Politics
Military officers hold Gov Fubara, family hostage, as South South leaders condemn emergency rule
Siminalayi Fubara, the elected governor of Rivers State, and his family members were reportedly being held hostage at the Government House, Port Harcourt by heavily armed soldiers Tuesday night.
It was gathered that they were held hostage moments after President Bola Tinubu invoked Section 180 of the Nigerian Constitution to proclaim a state of emergency in Rivers.
Tinubu based his move, which has been heavily criticised by many, including Ijaw groups and PANDEF, on a prolonged and rapidly escalating political feud led by state lawmakers loyal to Nyesom Wike, who commenced impeachment proceedings against Fubara last week to settle scores in his fallout with Wike.
Peoples Gazette quoted Rivers government sources to have said that soldiers carrying out the president’s instructions on declaring the state of emergency barricaded all entrances and exits to the government house immediately after the president’s speech.
According to the sources, attempts by Fubara and his family to pack their belongings out of the Government House have been rebuffed by the soldiers, who suppressed all movements around the premises.
“We are being held hostage,” an affected official told The Gazette from the scene on Tuesday night. “They said they don’t have instruction to let anyone leave the premises.”
It was unclear whether the soldiers implemented their duties as instructed or were overzealous in following specific orders.
Spokespersons for the Nigerian Army and Defence Headquarters did not immediately return requests seeking comments about the soldiers’ treatment of the Fubara and his family.
Tinubu’s declaration to suspend the feuding parties from office for six months, effective Tuesday, sparked furious debates across social media as netizens argued whether the president had constitutional grounds to suspend an elected governor whom the state lawmakers have not yet impeached. Efforts to impeach Fubara began on Monday, barely 24 hours before Mr Tinubu imposed an emergency ordinance.
Lawyers like Inibehe Effiong and Folarin ‘Falz’ Falana have slammed the president for taking the law into his own hands without regard for the Constitution’s position.
The president named the retired chief of naval staff, Ibok-Ete Ekwe Ibas, as the military administrator in Rivers in the interim.
South-South leaders, PANDEF condemn emergency rule
Meanwhile, several South-South leaders and stakeholders have decried President Bola Tinubu’s declaration of a state of emergency in Rivers State and impropriety of brazenly backing the Federal Capital Territory Minister against Governor Siminalayi Fubara and the state’s citizens
According to the one-time Attorney General of Akwa Ibom State, Uwemedimo Nwoko, SAN, the decision to declare a state of emergency in Rivers State was ill-advised.
“The president’s action is not well thought out. The situation in Rivers State has not met any of the conditions prescribed by the constitution for the declaration of a state of emergency by the president. It falls short of it.
“So the president’s action is ill-advised and not based on the provisions of the Constitution. For me, it is part of a script to take over the control of Rivers State, which they had already written and have been acting stage-by-stage and scene-by-scene.”
Former President of the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), Eric Omare Esq., said: “President Tinubu took a wrong decision; I strongly condemn his one-sided action, and again, removing Governor Fubara won’t solve the problem.”
“The President’s intervention in the Rivers State crisis has been one-sided. His actions and body language have encouraged the FCT Minister, Wike, to fuel the crisis up to this point.
“If Governor Fubara is blamed for not doing enough to handle the situation, what has the president done in response to Wike’s unnecessary outbursts, which laid the foundation for the tension in the past week?
“I think that an unbiased president should have called Wike to order or sack him to demonstrate his unbiased position in this matter. But from the onset, the president has been biased in favor of Wike, and that has not helped in the resolution of the crisis.
Meanwhile the apex sociopolitical body for the South-South geopolitical zone, the Pan Niger Delta Forum, PANDEF, said on Tuesday it was studying the situation and would soon come up with its position.A statement yesterday by PANDEF’s National Spokesman, Chief Obiuwevbi Ominimini, read: ‘’PANDEF is seriously alarmed by the state of emergency declared in Rivers State due to a crisis that is ordinarily avoidable. We are, therefore, studying the situation and we shall soon come up with Pandef’s position.”
According to Amaebi Clarkson, former national spokesman of the Movement for the Survival of Ijaw Ethnic Nationality in the Niger Delta (MOSIEND), “I am sure the governor would challenge the constitutionality or legality of the state of emergency. But politically, the emergency is in bad faith and obviously, the execution of a well-oiled script hatched in furtherance of the 2027 election.
“The president did not act like a president of the entire nation, but rather he took sides with his minister to punish the governor and left out any punishment to his appointee. He executed the plan of Wike.
“Firstly, Wike goaded the Ijaw by going to their homeland to provoke them, but he did get the needed reaction. Then the next day, there was an explosion in an oil facility, and shortly before the broadcast, there was another explosion, which he hinged upon as one of the core reasons for the declaration.
Also reacting , The Ijaw Youth Council, IYC, Worldwide, has strongly decried the declaration of a state of emergency in Rivers State, describing it as a clear “case of oppression and intimidation of Ijaw people.”
Spokesman of IYC, Amb Binebai Princewill, said: “We condemn the state of emergency declared on Rivers State by President Bola Tinubu, the reason being that we have states that have been boiling and grappling with insurgency; Boko Haram and herdsmen have held sway, perhaps, because it is Ijaw matter.
“We see it as a case of oppression and intimidation meted out on the Ijaw people and the people of Rivers State in particular, and for the man who fuelled the whole crisis—nothing has been done or said about him.”
An elder statesman and chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Edo State, Hon Charles Idahosa, said the declaration of a state of emergency by President Tinubu was an opportunity for the warring parties to find a meeting point and resolve the political crisis in the state.”
“Fubara did not thread softly at all; all the politically hungry people in Rivers State took advantage of it by giving him wrong advice. Now that the president has declared a state of emergency, this is the time for them to take the opportunity—himself, the legislators, and the Minister of the FCT should come together and find a solution to their differences.
“They should see if they can prevail on the presidency to find a solution to the crisis in these first six months because it will be very difficult for the presidency to be calling them. He did that before, but they did not listen.”