Governor Siminalayi Fubara and Nyesom Wike
The political crisis in Rivers State may be experiencing a lull going into the yuletide, but there are important takeaways. There is no gainsaying the fact that the intervention of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in the feud between the governor of Rivers State, Siminalayi Fubara, and his estranged political godfather and Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike, which eventually culminated in an eight-point resolution has calmed frayed nerves at least for now.
Although Fubara and Wike have both pledged commitment to implement the presidential resolution, their body language is saying otherwise.
For example, Wike, while attending the wedding anniversary of his associate and immediate past Commissioner for Works, Dr. Des George-Kelly at the Kings Assembly in Port Harcourt, shortly before Christmas, blamed his successor for the political crisis, insisting that he has failed to play by the rules of the game (politics) and urged people of the state not to involve themselves in a fight they know nothing about.
He stated, “Don’t get involved in any fight between two politicians without knowing the cause.
“In any facet of life, there are rules and they must be obeyed. As a pastor, there are rules you must follow. So as politicians, we must follow rules.
“When I was governor, I followed those rules and that’s why I was able to succeed.”
On his part, Fubara, at his maiden state banquet at the Government House, Port Harcourt, on New Year’s Eve said those fighting him were after his ‘red biro,’ and boasted that he is still firmly in possession of the pen.
The governor added, “What they want is this red biro, but it is still with me. We are the winners, because we are still signing with the red biro.”
Interestingly, the cold war snowballed into the yuletide with the two political leaders trying to buy the heart of the people or at best, ensure that their support bases are intact, especially in the spirit of the season.
Rice is a major staple food in the country, especially against the backdrop of how expensive it is, many will appreciate it as a gift and this was exactly what happened.
Customized bags of rice bearing the bold faces of Governor Fubara and Wike adorned Port Harcourt and its environs, with suspected aides of the duo distributing same to various stakeholders and groups so much so that it has set off conversations in the social media.
In one of the pictures on the rice bags seen by South-South PUNCH reporter, Fubara adorned a native attire with a hat to match, while Wike is seen in suit, in what many indeed believed was his official portrait when he held sway as Governor.
South-South PUNCH gathered that Wike gave 2,000 bags of rice to each local government area of Rivers State, while Fubara was said to have given 100 bags of his own brand of rice to each ward in the state.
Some of the groups that have benefitted so far include some political party members, youth groups, market unions, non-indigenes, landlord associations and counting.
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