odogwuemekaodogwu.com brings you another reply to perceived enemies of Governor Willie Obiano by Citizen James Eze. Enjoy:
Thinking of the recent
media attacks on Governor Willie Obiano and his wife, the only morsel of wisdom
that comes to mind is the admonition by Winston Churchill that “You will never
reach your destination if you stop and throw stones at every dog that barks.”
Famous for his inspiring
leadership of 20th Century Britain to resounding victory over Nazi Germany and
the Axis Power during the 2nd World War, Churchill has made quite a home in the
hearts of millions across the world with his remarkable rhetoric. And of the
futility of a leader responding to every calculated attempt to distract him,
Churchill should know. Nothing makes a great leader wiser than crises or
conflict and he rode the crest of the World War II to historical acclaim.
True, Anambra State is not at war
with any visible enemy but like all human societies in quest of accelerated
development, Anambra is at war with itself. Today, the greatest challenge that
is facing Anambra State is the challenge of rejecting the half-way house to
greatness; of accepting anything less than the fullness of its promise!
And in defining this reality for Ndi
Anambra and carving a stone-paved pathway for its rejection, Willie Obiano has
erred in the sight of some people whose ultimate wish is that Anambra never
rises beyond mediocrity. These people are content with the poor picture of the
old Anambra as the place where people point at from the safety of other less
gifted neighbours. And now that their long knives are finally drawn, it remains
to be seen whether Ndi Anambra will allow them a chance to plunge a blade at
the figure behind their changing narrative and halt the emergence of a state of
their dream.
This should provoke the thoughts of
any right-thinking onye Anambra. Should this emerging symbol of renascent
Anambra be allowed to be hacked to pieces so soon? Should Governor Willie
Obiano be left at the mercy of power mongers whose only claim to fame is their
infinite ability for mischief? Anyone who decides to choose silence in the face
of this gathering storm should remember the warning from America’s charismatic
civil rights leader, Dr Martin Luther King Jnr that “In the end, we will
remember not the words of our enemies but the silence of our friends.”
Quite frankly, the spate
of attacks on Governor Obiano and the current wave of defections by some important
figures in the All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA) are clear pointers to the
discomfort of some elements with Obiano’s giant strides in Anambra State. The
recent concentration of earth-moving equipment to Aroma Junction in fulfillment
of Obiano’s promise to change the landscape of the long neglected Awka Capital
Territory with a modern flyover and a fancy tunnel seems to have confirmed the
worst fears of some politicians that the change in Anambra has gone beyond
metaphor.
Expectedly, their rhetoric has changed.
Suddenly, it is no longer that the indigenes of Awka are resistant to change
and have frustrated all efforts to give Anambra a befitting capital but a
funny story-line. Out of their fevered imagination leaps out stories
of how Obiano has commenced payment of mind-boggling sums of money in
settlement to Sir Victor Umeh, the National Chairman of APGA and how the
governor’s appointments have been skewed in favour of his own people. But these
charges are at best jejune and at worst asinine! They are products of an
afflicted imagination that have found an outlet in a discredited blog. Ndi
Anambra are far too sophisticated to be led by the noose. Already, they have
started asking the only important question which is whether Willie Obiano has
delivered on his promises in just 130 days. Okwu agwugo!
But sincerely, anyone
who can read the political climate of Anambra State can easily tell that the
recent wave of defections in APGA is nothing but a natural reaction by
politicians who have lost the moral authority to work on behalf of the people
who put them in office. Scared at the obvious reality that they have not earned
their keep, these politicians have decided to make hay while the sun shines.
They knew that in the renascent Anambra of the Obiano era, any public office
holder who has not justified the people’s faith n him has lost the moral claim
to a renewed mandate. But they are not prepared to go down without a fight,
without splashing mud all over the place to sully others up.
In proving that a people
who are plagued by some persistent human problems can push back and reclaim a
veritable foothold; that a gravely wronged society can finally seek redemption
under a purposeful leadership, Willie Obiano seems to have asked for too much
from some people who are yet to read the signs of the times. And for these
people, all is fair in love and war! And in the ensuing melee, nothing is too
sacred to be left out from the boiling cauldron, not even the Church.
How else can anyone
explain the political undertone in the peaceful protest staged by the Anglican
Diocese on the Niger over a disputed school block between it and Nkwelle
Ezunaka, its host community? Chanting songs of protest and hurling invectives,
the protesters had pointed a finger in the direction of the state government,
claiming that the roof of their new building at Oyolu-Oze Primary School was
pulled down on the instruction of the agents of the state. On close
interrogation, some leaders of the church explained that they were angry that
the wife of their leader, Bishop Owen Nwokolo was not allowed to address the
governor when he visited the scene of the crisis to announce the steps his
administration had taken to address the dispute.
What has not escaped the
curiosity of many discerning people however is how the entire population of the
Anglican Church in Onitsha could stage a protest over an alleged slight on the
wife of their bishop. There are obvious gaps in this scenario which gives the
protest away as an outright machination of some out-of-favour politicians.
This is made even more
so by the fact that on the same day that Mrs. Nwokolo was purportedly slighted
by the government, she was invited to the Governor’s Lodge along with her close
aides and the church’s legal counsel where she had a long and fruitful meeting
with the governor and his deputy, Dr. Nkem Okeke who heads the special six-man
committee on the dispute. It must be noted that Dr. Okeke himself is a member
of the Anglican Church. It is unlikely that the leadership of the church is
aware of this meeting with Mrs Nwokolo. Otherwise, the staging of a protest to
announce its displeasure over the purported slight which is in itself, an
overkill would have been unnecessary. If not for the probable incitement of
some insidious politicians, it is highly unlikely that a whole church would go
on a protest to announce its anger over a purported slighting of the wife of
its bishop. But politics corrodes and in its corrosive best, nothing is too
sacred for it.
Sadly, barely four
months on the saddle, Governor Obiano must be finally getting acquainted with
the full meaning of purposeful leadership. He must be rubbing his chin and
grinning to himself now that he has realized that sometimes, when a leader does
his job well, he courts the disaffection of a segment of the people whose
interest is better served by bad leadership. And for this segment, it is
unacceptable for any leader to rise beyond mediocrity; beyond their limited vision
of society.
But there is one more
lesson for the high-performing governor of Anambra State. Using the paradigm of
the orchestra to illustrate the nebulous relationship between a leader and his
followers, Max Lucado, American-born writer and preacher observed that “a man
who wants to lead the orchestra must turn his back on the crowd.”
In the final analysis,
Governor Obiano will learn that to achieve his vision for Ndi Anambra, he must
turn his back on the expected hysteria from a segment of the crowd and that if
that does not work, he should take it all in his stride as the price of
purposeful leadership.
Eze writes from Ifite, Awka, ([email protected])
Governor Obiano And Attacks On The Social Media : A Reply From Citizen James Eze
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Thursday, August 21, 2014
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