Tag: Ovie Omo-Agege

  • Omo-Agege reacts after Akpabio emerged as Senate President

    Omo-Agege reacts after Akpabio emerged as Senate President

    As his term as Deputy President of the Senate ended on Tuesday, Senator Ovie Omo-Agege, who represented Delta Central in the 9th Assembly, congratulated Senator Godswill Akpabio who emerged the new President of the upper legislative chamber.

    Omo-Agege who is also the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) during the March 18, 2023 gubernatorial poll in Delta State also felicitated Senator Jubrin Barau who emerged as the Deputy President of the Senate.

    Omo-Agege also sent his felicitations to Rt. Hon. Tajudeen Abbass who is the new Speaker of the House of Representatives.

    Similarly, he congratulated others who emerged principal officers in both arms of the National Assembly.

    For Senator Ede Dafinone who succeeded him as the representative of Delta Central in the Senate, Omo-Agege extolled his virtues, doggedness and vision, assuring the district and Delta State that Dafinone is coming with the determination to make the National Assembly more responsive.

    Also, Senator Omo-Agege congratulated Senator Joel-Onowakpo Thomas (Delta South), who he described as a thorough professional desirous of serving the people of the Delta South Senatorial district.

    Omo-Agege expressed confidence in the leadership qualities and drive of Akpabio, stating that with him at the helm, the National Assembly is in safe and reliable hands to compliment the executive branch in charting a new course for Nigeria.

    According to a press release issued by his Media Adviser, Mr. Sunny Areh, Omo-Agege sought the cooperation of Nigerians for the 10th Assembly, noting that the great and diverse representation bodes well for the country.

    “The fact that we now have more political parties with significant representation in the National Assembly bodes well for the country. I believe this will make the 10th assembly more robust and inventive. And with Senate President Godswill Akpabio steering the ship, federal lawmakers will more positively engage President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in giving the people greater hope for the future”, Omo-Agege stated.

  • Omo-Agege hails Buhari for University of Medical Sciences, Delta

    Omo-Agege hails Buhari for University of Medical Sciences, Delta

    The Deputy Senate President, Sen. Ovie Omo-Agege  has commended President Muhammadu Buhari for  approving the establishment of the Federal University of Medical and Health Science, Kwale in Delta.

    Omo-Agege said this in a statement in Asaba on Thursday by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr Sunny Areh.

    ”Following persistent strategic and  fruitful engagements between the Deputy President of the Senate, Sen. Ovie Omo-Agege and the Minister of Education, Malam Adamu Adamu.

    “And a subsequent direct request to His Excellency, President Muhammadu Buhari, the Federal Government has now approved the establishment of the Federal University of Medical and Health Science, Kwale.

    “This is a great win for all our people, especially the Ndokwa nation.

    ‘It is a fulfillment of a major campaign promise by the deputy Senate president to the good people of Ndokwa Nation during the last electoral campaigns. We give all the glory to God Almighty,” he said.

    Omo-Agege said that he was eternally grateful to the President for his undeniable patriotic and equitable leadership spirit which has again resulted in the establishment of this much needed institution.

    He said that the gesture came at the heel of the establishment of the Federal Polytechnic Orogun in Ughelli North LGA of the state, both for the good of the people.

    The deputy senate president also thanked the Minister of Education, Adamu Adamu, for demonstrating admirable patriotism and respect for positive friendship in managing the huge responsibilities of state.

    Omo-Agege said that the establishment of the Federal University of Medical and Health Science, Kwale was without question, a worthy achievement.

    “It’s my hope that our leaders will work together to realize its proper take-off and sustainable functioning for the benefits of our youths.”

  • EXCLUSIVE: Omo-Agege’s brother speaks with TheNewsGuru.com, says DSP not Igbe Worshipper

    EXCLUSIVE: Omo-Agege’s brother speaks with TheNewsGuru.com, says DSP not Igbe Worshipper

    Dr Victor Omo-Agege, an Igbe Onori, and brother to Deputy Senate President Ovie Omo-Agege, who is the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate for the 2023 governorship election in Delta State holds no bar in this explosive interview with TheNewsGuru.com (TNG).

    Recall that in run-up to the March 18th governorship election, DSP Omo-Agege was widely rumoured to be a revered member of the Igbe religious group, described to be a cult-like family religion of marine spirit worshippers in Delta.

