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Chris Ngige: The hero of the Fourth Republic
Paul Mamza
Tuesday, June 28, 2005
A former Assistant Inspector General of Police, now late Mr. Raphael Ige, abducted the Governor on July 10, 2003 with full detachment of police and forced his resignation, which was upheld by the Anambra State House of Assembly, thereby swearing in his erstwhile deputy, Mr. Okey Ude, as governor. It was a clear failure for the conscriptors of this plan. With an unrelenting zeal, the Federal Government took the matter further to the Supreme Court on March 28, 2004, asking the court to declare the arrival of Ngige to the Government House as illegal, null, and void. It went further to withdraw the security details of the Governor, challenging the credibility of the Chief Judge that swore in the Governor in the first place.
On December12, 2003 the supporters of Chief Chris Uba engaged the security details of the Governor in a shoot-out at both the Michael Okpara Square and at PDP Southeast Zonal Congress meeting at Enugu, in which the Governor was humiliated. By November 29, 2004, an assassination attempt was made on the life of the Governor, which failed. Chris Ngige was reported to have another shock of his life when his convoy was involved in a ghastly motor accident along Adazi Ani-Nnobi-Nnewi road; the Governor escaped narrowly. On November 14, 2004 and December 4, 2004, the convoy of Chris Uba challenged the Governor’s pathways and the Governor again escaped another assassination attempt, which put the Government House in blazes along with other Government edifices respectively. The latest attempt was so devastating that colossal losses in property and valuables were recorded.
The Supreme Court on Friday May13, 2005 ruled in favour of the Governor that he did not resign after all. According to the highest court, the document allegedly signed by Ngige as a resignation letter dated July 9, 2003 is a false document and hence null and void. With virtually only the commoners to hold onto, Chief Ngige severally suffered the blows of the Aso Rock steam, the striking tempestuous lash of his godfather and the nervous betrayal of his party (PDP). He went through the valley of perseverance of severance and came out nearly intact without a bold scar of submission. During his travails Anambra was either served with suspense of the lack of safely of its Governor and his throne or charred by an inferno muted through ambush by his political opponents.
The state that parades such notable Igbo personalities as Dr. Alex Ekwueme, Chief Emeka Anyaoku, and Professor Chinua Achebe watched helplessly as renegades boasting openly of connection at high places {apologies to Achebe} wrecked havoc on the state in order to smoke out Ngige from his assumed incontrovertible seat. Many subterfuges were conceived to make him both vulnerable and weak but, as one snag wiggles, the Governor waxed a reclaim and exclaim of control to the displeasure of his political enemies. In an established political environment of disquiet, Chris Ngige had shown courage of hope in an emerging paradigm of parting away with old bad ways.
The success of Ngige against the tides of his godfather and the powers-that-be is the political equivalent of a systematic revolution. Like the rock in Abuja, he was both impermeable and indestructible, a good lesson that man does not decide a fellow man’s fate but only God does that with certainty. His targets were missed several times, but he never missed their targets as and when due. Like a vicious marksman of reason, he had stood on the path of rationality. The Ngigean example is an exemplary model of cleansing the Augean staple of filth that a corrupt political system has entrenched as a normal and acceptable norm in political contest and victory as practiced curiously in Nigeria. When eventually the history of revolutionary trends is documented as a new focus for political development of Nigeria, the Anambra case of Chris Ngige stands a good test. Ngige’s Anambra will be a study profile of courage, perseverance, and resistance. All the forces that early converged against him had either gone on holidays abroad, retreated, or humiliated along the line of events.
Ngige was a sinner of a sort but later became a saint of a kind in a country whose tradition is rooted in the maintenance of old and archaic status quo. His is like a proverbial cat in the belly of a tiger that later became the tiger through transmutation. Chris Ngige may not have built bridges, constructed major roads, provided many other social amenities, but he had secured the basis of democracy and had through a point of departure ignited the essential ethics and ethos of democratic succour. The survival of any democracy depends largely on this. He is definitely the anointed Man Friday of the current political dispensation and my hero of the Fourth Republic with his recent victory at the Supreme Court.
Mamza, a Political Columnist with the Leadership Newspapers, writes from Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria |