in the wheel of  Wike’s political structures and was dismantling it which Wike couldn’t take.

“The reason we are having Rivers in the news for bad things is because the state governor is fighting himself,” he said.

Speaking on the Federal High Court’s dismissal of a suit seeking to replace the pro-Wike 27 lawmakers, Okocha said Fubara is the chief law officer of the state and also the chief lawbreaker.

This, he said, was especially because he chooses the order to obey and the one not to obey.

“And when you do that, it is an invitation to anarchy, he is the one that brought ant-infected firewood to his house, and now lizards are feasting,” Mr Okocha said.

He added that Mr Fubura remains Mr Wike’s political investment in Rivers, saying he would not allow him to destroy the political structures he built over the years.