    To make matters worse for the Deputy Senate President, videos went viral, prior to the election, on social media of some Igbe group members, some praying for Senator Omo-Agege, while others were taunting Christians in the State that Igbe worshippers will take over the Christian Chapel in the Government House, Asaba.

    However, Dr Omo-Agege, who declared himself as a proud anointed Igbe Onori, denied the DSP is an Igbe Worshipper, stressing that Omo-Agege, who lost the 2023 governorship election in Delta to Rt. Hon. Sheriff Oborevwori has always been a staunch Catholic.

    He, meanwhile, added that insinuations that Igbe worshippers will take over the Chapel in the Government House if Omo-Agege was elected Governor is not in line with tenets of the Igbe religion.

    “The DSP is a staunch Catholic. There are 1,001 pictures of him in churches before he became a political figure out there. I attended his wedding in a Catholic Church. Quote me: “he is not and has never been an Igbe member”,” Dr Omo-Agege told TNG.

    In the interview with TNG reproduced below, the Nigerian-American dissected the Igbe religion and bursted some myths about the Igbe religion. He also lambasted the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in Delta State and likened DSP Omo-Agege to former U.S. President Barack Obama, who he said was persecuted for his religious leaning.

    Read excerpt from the interview of Dr Victor Omo-Agege with TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) below:

    Let’s meet you. Please, introduce yourself

    First and foremost, thanks for the opportunity to discuss and clarify some misinformation about Igbe and the Omo-Agege family. I am Dr. Victor Omo-Agege, a US Navy Veteran currently a Federal Project Director with the United States Department of Energy. I reside in Washington State.

    Your family is reputedly the founder of the Igbe religious group of which you are a senior member. What exactly is the Igbe group to the uninitiated? What does your title mean and how do you function?

    There is a lot of misconception and misinformation out there about the Igbe religion, and a major one is my family, i.e., the Omo-Agege family is the founder of the Igbe religion. I have to say, in capital letters, that is simply false. Igbe was founded in Kokori by Prophet Ubiesha Etarakpo. It was the first religion of its time to preach the belief in One God in the Niger Delta. To become an Igbe member, all you have to do is to accept there is only one God and no intermediary. Then you have to destroy all idols in your possession. Igbe is the name of the religion, but you don’t worship Igbe. You worship God. Like you don’t worship the church or Islam.

    “Another misconception is that Igbe is a religious cult of folks who worship a Marine Spirit. The Marine spirit is not and never was part of Prophet Ubiesha’s doctrine. Some people practise this, and out of ignorance, people call them Igbe; they are the Igbe-Rame meaning the Water Worshippers. We are Igbe or Igbe-Orhe. We don’t worship any idols but God directly. You can leave anytime you like, and there are no sanctions or punishment. Igbe is a way of life that emphasizes the moral obligations of doing right and doing no harm to your fellow human being”.

    I happened to have been blessed by having parents who were free thinkers and believed religion is a choice between an individual and his God. I have in my life studied a lot of religions. My brother, Azania and I were mass servers in the Catholic church during our teens. I have prayed with Muslims and knocked door to door with Jehovah’s Witnesses. I prefer to classify myself as a spiritual person instead of a religious person. I believe in one God, the belief to love my neighbour as myself and wish for the next man what you wish for yourself. I am an Onori. The Onori serves as a leader and counsellor to the Uku, the head of his branch or Ogwa.

    How do you marry your serious academic background with being a senior member of the Igbe group?

    I won’t classify myself as a senior member of the Igbe religion. I am a servant of my people, ready to serve when called upon. We are all equal in the eyes of God.

    “Having the last name, Omo-Agege comes with expectations. My parents expected us to be the best we could be” – Dr Victor Omo-Agege.

    My sisters and brothers were very ambitious and accomplished. Frankly, I had no choice if I wanted to come home to the dinner table. We are a family where you have to hold your own intellectually at the dinner table. God blessed me with the opportunities and strength to complete my educational goals.

    As a brother to the DSP, there is the general belief that he too is a senior member of the Igbe group while also being a Catholic. Is it true; if not, why?

    The belief is political propaganda originating from the PDP camp. The DSP is a staunch Catholic. There are 1,001 pictures of him in churches before he became a political figure out there. I attended his wedding in a catholic church.

    “Quote me. “He Senator [Ovie Omo-Agege] is not and has never been an Igbe member” – Dr Victor Omo-Agege.

    You are fully aware the DSP at one time was a member of the PDP in Delta state and served as the SSG. Why did they never have a problem with him being an Igbe member, then? Pure political propaganda. Don’t forget they also accused Barack Obama of being a Muslim. It’s just gutter politics.

    Did you see the videos done by some Igbe group members, some praying for him, others taunting the Christians that the Igbe group will take over the Christian Chapel in the Government House, Asaba?

    No, I did not. If you have a copy, please send it to me, and I will get to the bottom of it.

    “Igbe members, like any other religious group, can pray for anyone. We all need prayers. Insinuating they will take over the Chapel in the Government House is not in line with the Igbe tenet to not harm your fellow man” – Dr Victor Omo-Agege.

    As I know him, my brother will ensure the State House welcomes all Deltans and their religious freedom enshrined in our Constitution.

    In your considered opinion, how did you rate the chances of DSP Omo-Agege at the just concluded governorship elections?

    In a free and fair environment, The DSP won hands down.

    Did you play any role in his attempt to win the governorship seat? Are you also an APC member?

    No, I am not an APC, PDP, or Labor Party member. I am tired of seeing the people of Delta State suffering. I believe in the DSP’s integrity, vision, and capabilities to make drastic changes in the state as he did in his senatorial district.

    As a Nigerian-American, like your brother, are you satisfied with the way politics is played and elections are conducted in Nigeria? What can we do differently? How do we get it right?

    Clever question. Yes, I am Nigerian American, but my brother, the DSP is Nigerian Nigerian. My brother went to St George’s Obinomba and Uniben. Trust me; he is solely committed to uplifting the state of the Nigerian people.

    What do you think of the Obidient movement which swept through the country in the last one year?

    Great. It was nice to see the youth galvanized.

    How do we get our politics right and Nigeria put on a proper pedestal to economic and political development?

    Nigeria is a complicated country. Ethnic and religious sentiments easily divide us. This will be an excellent question for the DSP. He has lived in that arena for the last 20 years. I don’t want to give you a canned bubble gum answer. I can only say Nigeria is a failed state, and change is needed and needed now.

  • Delta guber: Gbagi asks tribunal to disqualify Oborevwori, Omo-Agege, others

    Delta guber: Gbagi asks tribunal to disqualify Oborevwori, Omo-Agege, others

    Chief Kenneth Gbagi, Social Democratic Party (SDP) governorship candidate in Delta, has appealed to the election petition tribunal in Asaba to disqualify the Governor-elect, Sheriff Oborevwori over alleged forgery.

    He also sought the disqualification of the All Progressives Congress (APC) candidate, Ovie Omo-Agege; Labour Party Candidate (LP) Ken Pela; the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) candidate Mr Great Ogboru, on the ground of violation of the 2022 Electoral Act.

    Gbagi, a former Minister of Education, made the call in an interview with newsmen in Abuja.

    The SDP candidate in the March 18 governorship election, had filed a 79-page petition against the governor-elect and the other frontline candidates, seeking for their disqualification .

    Gbagi in a certified true copy petition with No.WPT/DL/GOV/2023 to the tribunal, alleged that the candidates, in their attempts to meet the constitutional requirements of eligibility for 2023 governorship election, presented forged documents while filling the INEC forms.

    He said the forged documents included multiple sworn statutory declaration of age and affidavits, inconsistency of names of some of the candidates, perjurious swearing of affidavits.

    Other electoral infraction alleged to be committed by the candidates also included lieying under oath, claims of possessing and non possession of various academic qualifications and alleged financial impropriety by one of the candidates, among other infractions.

    He also hinged his call for their disqualification on the alleged degrees of electoral malpractice at the march 18 poll in Delta.

    He listed the alleged malpractice to include over voting, vote buying induced by the candidates.

    He said there were situations where the total number of votes recorded and allotted were more than the Permanent Voters Cards (PVCs) collected by voters that exceeded the number of registered voters in the polling unit.

    Other alleged infractions, according to him , included alteration of some results sheets which did not reflect on the duplicate copies given to party agents, mutilation of form EC8As, polling units without corresponding voting points result sheets, over and under balloting, among others.

    ”I am a candidate, and I am saying, we are candidates of these election, but this people who are candidates ought not to be candidate and the tribunal is the appropriate place.”

    The SDP candidate, consequently in the petition, urged the tribunal to declare non and void and of no effect, the Certificate of Return issued by INEC to the candidate of PDP as the winner of the governorship election in Delta State.

