Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro - Politics - Nairaland
Nairaland Forum › Nairaland General › Politics › Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro (1264 Views)
| Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro by chrisokw(op): 8:29am On Jun 07, 2007 |
Much ado about Okiro Thursday, June 07, 2007 People and Politics Ochereome Nnanna ON Wednesday, May 30th 2007, former Inspector General of Police, Mr. Sunday Ehindero, was ordered to hand over his post to the “next most senior” Deputy Inspector General. From records, it became clear that Mr. Ogbonnaya Onovo, the DIG in charge of Administration, was that person. But, by Friday that same week when Ehindero formally said goodbye to the Force, the formal instruction was that he should hand over to Mr. Mike Mbama Okiro, the DIG in charge of Operations. This move ruffled quite a few feathers within the system. Some thought that the new regime of President Umar Yar’Adua, in making the decision, “bypassed an Igbo man” and gave the coveted position to someone from Rivers State. While some speculated that it was part of the administration’s continued effort to woo the South South and encourage the cessation of violence in the Niger Delta, others felt that the new leaders were continuing former President Olusegun Obasanjo’s perceived marginalisation of the South- East. Some even concluded that Obasanjo must have been behind the move. LET me remark here that this mess was avoidable. Rather than ask Ehindero to hand over to the next senior officer, he should have been told to hand over to Okiro. Even though some people might still have grumbled that the bypass of Onovo was politically fishy, they would have recognised the President’s prerogative of making such appointments. Past Heads of State had tended to appoint their tribesmen to key security positions, including the post of IGP. In fact, it was the vogue to ensure that the service chiefs and key administration officials were from the tribe or region of the Head of State, perhaps, because it gave them a sense of security. Many top officers in the forces were often retired to give way to the anointed ones. Even Obasanjo made sure that all three Police IG’s who served during the eight years of his regime were Yoruba, and retirements had to be conducted in 1999 to create room for this. When EFCC Chairman, Malam Nuhu Ribadu, was being touted as Ehindero’s successor, the stage seemed set for another round of retirements of top cops. It is, therefore, pleasantly surprising that (at least so far) the new regime is toeing former President Shehu Shagari’s line in giving the post to a competent policeman and not insisting that he must come from his geopolitical area. If this trend is continued in all areas of security and administration appoint-ments, people will no longer feel that their parts of the country are being kept out of the scheme of things. It is important for us also to dispel the impression that Okiro getting it instead of Onovo amounts to the Igbo being bypassed. Even though some have speculated, in the past, that Okiro is Ijaw, the truth is that he is of Igbo stock. He comes from Egbema, which was in the Ohaji/Egbema/Oguta Local Govern-ment Area of the old East Central State (ECS). When new states were created in 1976 by the government of General Murtala Mohammed, Egbema was part of the newly created Imo State. It was during the boundary adjustment exercise that followed that Egbema, an oil-producing area, was shifted into Rivers State, an action that some Igbo leaders, such as the late Chief Sam Mbakwe, felt was aimed at depleting Imo of its oil producing status. Besides, Igbo-speaking people in Rivers and Delta are as Igbo as any other Igbo, just as Yoruba in Kogi and Kwara are Yoruba and Ijaw in Rivers and Delta are Ijaw. The boundaries that separate people are just artificial. Let people learn from the lessons of recent history. Former Rivers State Governor, Dr. Peter Odili, used to pride himself as a “Rivers man”, as if Rivers State is a tribe. But, as soon as he embraced the presidential race and looked like a real prospect, some Ijaw leaders, such as Chief Edwin Clark, started telling the world that Odili is an Igbo man, and that the agitation for a South- South president of Nigeria was not meant for an Igbo man masquerading as South Southerner! So, Okiro remains the first Igbo man ever to be appointed as the Inspector General of Police, for whatever it is worth. On a more serious note, it does not really matter where the Police IG comes from. That he comes from a tribe does not prevent him from doing the bidding of his appointers neither does it propel him to carry out an obvious ethnic agenda. In fact, the best person to be used against a tribe or religion is a member of that tribe or religion. All three IGP’s under Obasanjo were Yoruba, and, yet, till date, the real killers of Chief Bola Ige are yet to be exposed. WHAT we know about Okiro, from his exploits as the Commissioner of Police in Lagos State, is that he is a tough crime fighter who does his job without creating undue political mess. He put area boys and the Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) in check in 1999 to 2001 without creating the impression that he was on an ethnic witch hunt. Okiro is also very media friendly, having come from the background of a student activist in his university days. It is now left for him to show Nigerians the stuff he is made of. The way Okiro makes his bed as Police IG is the way he will lie down on it! |
| Re: Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro by ishmael(m): 1:29pm On Jun 07, 2007 |
if he's ibo then why are ibos complaining?? |
| Re: Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro by BlackMamba(m): 4:51pm On Jun 07, 2007 |
