Sunday, 26 October 2014

Why Ihenacho should divest himself of clannish politics


Dr. Ihedoro







By COLLINS Ughalaa


Some people say the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) in Imo State has become the beautiful bride of Imo State politics; I want to add a rider to that: there are many interesting events going on in Imo State APGA. True, the entrance of Capt Emmanuel Ihenacho into the party was like a thunderbolt that took many by surprise; it was an event that was billed to change the face of the party. Yes, if perception is anything to the people, the entrance of Ihenacho to the party was what led to a change in the perception of the people of the state about the party, and that was after the party had been described as dead, and the cock described as meat good for Christmas by Governor Rochas Okorocha. To some people, what the party lost in Governor Rochas Okorocha was what it gained in Ihenacho; at least, they have a big man in their midst, one they believe has the capacity, not only to match but to win Okorocha in the 2015 governorship election.
But Ihenacho’s entrance did not leave the party without some headache: the first game was to have the control of the party structure; and if you know what having the party structure means in our kind of democracy where one man might think that a certain political party belongs to him and his family and that he should decide what goes on in the party at all times, you may not find it difficult to comprehend why politicians in our clime struggle to have the control of the party structure at all times. Ihenacho’s mission in APGA was not hidden: he came to run for the governorship of the state in 2015, and he has since kept no one in doubt about this. Then followed the dissolution of the state exco and the inauguration of a new one. And of course, it was said that Ihemacho masterminded this. What did you expect? That Ihenacho came to APGA to contest the governorship of the state was enough to suspect that any change in the leadership structure of the party was masterminded by him, but he has since said he did not play any role in it. Again, the new exco, as if acting a script, dissolved the local government structure of the party. This was actually the climax of the controversies that have trailed the entrance of Ihenacho into the party. That dissolution ruffled some feathers, and not long afterwards, Chief Martin Agbaso left the party to join the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), making the coast clearer for Ihenacho.
With Agbao leaving the party and Ihenacho gaining a firmer hold of the party, the stage was clear for his adoption by the leadership of the party in the state as the consensus candidate of the party for the governorship election in 2015. And although this has raised some dust in the party, the adoption of Capt Ihenacho as the consensus candidate of the party for the governorship election in 2015 is a great feat, and those who engineered it deserve some commendation. But to me, that is not all: there is a greater feat to achieve; there is a greater huddle to jump.
This huddle is the overcoming of clannish politics. If Ihenacho can overcome clannish politics, that is, playing politics or running his Captain Ihenacho Campaign Organization (CICO) as if it were an extension of his kindred meeting, it will enhance his chances of clinching the governorship of the state. Imolites have complained against what they call the government of my family for my family and by my family, and they are not ready to sell a dog and buy a monkey. What they want is change, real change. Then, how would the change come through the display of clannish politics?
If you take a critical look at the constitution of CICO, a campaign organization for a man that wants to be the next governor of Imo State, the campaign organization of a man that wants to bring the change that Imo people have been searching for, you will only weep. You will weep that apart from two members of CICO, the youth leader and legal adviser, the rest are from Enmekuku. They all come from Ihenacho’s community. They are all his kinsmen. Then my question is: what sort of campaign organization is CICO? Or is it Emekuku Village Association? What on earth was the reason behind the constitution of a team like this if not for clannish interests; if not to patronize brothers in the spirit of brotherhood? And, my worry is, if a governorship hopeful can pursue his political agenda with men like these, what assurance do we have that when he wins we will not have a government of Emekuku for Emekuku and by Emekuku?
In the spirit of the endorsement as the consensus candidate of the party, and going forward, what Ihenacho should do is to immediately disband the members of the organization and reconstitute it. He should do this as a matter of urgency, else the thinking that he is running an Enmekuku Campaign Organization will continue on the minds of the people. Continuing with his kinsmen dominating the organization is a defeatist strategy: the picture it paints is that Ihenacho is clannish; that he only considers his own brothers. It gives the impression also that Ihenacho is not at home in his Emekuku community and that he needs his brothers on board to capture his own community. It also gives the impression that Ihenacho does not have the contact spread; and of course, it shows how his mind is working: that only his Emekuku kinsmen will save him and make him governor. And perhaps, if he wins the governorship election, he will only appoint his kinsmen into positions. This picture is bad, and Ihenacho does not need it.
Tell me what value appointing his Emekuku kinsmen and making them dominate CICO or making his kinsman the CICO DG would bring to his electoral victory in 2015? There are two INEC wards in Emekuku. Ihenacho, the Agbasos and the Chikwes come from Emekuku Ward 1 which has a voting strength of 6,295 voters. And since Chief Martin Agbaso and Dr Mrs. Kema Chikwe do not feel good about Ihenacho, no one needs a soothsayer to know that the 6,295 registered voters in Emekuku will be seriously contested; and following the level of influence Agbaso and Chikwe command in the area, not to talk of other politicians from other political parties in the area, it is wise to conclude that Iheacho should not count on the votes from his community because the prospect of violence in the governorship election in the area may mar the election and render it inconclusive. Then what magic will his kinsmen who now dominate CICO perform? What magic will the DG of CICO, Dr Toney Ihedoro do; or better put, what surgery will he perform?
Ihenacho should do the needful and remove Ihedoro and his team if he really wants to win the election, because you cannot win election in Imo State with a team like this one led by Dr Ihedoro; a team that has become, to my judgement, incompetent and ill constituted.  What Ihedoro has achieved so far is to create an Emekuku cabal that sees their membership of CICO as means to get jobs; they see CICO as Ihenacho’s means of creating jobs and empowering his people. As far as they are concerned they see CICO as a lifeline or a life-support programme. But that is far from the truth of the matter. This Emekuu cabal has held CICO hostage and cannot make any meaningful converts for the organization. The Emekuku cabal led by Dr Ihedoro is only interested in feathering their nests by spreading rumours and gossiping about other people. That is what they do. If you doubt what I am talking about, let Ihenacho conduct a performance audit on all the members of CICO, starting with the DG, and let us see what the outcome will be. Ihedoro will not allow this, but I cite some examples: few months ago, Hon Eudora Igwe had a programme at Orlu and CICO was invited. Capt Ihenacho was supposed to lead the team of CICO to the event but he was out of town. And naturally it fell on Dr Ihedoro to lead the team. We were 3 journalists that went with them to cover the programme for CICO, and by the time we got to the venue of the programme it was raining. Yes, it was raining but not heavily, and Hon Igwe was taking the salute when the DG called me to take a group picture of CICO members that attended the programme. Of course, I obliged. Do you know what happened after the group photograph? The DG ordered everyone to board the bus for home journey to Owerri, and for CICO, the programme was over without a mention or recognition of CICO at the programme. We left the programme in about 10 minutes after we arrived, and we came back to Owerri, just to allow the DG to share the money and everyone would go home. That outing would have been worse had I not personally prevailed on the DG to grant an interview to us in his CICO office. That remains that only interview I have read granted by the CICO DG; every other thing you read in the papers are comments made by Ihenacho himself. CICO lost the opportunity to showcase Ihenacho in Orlu at that event just because of a clueless DG who should have no business handling a campaign organization.
What is more incompetent than this? Another opportunity came up: that was the day the members of the party revolted following the dissolution of the local government structures of the party. I had been called up early morning that day and informed of the development; and trust me, I dashed to APGA secretariat with my midget conducting interviews and monitoring the situation. The majority of APGA members that were protesting that day had Ihenacho on their lips: they said it was Ihenacho who engineered the dissolution. All the journalists covering the protest wanted to see the CICO DG and speak with him but they could not see him. Then I put a call to him and told him we wanted to speak with him. His answer? He said it was a party matter and that he was not in a position to speak on it. The consequence was that the following day many newspapers came with bold headlines of how Ihenacho was splitting APGA. I can say why he did that: on the day we interviewed him after the Hon Igwe’s programme, I remember he was very careful not to offend anyone, and he practically asked us to delete anything that we thought Captain would not like. That gave me the impression of a DG that does not read or know the mind of his principal; a DG that does not know what he should say and what he should not say to get his principal upset. I also thought it was possible he was struggling not to offend Agbaso. Subsequent event would breathe some life into my suspicion.
Another reason Ihenacho should remove the DG and his group immediately is that the Dr Ihedoro led CICO cannot be trusted. We have a campaign organization where information is leaked to the opposition, even the main opposition, at a frightening speed. In CICO there are no secrets. This is the opposite of politics which is full of conspiracy, and you cannot effect a conspiracy with people that cannot seal their lips, with people that are worse than parrots; with people that talk more than women. Any politician that takes this type of unhealthy risk has concluded his fate: that he will not win. On several occasions meetings held in CICO or with Captain got leaked while the meetings were going on, and this leakage has been traced to no less a person than CICO DG. Just recently, Hon Dan Ikepazu held a meeting with Captain and while the meeting was going on the DG sent a text message to Agbaso that Hon Ikpeazu was with Ohenacho in a meeting at his Owerri residence. And just immediately Agbaso put a call to Hon Ikepeazu, and his first question was “Dan where are you right now?” An investigation began immediately and the leakage was traced to the DG. There is yet another one: a senatorial aspirant from Okigwe Zone recently held a meeting with Captain and it was leaked to Agbaso. Investigation also showed that it was the DG that leaked the information. Help me ask Captain the kind of DG he has.
The Dr Ihedoro led CICO has been enmeshed in controversies about looking at and chasing married women who are also members of CICO or those who come around CICO for one thing or the other. In fairness to the CICO women, they are decent women that have no time for nonsense. This no nonsense attitude of the CICO women has however made them objects of gossips with the CICO men. There was a celebrated case that almost burst the bubble. A married woman (name withheld) was blackmailed by a certain member of CICO of having slept with her when that never happened. The background to the story is that the woman wanted a post at CICO and the Emekuku cabal swore that until they slept with her she would not get the post. So, to the cabal it was a game of who would get her. Therefore, a certain member of CICO, in other to feel important before the other members of the Emekuku cabal cooked up a story and spread it among them that he had slept with the woman. The woman is someone I know that cannot come close to doing a thing like that; therefore, she told her husband who did not take the matter lightly. It was a big case, and it eventually got to Captain’s table. And I tell you, Captain was shocked at that ugly development, and of course, he had nothing to do with it. Upon investigation it was found to be false, a mere cooked up story to tarnish the image of the innocent and decent married woman whom I respect so much and an act meant to force her out. As we speak, that woman did not get the position she was looking for. Such is how powerful this Emekuku cabal is.
The Emekuku cabal that has dominated CICO thrives in conspiracy and gossip and outright lies against those they term “outsiders” – a term meaning that someone is not from Emekuku. Because they are largely incompetent, the cabal uses conspiracy, gossip and lies as war weapon to keep away from competition. They feel frightened by the presence of those the call “outsiders” and they feel comfortable in their small enclave of the Emekuku cabal that adds no value to CICO. Once you show up at CICO and the cabal sees you close to Captain, they come up with a sweet lie that only the very strong in character can dictate. They say all kinds of things to Captain about you; and because of the way the cabal operates, what one says about you will be confirmed to Captain by another member of the cabal upon inquiry. And this way, he has no option than to believe them. And before you spell your name, you are frustrated out. If you join this cabal to a programme you will hear nothing else other than gossips about others or talks about women. Very absurd!
Dr. Ihedoro has shown that he does not have the capacity to run CICO in several ways. He does not have the knowledge power about running a campaign organization. Ihedoro is a Medical Doctor, and there is nothing before me that suggests he has got the requisite knowledge power about the intricacies or the workings of a campaign organization. Moreover, a DG that leaks information to the opposition camp is not worth his salt. Again, Ihedoro’s antecedent in campaign management is an added disadvantage. What we know is that the two candidates he had managed did not win. He managed Dr Mrs. Kema Chikwe, and we know that she suffered a humiliating defeat in her own ward. What of Chief Henry Njoku? He lost his bid to the House of Representatives. And who was his DG? Dr Ihedoro.
There was also a story of a top ranking CICO member who approached Okey Ezeh, a top governorship contender under the platform of APGA, to buy him a jeep so that he could collapse the CICO structure to him. This is the height of betrayal from people that are “trusted” allies. The deal did not sail through because Okey Ezeh did not trust the man. He said the man’s offer was questionable.
There is another nauseating practice going on in CICO which Captain is not aware of. The top rankers in CICO go about collecting money from aspirants promising to put them under Captain’s structure and to secure them Captain’s support. And following this, they go about churning different lists for the control of the various APGA and CICO structures at the various wards and local governments. This has been a major cause of trouble in the organization.    
The DG, apart from feeling the comfort of the CICO office and enjoying the title of CICO DG, appears not to also have the connection power. This is what is needed too to win the election. The DG should be someone who knows his ways around the state, one who has spread his net across the state. If he had it his former principals wouldn’t have lost their elections. A campaign DG should be someone that commands respects and has built his bridge across the state so that his principal would cross easily. But that seems not to be the case with the CICO DG. He lacks the interpersonal relationship which is a veritable tool for managing a campaign organization. It is his lack of inter personal relationship that makes him feel frightened by the presence of “outsiders” instead of tapping from their various experiences to move CICO forward.
There is nothing the Emekuku cabal can offer to the running of CICO and to the electoral values of Ihenacho. The best they can do is to go back to the home front and see what they can do about the less than 6,300 votes in Emekuku Ward 1 and leave the running of CICO and Ihenacho’s governorship campaign to “outsiders” who are knowledgeable about the running of a campaign machine. Ihenacho has this knowledgeable “outsiders” in their numbers, only that the cabal won’t let them come close.
They should be disbanded and a new one set up immediately. Let them go back and work from the home front, and if Captain wins he can bring them in and give them any position he likes. But for now, Captain needs to win the election first before patronizing the Emekuku cabal. Winning the election is more important now, and Captain should choose between losing the election and keeping the Emekuku cabal or losing the Emekuku cabal and winning the election. The choice is his to make. But in the event that he fails to make the right choice, APGA should inherit his campaign structure since he has been adopted as consensus candidate by the party.                                   
                          

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