Tinubu, Wike, Fubara and  Rivers Crisis





There is a saying  in Yoruba ….”Agbalagba ki wa loja, ki ori omo tuntun wo”….  (When  elders are in the Market, the head of the child must be placed properly).

For women who  are used to strapping  their baby on their backs, it is those behind them  that will  notice if the baby’s head is not placed properly and if it is so ,they draw the attention of the mother since the baby cannot talk.

There is also a saying …,Agba ko si ni Ilu,Ilu baje,Baale ile ku Ile dahoro ….(when Elders are no more in town, the town becomes a ghost of its glorious past).

Elder statesman, Chief Olabode George, in spite of his being a politician and member of the leading opposition party, the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, must have had the above saying in his mind when he   drew the attention of both  President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and elders of his party, the PDP, to intervene in the prolonged power tussle in Rivers state which remote causes could be traced to the  struggle for power between  former governor Nyesom  Wike and Similari Fubara, incumbent Governor.

They were obviously struggling for control of the  state’s political structure just as it happened in the first Republic when the duo of the late Chief Ladoke Akintola, Premier of the Western  Region and his predecessor,  late Chief Obafemi Awolowo were struggling for the control of then Action Group, AG and the region, barely two years after Awo left the region and emerged opposition leader at the centre.

The distinction George failed  to draw was  that while Akintola wanted to dine with the Tafawa Balewa -led Northern People’s Congress, NPC, and carry   along the region with him, Awolowo, the then Leader of the party and his supporters thought  otherwise.

They did so because  they saw  themselves as a party of  a  different ideology and  as the political  party which could take over power at the centre.

The ensuing  crisis led to the suspension  of Akintola  during the 1962 Jos national convention of the AG for what the party  leadership described as Anti -Party activities.

 It was  there and then that the battle line for the control of then Western Region was drawn between the incumbent Premier and his predecessor.

It is also important to point out the fact that the seed of the deep polarisation of Yoruba political followership between the progressives amd conservatives was sown during this period and the followership in a way subsists till now.

The difference in the scenario then and now is that unlike Awo who went to the centre to be leader of opposition , Wike, Fubara’s predecessor is wining and dining with Bola Tinubu as a serving Minister.

He also wanted to keep his anointed successor,  Fubara and his PDP as a bargaining chip to strengthen and negotiate his political future with Tinubu and the  All Progressives Congress, APC-the party he and four other PDP rebels  helped to power at the centre in 2023.

But early in the day of his government, Fubara showed his hands that he wouldn’t want to be a puppet but his own man..contrary to Wike’s political calculations.

Wike,  like Akintola,  wanted to eat his cake and have it while Awolowo who remained as Leader of the Action Group also wanted to remain the boss in Western region by subterfuge and holding the region as his launching pad to Federal Power in the terms of his being the leader of the  opposition party.

Yes, like George recalled the power struggle in Western region set in motion crisis which led to the collapse of the First Republic, it also changed the course of Nigeria’s political history.

The difference in the unfolding political scenario is that both Wike and Tinubu want to change the political behavior and  alignment of the people of Rivers for better while Fubara also wants  to become a new political force, a  godfather in Rivers and also  help the opposition, PDP, to retain its control of Rivers and by extension South South region politics which George maintained belong to PDP.

Fubara’s   stranglehold on Rivers State early in the party and not long after he took power in 2023 also has the unseen hands of PDP leaders like Abubakar Atiku and other stakeholders who   feel  Fubara can help them undo what Wike did by making Rivers people vote Tinubu during last year’s presidential election.

This is where Fubara’s interest,  albeit,  political survival has sympathy in PDP elders like George.

But then, the fractious  nature of elders of the party who want  Atiku to remove his grip on  the party portends  another obstacle for Fubara.

This makes George’s  cry on Elders to intervene  rather difficult to attain given their divergence of interests  and the attendant schism in the PDP which Atiku’s ambition has not helped.

However, the political manouvering of Tinubu especially his interest in retaining Wike’s  support towards his re- election in 2027 is also a defining factor in the unfolding Power game in Rivers.

 This may raise  the difficulty  in Tinubu heeding the counsel of George for purely political maximization and gains. Afterall, politics is about Power and interest

The controversial execution of the Lagos-Calabar Coastal Highway- easily the biggest project in the country in recent years and the apparent infrastructural benefit derivable by the South South region may be Tinubu’s double- edge sword to rein in the people of the region to his party and electoral support.

It also sort of strengthens  Wike’s political capital being the strongest political office holder from the region in Tinubu’s government.

His performance in the Federal Capital Territory, FCT- a position reserved for the North, with its capacity to dispense political favours  back home will definitely strengthen his influence on the region’s politics.

Besides, George’s alarm may also not sound a big  threat enough given Tinubu’s allocation of Oil and Gas portfolio and positions to Heineken Lokpobiri and other  strategic Niger Delta Development Corporation,NCDC positions to others from the region.

This decision comes with loyalty to him and his political agenda to retain a foothold in the region, traditionally a PDP stronghold.

The people are  now obviously divided between staying in local politics and embracing federal positions with the attendant  perks of office and influence.

But in spite of an  apparent weakness  of Fubara’s local structure, his willful destruction of institutions of governance  to remain in power is far fetched and akin to pulling down the roof on his own head,  not minding the collateral damage inflicted on the state institutions.

 This situation makes Fubara appear   like the proverbial drunk  in the Chinese shop.

You have to separate him or push him out carefully before doing much damage to himself and the shop.

For a Governor who pulled down the state house of Assembly complex in December last year , citing the  need for renovation, he can still go a long way to do a bigger damage to make himself difficult to remove.

Though Joseph Johnson, his then information commissioner said the reason was  to renovate the complex, you wonder at  the suddenness of  the action.

That this is coming a   few months after he attained power is strange and points to a capacity to rein in more damage to himself and the system.

Now, more dangerous is that the division in the state house of Assembly over an  impeachment threat coupled with  signals to pull down the roof on recalcitrant  assembly men poised to remove him is also another desperate move by Fubara to compound the state’s politics.

In other words, Fubara, is determined to destroy all institutions of governance, except himself.

Fubara’s  desperate game plan is also akin to an adage which says, “Eniyan ti o titori pe oun n lo si Ede to ba Odede je,to ba kuro ni Ede,Odede lo maa pada si…( he who destroys his home because he is embarking on a journey will return to meet the ruins of his home…that is if there is anything left after the destruction).

However, given that far reaching implication of instability likely to happen  if  there is a conflagration in Rivers state -which reality is quite obvious except something drastic is done to bring the two warring parties together , the days ahead are full of challenges.

The casualties of the  political disagreement  likely as a result of the battle for the soul of Rivers state, are not likely to be limited to emotional casualties of office and powerful losers, but like in John Pepper Clark’s poem  on  Nigeria’s Civil War, emotional casualties, then  included the stay- at- homes, the poor, weak and innocent citizens struggling to survive Nigeria’s suffocating economic environment .

It is also not impossible that Rivers implosion may ignite the sleeping dog in the Niger Delta militants who may be recruited by external forces to disrupt economic activities in the region with its implication on production of  Nigeria’s daily crude  already far below OPEC  allocated quota.

While it is also incumbent on President Tinubu to play a statesman’s  role like he did when the  conflict started last year, the PDP and other concerned stakeholders also have to set politics aside and bring the warring parties to ‘jaw jaw’….before the unexpected happens.

A stitch it time, saves  nine