    He further urged the tribunal to withdraw the Certificate of Return and issue a fresh certificate to him as duly qualified and elected governor.

    “For those of us, who contested and particapated, I am the only one on the list  that is qualified.

    “The election has been held, marks were allocated to us, my prayer is that they were not qualified, and I should be declared as the winner of the election because I am the only qualified candidate in the first instance,”he said.

    He said it was the right time to bring up the matter as records and experience showed that pre election cases most times do not go far.

    “Go back to the Electoral Act, I could not have raised an objection on issue of a candidate of a party that I am not a member.

    ”Every one who went to pre-election matter, none of them went any where, this is the appropriate time, to raise this issue,” he said

    Meanwhile, effort to get reaction of the Chief Press Secretary to the Delta Governor -elect, Mr Dennis Otu, was unsuccessful as he didn’t respond to the WhatsApp message request for his reaction.

  • Why and How Ovie Omo-Agege lost in Delta State – By Mideno Bayagbon

    Why and How Ovie Omo-Agege lost in Delta State – By Mideno Bayagbon

    A lot has been said in the media, especially on political platforms on television and in the social media, about the gubernatorial elections in Delta State, which the candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party, the Right Honourable Sheriff Francis Oborevwori, won convincingly, pulling over 360,060 votes to Ovie Omo-Agege, the APC’s candidate’s 240,000. The fire works  have expectedly heightened and the intense battle which engulfed the state during the campaigns, and the elections proper, are set to shift to the courts. As has become the tradition with our politicians, especially in the South of Nigeria, no politician agrees he or she was fairly beaten, clean and square.

    That is why, typically, the Deputy Senate President, Ovie Omo-Agege of the APC, who was the main opponent of the PDP in the contest, in refusing to accept defeat and congratulate his rival, has amply served notice that he is heading to the courts to “retrieve” what he claims is his mandate.  Under Nigerian law, and as it has become the norm, the  Courts have over the years become the final arbiter, whose vote decides who occupies which office and who does not. Sometimes, the Court rulings are so outlandish, so stupendously buried in legalese, most people have been left wondering how technicalities supervene and out-do the will of the people. In carrying out their duty, the courts, especially the Supreme Court, have unfortunately acquired an unsavoury reputation in the public eye.

    For some of the politicians, it is a case of impunity. They do everything and anything possible to be declared winners. Then they tell their opponents: go to court. For some, it does not matter whether they are declared winner by the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, or not. They tell whoever cares to listen that they know their ways around the courts. One of such persons is the current governor of Imo State, Hope Uzodinma, who is called, by his people, the Supreme Court Governor of Imo State. Like him, DSP Omo-Agege, and his followers boast, that no matter what, they can always get the courts to declare the APC candidate winner. They point to the two previous elections which he has won through the courts as evidence.

    Nevertheless, even as both parties prepare to present their evidence in court, as an active participant, and as most Deltans will testify, there are some cogent reasons, both from what happened on election day and precursors to it, why the candidate of the APC, Omo-Agege, could not have won. Yet he had so many things going for him. The first of these is the implosion in the rival PDP, the factions which sprouted uncontrollably from the disagreements between the acclaimed leader of the party in the State, Chief James Ibori and Governor Ifeanyi Okowa over who should be the candidate of their party in the March 18th governorship elections. Their divided house became the hunting ground for the APC candidate. The unthinkable happened. An aggrieved Ibori, was said to have sworn that over his dead body would the Ifeanyi Okowa-supported Sheriff Oborevwori, who emerged the candidate of the party, become governor of the state.

    Expectedly, because of his influence in the party and in the state, a lot of people kow-towed to him. Many who were sitting on the fence claimed they got personal calls or visits from the Odidigborigbo himself to not allow Sheriff Oborevwori become governor of Delta State. A lot of them obeyed and resigned from the party, even at the dying hours, to throw their weight, behind the candidate of the APC who most of them, before now, could not stand, and had no respect or regard for. The Ovuozorie Macauleys, the Omizu Odebalas and other known  heavyweight chieftains of the PDP  jumped over the fence and landed on the laps of Ovie Omo-Agege. An impotent feat, it turned out, as most of them lost in their units and wards during the elections. But Ovie had expected to reap much political capital from the problem in the PDP and from the high powered defections.

