IMO: AGONY OF A PRIVATIZED STATE BY ETHELBERT OKERE

0
631

 

When a few months ago agents of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) arrested some functionaries of the Imo state government over alleged financial irregularities, hell was let loose. The governor, Chief Okorocha, went bisark. He accused his so-called enemies for master minding the arrests and in a baffling betrayal of a desperate attempt to cover-up the matter, he leveled several mind-boggling allegations against his immediate predecessor, Dr. Ikedi Ohakim. Interestingly, it is the same officials that are also involved in the payment of over one billion naira to a contractor who was yet to execute his job and which has lead to the ongoing impeachment processes against the Deputy Governor of the state, Mr. Jude Agbaso. As things stand, the state may have lost all that huge amount of money. More noteworthy is that this time around, it is not the EFCC but the peoples’ own representatives, that is, members of the State House of Assembly, that uncovered the sordid goings-on in the government of Imo state under His Excellency, Chief Rochas Okorocha. This is what can be deducted from the current saga revolving around Okorocha’s deputy, Mr. Jude Agbaso.

 

The probe of the deputy governor has exposed the unwholesome diversion of public funds through phantom award of contracts without any documentation. The Agbaso case may well be a confirmation of the series of allegations that the state government under Okorocha uses fake contractors to loot Imo funds. The particular contract award for the rehabilitation of a mere three-kilometer road at a mind boggling rate of N400 million per kilometer, as has been seen from the House of Assembly probe, was never advertised, had no project design, no bidding, no bill of quantity, no tenders, no evidence of prequalification and was not provided for in the budget. Besides, the contractor is said not to have done any road contract anywhere in Nigeria before. Without doubt, the sheer contemplation that such a scenario must have been playing out in all the projects the administration has engaged in would sends jitters down the spines of every well meaning citizen of Imo state.

 

Yet, Governor Okorocha keeps on mesmersing the people of the state with more proposals on phantom projects. In his 2013 budget speech, he outlined a number of projects for which he claimed he had already paid 40 per cent of the contract sum. These include the Imo Towers of 1,000 housing units, the ecumenical centre, the magnificent towers, three five star hotels in each of the senatorial zones, an ultra modern judiciary headquarters etc. Yet, there is nothing on ground to justify the payment of 40 per cent advance as stated by the governor in his budget speech. And as with others, the contracts never went through the normal processes. No advertisement, no tenders, no bidding, nothing.

 

It is not a hidden matter that Governor Okorocha has, himself, made a song and dance of his disdain for due process; in fact making the people of the state to see non compliance with due to process as a virtue.  Indeed, he has said repeatedly that due process is the avenue through which previous administrations siphoned state funds. The people now know better; which is that the ‘undue’ process style of the Okorocha administration was deliberately fashioned out to ease corruptive manipulations of the state bureaucracy for self serving ends.

 

The point being made here is that no matter how the Agbaso impeachment saga ends, it would be tragic for Imo people, indeed Nigerians, to go home with the impression that Governor Okorocha is a champion of the fight against corruption. The Governor is the chief architect of the rot in the state.  The only thing that goes for him is that he has the flair for transferring his own guilt on others. Up till now, the governor has failed to explain what happened to a total of N26.27 billion left behind by the Ohakim administration. This amount included the N13.3 billion bond proceeds out the N18.5 that was initially drawn down, N3billion in SUBEB project account, N2.5 billion local government joint project account, N3.6 billion JAAC Account, N488 million in VAT account, N670 million Imo children fund, etc.

 

Unknown to many, none of these amounts have reflected in any of the two budgets (2012 and 2013) so far proposed by the Okorocha administration. In a recent press conference in Owerri, the Association of Local Governments of Nigeria (ALGON) in Imo state brought this particular issue up again. According to ALGON, “the entire N26.27 billion have been criminally squandered without the knowledge of the Imo people”.  

Yet, Governor Okorocha is famous for leveling frivolous allegations against other people. Each time he is challenged to prove it, he abandons that particular one and makes another allegation against the same fellow. Interestingly, his deputy, whom he was using to visit hatred on others, is now at the receiving end.

 

The deputy governor, Mr. Jude Agbaso, insists that he is innocent of the charge (of taking N458million bribe money) against him and, in my candid opinion, he remains so until all avenues of proving him guilty are exhausted. This is more so as a judicial panel, which is perhaps the most critical stage in the process of impeachment, is yet to sit over the matter. Added to this, of course, is that the deputy governor has gone to court to challenge the denial of his right to fair hearing.

 

Is it not good to know that Mr. Agbaso is now talking about fair hearing? Only a few months ago, precisely on January 14th ,2013, he, Jude Agbaso, it was who stood for three hours in front of television cameras to level mind-boggling allegations against Governor Ikedi Ohakim, based on a phantom audit report. Before that live television broadcast, neither Ohakim nor any member of his administration was given the opportunity to be heard by Mr. Jude Agbaso and his audit panel. This is one big lesson that can be learned from the current saga. It is actually my wish that Mr. Agbaso survive his present ordeal because I believe that the experience he is gathering from it will be of benefit to the Imo society if he retains his job.

