In an interview, Gov. Amaechi also gave the impression that the
President and his wife can never keep to their promises, recalling how
they held several meetings with him begging him to deliver the state to
Jonathan during the 2011 presidential election with the promise that
they would never trouble him again, a promise they did not keep.
Gov. Amaechi listed many instances where his actions infuriated
President Jonathan and the First Lady, whom he described as a ‘de facto
President’.
According to Gov. Amaechi, one of the main reasons for the battle to
bring him down is the desperate ambition of Dame Patience Jonathan to
see herself and be addressed as the political ‘lord’ of Rivers State,
her home state, despite the fact that she is even not recognised by the
constitution and is not occupying any elective office.
He recalled a recent accident which has occurred in the hometown of the
First Lady, Okrika. Dame Patience snatched the microphone from Gov.
Amaechi reprimanded him for saying he would buy off some buildings
around a school and demolish it so as to create enough space for
extracurricular activities for the school.
Governor Amaechi attributed the crisis to three things:
“The first was the attempt by the wife of the President to control the
Rivers State government. I remember when female senators came to me
after she met with them.
“She said to them: ‘I am the highest ranking officer from Rivers State
and I wonder why the Governor of Rivers State does not accord me that
respect’.
“I said in law, I don’t see the office of the wife of the President
being superior to that of the governor…The resistance is what you are
seeing.”
During Jonathan’s campaigns for 2011, he said the President and his
wife pleaded with him since he (Amaechi) wanted to be assured that if
Jonathan emerged, there would not be a multiplicity of presidents where
"you have the wife manipulating power, everybody doing one thing or the
other".
“I wanted to make sure that I and the Rivers people are fully protected. I wasn’t convinced.
“Now, within the period, the President had called me and the wife and
we sat together and made peace. There again, they promised that nobody
would hurt me, nobody would do this or that. That’s why this is a bit
difficult because there is nothing new that they can tell me that they
did not tell me in 2011 and they did not keep to their promise”.
He said the meeting was just between him, the President and Mrs.
Jonathan and he secured their promise to protect him, but "we had hardly
won the 2011 elections when the wife descended on me and the Rivers
State Government".
“Basically, the only way you can survive is if you then wake up in the
morning to say: ‘Good morning, ma. My name is Rotimi Amaechi, governor
of Rivers State. Do I greet this person or that person’?
“If she says no, then I don’t greet you. But if you need to run the
office of the governor the way it is supposed to be run, then you would
certainly have a disagreement with the wife of the President.
“It is about power and control. She appears to be somebody who loves power.”
The governor also said part of the problem was that the President took
about 41 oil wells from Rivers and handed them to Abia and Bayelsa, the
President’s state.
He also said the President was not comfortable with the fact that he (Amaechi) speaks his mind whenever he had the opportunity.
For example, he said he had complained many times about the rising
poverty and corruption among public office holders in the country to no
avail even as the country’s economy is in bad shape.
Another incident that pitched Amaechi against the President was that
the former accused the World Bank, during an event abroad, of aiding
Nigeria’s lamentable corruption.
He also lamented the increasing activities of oil thieves, adding that
attempts by his government to subdue the thieves have also been scuttled
by the President because of the problem between them, thus making the
country suffer the consequence.
“My colleague, the governor of Benue State, told me that teachers are
on strike in his state because of salary. And you would see more in the
next few months. The country is broke.
“The amount of money being stolen is enough to run this economy. They
set aside 455,000 barrels per day for local refining. We don’t refine in
Nigeria. Crude is refined overseas, brought back to Nigeria and then we
pay subsidy on it,” he said.
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