
Former Governor of Anambra State, Senator Chris Ngige, has alleged that his removal from office in 2006 was largely due to his refusal to appoint prominent political figure Chris Uba as his deputy governor.
Ngige, who also served as Minister of Labour and Employment under the administration of the late President Muhammadu Buhari, maintained that he remains a member of the All Progressives Congress (APC), although he is currently on sabbatical from active party politics.
In an interview in Abuja, Ngige
said he had no regrets about his ousting from office, describing it as part of
a divine plan. “I know those who were removing me. They showed their hands.
They gave me conditions, and I said I won’t do them,” Ngige said.
He recalled a meeting facilitated
by the late Senator Ibrahim Mantu, who allegedly delivered the conditions on
behalf of the political powerbrokers.
“Mantu came to me and told me the
things I was supposed to do. He said somebody sent him. I said, ‘Tell the
person I would not do it.’ He came back and said, ‘Let us go and see the
person.’ And the person told me the major condition would be that I should make
Chris Uba my deputy governor.”
Ngige said he rejected the demand
for two key reasons.
“First, if I made him deputy
governor, he would have immunity and could walk into my office and shoot me. If
he shot me, nothing would happen. Stories would be told that my orderly did it
by accident. Second, the people of Anambra would revolt against me. That’s the
even more important reason because the Anambra people have seen all those
people and they didn’t hide themselves. They came and burnt down the state.
“They burnt down the House of
Assembly, burned down the governor’s office, burned down the Anambra
Broadcasting Service, burned down the Anambra Education Commission
headquarters, and so many things. And the people did not hide themselves.
“They even made a broadcast on AIT
and said that I should not enter the state again, that they have taken over. So,
I said that these people who said they are taking over and burnt the place are
not the people who should come and govern you. I said no. You can take my seat.
No problem. God is in charge.”
Ngige, a devout Catholic, said he
believes strongly in predestination and accepted his removal as the will of
God.
“I’m happy with all that transpired
because that is how God willed it. When I was removed from government, somebody
came to me crying, saying if it were him, he would commit suicide. I told him,
‘I can go and get a rope for you.’ Because this is what God wants,” he said.
He explained that he chose not to
challenge the court ruling that removed him in order to avoid further unrest in
the state.
“I wasn’t born a governor. I was
born Nwabueze Ngige, son of a carpenter, my father was a foreman of works at
PWD,” he said.
Ngige also addressed his decision
to employ individuals perceived as “bad boys” during his tenure as governor,
noting that it was a deliberate move to tackle insecurity using local
resources.
“To secure your place is money, and
that is why the originators of budgets did what they call security votes. But
many governors and Chief Executive of states and even their deputy think that
Security money is pocket money, no.
“I’ll give you a typical example. I
took a bill to Anambra State House of Assembly in 2003 as I come for vigilante
services in every community, AVS bill, they passed it because before them, me
and them have had a brawl over kidnapping me and not kidnapping me and
resigning and not resigning but we became friends. We bond together now, we eat
together. We eat dinner together two times a month, and we discuss everything
about the state. So they passed it.
“So each community in Anambra State
then we told them to go and give us men, as a matter of fact, give us those who
are bad boys, write out the names of the bad boys separately, and then write
out the names of those you want us to employ.
“They wrote them, so we gave
employment to all of them and brought the bad boys and said, look, you people
are bad boys, look at the list, any false movement, you are dead, but you owe
us a duty to show us other bad boys, even those who have committed crime here
and run out of the state.
“And they complied, and we paid
them handsome amount of money, 30,000 Naira in 2003, 2004, 2005. That 30,000
Naira is the equivalent of about three million now. We paid; we gave them food
two times a day. We provided them busses. We provided them recharge card money,
so the people were ready to defend their state.
“In fact, when my police were
withdrawn, they made their security available for me they did. They secured
their state. Sometimes they go on operation to Aba (Abia State) to hotel and we
go and catch people who have committed one offense in Anambra before. That is
what security fund is all about. But many governors don’t spend security votes.
It’s pocket money for them; it’s money for buying property."
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