 

In their appraisal of the on-going imbroglio, most commentators would resort to the general refrain of “it serves Agbaso right”. Others would recoil in sheer condemnation of the deputy governor. Yet, a third persuasion would say, “we knew it”. All this taken together, Mr. Jude Agboso’s fate is extrapolated to include the role his elder brother, Martin, played in brining the state to its present debilitating state. Yes, he, Martin Agbaso, dumped the political refuse that is emitting foul odor in Imo today. It is not an exaggeration to state that Okorocha’s governorship was basically the making of Martin Agboso, the deputy governor’s elder brother, who violated an existing arrangement in the state to sell the governorship ticket of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) to Okorochia. It is a well known fact that by the time Chief Okorocha got the APGA ticket, he was not a member of APGA. But that really did not matter.  What baffled Imo people was that Martin Agboso, the undisputed leader of APGA then, found it convenient to give Okorocha the ticket of his party in spite of a subsisting arrangement wherein the governorship seat was expected to move from Okigwe zone to Owerri zone, Agboso’s homestead, in 2015; in keeping with the Imo charter of equity. This expection was especially so given that Orlu zone, were Okorocha comes from, had held the governorship position for eight unbroken years. Today, the Agbosos are making a song and dance of “2015 for Owerri zone”. I they had played to the rules, the governorship seat would have naturally gone to Owerri zone without any debate.

 

The major reason most Imolites are not sympathetic with the Agbasos over this matter include the ease with which they extracted from Okorocha juicy portfolios based on the selling of the APGA governorship ticket to him.  Interestingly, the deputy governor ran into trouble as a result of things that happened while he was combining the big position he was ‘elected’ into with that of Commissioner for Works, believed to be one of the juiciest positions in any state government. There are even those who charge the Agbasos of further immodesty for also cornering to their larger family the position of Commissioner for Health. The current state Commissioner for Health is said to be their maternal uncle.

 

Quite a good number of people believe that Okorocha must have reluctantly made the concessions to the Agbasos because he was desperate and helpless at the time he was giving them. It is further argued that Okorocha, reputed as very deft when it comes to ‘business’ matters, was merely bidding his time to tell the Agbasos that “before Abraham” he was. It is in this sense that many argue that they saw the current quarrel coming. Which brings us to the crux of the matter.

 

The deputy governor has said that his present ordeal is traceable to the collapse of an “agreement” over a number of issues between his elder brother and Okorocha before the 2011 governorship election.  Among them are said to be an agreement that Okorocha should serve for only one term and hand over to Martin Agbaso. There are other agreements that have to do with pecuniary interest but it is saddening that a section of the Imo society is already being sold on the idea that Okorocha has committed an abomination for not respecting the spirit and letter of the agreement reached with the senior Agbaso.

 

Pray, what was the agreement all about? To share Imo state just between Martin Agbaso and Rochas Okorocha? To cede to another Orlu fellow additional four years in exchange of political positions and material things? So, things became that bad for Imo state that two people could sit at their convenience and decide the collective destiny of a people hitherto reputed as one of the most cerebral and sophisticated in the entire Nigeria. The ease with which the Agbaso/Okorocha agreement is being talked about, with shameless audacity, is an affront to the collective integrity of the entire state.  So, if Okorocha had not breached the so-called agreement, Imo state would have been reduced to a mere convenience of two families collaborating in a perfidious appropriation of the collective patrimony of a people believed to be one of Nigeria’s best.

 

Needless to say, the current saga has merely unearthed the grand conspiracy against the people of Imo state by the Okorocha and Agbaso families and which was successfully executed in April/May  2011 using outside elements that were also part of an agreement to put the state on sale. Since the saga began, some names from outside Imo have been severally and continually mentioned as among those who were privy to the agreement between Okorocha and the Agbasos and were themselves potential beneficiaries of the heist that was to be unleashed on the state pursuant to the “agreement”.  It is instructive that not one citizen of Imo state has been mentioned as either being present or part of the agreement and it will not be very surprising if none is mentioned until the matter is over in one way or the other.

 

When all this are put together, it would need no emphasis to state that the contrivance known as the Rochas Okorocha administration was a disaster that was bound to happen. Apart from the criminal manipulation of the electoral process to pave way for it, it is now clear to the entire world that the administration was conceived on greed, avarice and an inordinate ambition to appropriate the collective wealth of one of the most hard working and resilient people in the entire Nigeria. Had the agreement not been shattered by providence as we are now witnessing, only God Almighty knows to whom our dear state, home of some of the most brilliant people on earth, would have been sold.

 

While the good people of Imo state must remain reflective of this, Governor Okorocha must not be made to go away with the impression that, having turned his back against the Agbasos, he has become the champion of the people’s cause. Far from it. He does not deserve any accolades.

 

Pointing at the instant case, for example, many wonder why a contractor was paid 100 per cent, upfront, of the total value of the contract even when he was yet to do one tenth of the job.  As revealed during the House of Assembly inquiry, whereas the Ministry of Works only wrote to the governor for approval of the contract, what eventually took place, according to the findings of the House of Assembly, was that the governor, after giving approval on paper, went ahead to give a verbal instruction to his Commissioner for Finance and Accountant-General to pay the contractor 100 per cent of the contract sum without any payment certificate or advance payment guarantee.   Even so, the contractor was said to have been over paid by N200 million.  For the payment, the Ministry of Works, which had earlier written to the governor for just an approval, was kept in the dark.  Those who know point out that technically speaking, this means that no records of the payment was kept at the Ministry of Works, a development said to be a big volition of both accounting and administrative rules. This is not to exonerate the officials of the Ministry of Works but to point out that Governor Okorocha is presiding over a circus. And it is for that reason that many believe that the same scenario must have been playing out in every other contract or project the Okorocha administration is purportedly engaged in; namely, crass abuse of office due to non observance of required due process.

 

When all this are juxtaposed with the stripping of assets of the state, it becomes even more glaring that what Imo people are today being treated to is just one scene of a grand series that was carefully scripted by Okorocha and those who manipulated him into office to appropriate the state into their private coffers.  But perhaps by sheer providence, the Agbaso impeachment saga seems to be providing the people an opportunity to pause and reflect deeply on their collective fate and what they must do to save their state from further slip into the abyss.