if he's Igbo then why are Igbo's complaining??Majority of Niger Delta Igbos deny they're Igbo, despite their obvious and conclusive Igbo heritage. It's a by-product of colonial divide-and-rule, and the Biafran cause. |
| Re: Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro by tpia: 6:24pm On Jun 07, 2007 |
excellent article- quite informative. |
| Re: Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro by Mamajama(m): 6:27pm On Jun 07, 2007 |
Because they are self centered selfish people. They always want more, and now watch for the barrage of attacks and bombs coming from left and right. Why is GANI and the IGBO not asking YAR ADUA why he appoint Hausa man as CHIEF of ARMY staff? |
| Re: Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro by Afam(m): 6:44pm On Jun 07, 2007 |
MAMAJAMA:@MAMAJAMA, You have been unable to hide your disdain for the Igbos on this forum and it is a shame that someone like you can be so silly. But the reality is this; you cannot compete with the average Igbo man (atleast considering the level of intelligence you show here). And to the rest of the Igbo haters, read this; LOVE THE IGBOS OR HATE THEM, YOU CAN NEVER IGNORE THEM, NEVER |
| Re: Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro by Mamajama(m): 7:05pm On Jun 07, 2007 |
Afam you are right we can never compete with the average iGBO man. We will let you guys self destruct. you guys can't even unite or come together as one to present a decent candidate to contest for the presidency. You guys are too busy blaming Nigerians for your seclusion and segregation from the top most appointments. you should seek the time to unite as one and have a good plan, but again you can;t trust and IGBO man. its the reality no offense and I'm not out to insult anyone. |
| Re: Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro by laudate: 7:13pm On Jun 07, 2007 |
BlackMamba:Here we go again!! ![]() I guess it isn't a by-product of the Igbo fuelling the discrimination among themselves, by saying one is 'core' Igbo and the others are not? |
| Re: Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro by Afam(m): 10:08am On Jun 08, 2007 |
@MAMAJAMA, That someone who regularly contributes on this forum should have such a disgusting opinion about a tribe is really shameful and unfortunate. What right do you have to judge a whole tribe based on the actions of a few (assuming you have had real experiences with the Igbos before)? If you are married then I really pity your children because I am sure you will still sow this seed of hatred in them and they will continue from where you left off. I will not be surprised too if your parents were responsible for sowing the seed of hatred that has fully germinated in you. Concerning your reference to the Igbos as a tribe presenting a decent candidate for the presidency only a big fool will say he/she does not understand the compromise that sent the presidency to the South West in 1999 and the need for power rotation that took the presidency back to the North in 2007. Funny enough, we see people who don't even know their right from their left discussing national issues with half baked knowledge. Shame on you with your hatred towards a people, you are simply a waste of orgasm. |
| Re: Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro by McKren(m): 10:20am On Jun 08, 2007 |
We trusted Tafa Balogun and Ehindero because they are non-Igbos Tafa's loot was exposed and he is jail, Ehindero's loot will soon be exposed. |
| Re: Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro by laudate: 2:07pm On Jun 08, 2007 |
Let's hope Okiro can quickly bring crime under control, much faster than his predecessors did. |
| Re: Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro by saintchux(m): 3:09pm On Jun 08, 2007 |
MAMAJAMA:Which kind of unity do we need that Onovo was bye-passed. Whether u like it or not, Igbo people are the best thing that are happening to this country. Trust is out of the question. I trust nobody and I don't want you to trust me. let us do our duty according to the rule and not trust. @ Mamajama Why should I trust you? |
| Re: Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro by saintchux(m): 3:18pm On Jun 08, 2007 |
McKren:U see the person u trust, a thief in disguise. Ehindero case will soon burst, keep ur finger crossed. http://www.sunnewsonline.com/webpages/news/national/2007/june/08/national-08-06-2007-01.htm http://www.vanguardngr.com/articles/2002/cover/june07/08062007/f408062007.html This is the trust abi? |
| Re: Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro by Iman3(m): 3:21pm On Jun 08, 2007 |
laudate:Surprise!!! ![]() |
| Re: Igbo: Much Ado About Okiro by laudate: 3:26pm On Jun 08, 2007 |
[quote author=I-man link=topic=58040.msg1182985#msg1182985 date=1181312484]Surprise!!! [/quote]What is making you 'suprised?' Haven't you heard of this, before? It happens everywhere. Or haven't you heard of the South-western indigenes claiming that their Northern brethren in kwara & Kogi, are not pure 'Yoruba' people, or that they have changed their names? Or the hausa people of Plateau as well as Kaduna Hausa christians, being denied access to government scholarships and amenities, simply on account of discrimination by their brethren? I was merely making an observation, not a value statement. So why the shout of 'suprise?' My former post was merely a response to BlackMamba who was trying to interprete the Niger-Delta Igbo's denial, solely as a by-product of colonial divide-and-rule, and the Biafran cause. Quote from: BlackMamba on Yesterday at 04:51:33 PM BlackMamba: Majority of Niger Delta Igbos deny they're Igbo, despite their obvious and conclusive Igbo heritage. It's a by-product of colonial divide-and-rule, and the Biafran cause. |
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