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Wike confronts Rivers elders for supporting Fubara, accuses them of fuelling insincerity 

Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike,  on Sunday, attacked Rivers elders for taking sides with Governor Siminalayi Fubara in the unfolding political crisis in the state, The Punch reports.
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While accusing the elders of seeking selfish interests, Wike warned people of the state against getting involved in any political conflict without knowing the root causes.

He spoke on Sunday during a thanksgiving ceremony and marriage anniversary of Dr Des George-Kelly, the immediate past Rivers State Commissioner for Works, at the Kings’ Assembly, in Port Harcourt.

In attendance were some of the 27 lawmakers believed to be loyal to Wike as well as some of the commissioners who recently resigned from Fubara’s cabinet.
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It was the first time Wike would be commenting on the feud between him and his successor and estranged political godson, Fubara, after the intervention of President Bola Tinubu, in Abuja.

Wike lampooned elders of the state who recently attacked the President for wading into the Rivers political crisis.

He said, “Let me tell the church, you know blackmail is the easiest thing. So many of you may believe what is going on; so many of you may also follow on the road without knowing where you are heading. If I were you, (I would) sit down and ask myself: can this be true? But just because we are no longer in power you may want to believe everything they have said. Power and money, if you are not careful, can destroy you. It can also make (you), depending on how you handle it.”

Wike said he would never do anything to drag Rivers State backward, saying, “In fact, it was during my time I fought so many states to bring back our oil wells. The money accruing from those oil wells today is not in my pocket but in the interest of the state.

“To show character, when I was here I never went to see the Federal Government, I never. I was the only opposition to the Federal Government. I challenged them. That is how you know people when they say they want to do something and they do it. I’m not a man that you can convince just because of a porridge of yam, no, it is not possible.”

Continuing, Wike said, “Don’t get involved in any fight between two politicians without knowing the root cause.

 

“In any facet of life, there are rules and they must be obeyed. As a pastor, there are rules you must follow. So also, as politicians, we must follow rules.

“While I was governor I followed those rules, and that’s why I was able to succeed.

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“When I was running for governor, I was invited (and told) that some elders wanted to see me. When I got there, I saw only two people; just two of them constituted themselves as elders over the whole state.

“They said the elders of the state had decided that I should not contest the election. I said it must be a joke. Now they’ve come back again as elders.

“Check everyone there, some of them their sons lost the election. Everybody wants to take their pound of flesh. ‘Wike prevented me from this’; ‘Wike made me not to be that’. ‘Wike made me not to be that’. Even those that Wike made have joined them.”

The FCT Minister also warned against propaganda, even as he expressed dismay that some of the elders he made have joined in criticising him.

He said, “You are the ones who said the President should intervene. Now the President has come to bring peace, you said no, you don’t have the constitutional powers.

“All of us must love this state but don’t listen to propaganda. There is nothing I’m looking for in this state now. I have my own budget as FCT Minister. I have my own commissioners. All I’m saying is if you are a politician play according to the rules.”

He said those bringing in ethnic sentiments were ill-informed, saying, “All of us in this state, irrespective of where you come from, know this state belongs to all of us. There is nothing like Ijaw, there is nothing like Ikwerre.  All I know is Rivers State.

“If you want to settle us, set out the facts. Don’t just be shouting asawana (a popular solidarity mantra). No, because when we were choosing who would rule, you never shouted ‘asawana’.

 

“Now they’re carrying flags and shouting asawana up and down. Are you people aware that Mr President actually called us privately and told us what to do? He didn’t do it and now Mr President then said okay, the larger house should come and they’re saying he does not have the constitutional right to do that. I have subjected myself to the peace process.”

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