    It is either he and Chief Ibori did not study well the political terrain and the impact of the deliberate Okowa political engineering, wrought over the last almost eight years, or they underestimated it and thought overwhelming it would be a walk in the park. I think they somehow failed to understand what Senator Okowa has done to the PDP, in the years of James Ibori’s absence. While the party structure on ground was built around the big party men in each ward and local government when Ibori and Dr Emmanuel Uduaghan held sway, Okowa turned the applecart and devolved power to the units and the wards, built several layers of leadership that are not dependent on any “big politician”. The structure of PDP in the state today is built in the image of Governor Okowa who has control of it. That’s why Ibori’s candidate and others were beaten silly during the primaries. That explains why those who defected to the APC could not move with the structures in their areas, and could not deliver the vote.

    Ovie Omo-Agege, like Olorogun Kenneth Gbagi, started this dream run for the governorship of the state early. He had ample strategies which he diligently implemented over the last four years. He appointed a lot of Special Assistants from all the eight local government areas of Delta Central, spreading his tentacles to other parts of the state in a bid to build a formidable groundswell for his ambition. This was further enhanced when he was able to convince the Buhari government to award the monthly N4.5 billion Pipeline Surveillance Contract to three entities: Tompolo;  his own younger brother, Jimmy Omo-Agege; and a company linked to Friday Osanebi;  who ended up as his deputy governorship candidate, in their failed bid to be the occupants of Osadebe House, the Delta State Government House.

    With this, Ovie’s brother, Jimmy,  had a lot of “boys” enrolled who got mostly a N60,000 monthly stipend, instead of between N200,000 to N250,000 which Tompolo pays his enrolees. He was seemingly able to build a formidable war chest from this and from the five federal projects he attracted to his Oromuru-Orogun village. He also had some constituency projects in some parts of Delta Central, in what his main opponent, Oborevwori, described as N35,000 solar powered streetlights which worked only for a time. He also had some low hanging fruits projects executed in some communities. But his senatorial zone, it seems, did not forgive him, that all the major projects which the federal government assigned to the state, he took all to his small Oromuru-Orogun village. We are talking about high ticket, hundreds of billion Naira projects. None was sited elsewhere else. All were warehoused by him.

    DSP Omo-Agege, before now, was known as a revered member of IGBE group, a cult-like family religion of marine spirit  worshippers. His grand father established it. His father, who at a time, was the Chief Judge of Bendel State, took over the mantle when his own father died and the DSP and his siblings, have a modern, grandiose shrine in their family  house where hundreds and at times thousands of worshippers frequently congregate to fellowship.

    In the heat of the elections, as public angst rose, members of the IGBE cult did videos promoting him and taunting his opponents, swearing that they were set to occupy the Christian Chapel in Government House, Asaba. The Christian community, in the state, rose in  furious anger. It became a battle of altars: whose God would be supreme in the state. A mosquito campaign, mouth to mouth, strategy ensured that all Christians heard the boast of the IGBE cult group. It became expedient, while not dissociating him entirely from the IGBE  group, to announce that Ovie Omo-Agege is a baptized and confirmed Catholic. But the IGBE group, his friends and associates inflicted wounds have irretrievably gone viral; damage done. It was too late for damage control.

    The Deputy Senate President will agree that the churches helped to mobilise against him. So did the people of Delta North who from his antecedents, believe that he will never allow that zone of the state to ever produce a governor again, as he is against the zoning arrangement in the PDP. Added to this is the fact that there are no significant leaders of the party in Delta North who are not in one turf war or the other with him. Senator Peter Nwaobosi is in jail for corruption. Ex Speaker of the Delta State House of Assembly, Victor Oche, is at daggers drawn with him, just like Cairo Ojuogbo, who has come out forcefully, openly in television interviews, to laugh at him and state why  Omo-Agege lost woefully. Add to that the fact that the APC is virtually non-existent in the nine local government areas which make up Delta north.

    His attempt to win over Government Ekpemupolo, the one they call Tompolo, with the Pipeline Surveillance contract did not yield the desired result too.  Tompolo chose to be neutral while his two brothers worked assiduously for Sheriff Oborevwori, the candidate of the PDP. With Godsday Orubebe hardly a significant force in the Ijaw enclave and Ayiri Emami a spent force in Itsekiri-land, having been stripped of his title and consigned to the background, the likes of Ereyitomi, JFK Omatsone, Michael Diden, (Ejele) (who though could not actualise his senatorial dream), ensured, that along with the Itsekiris, Ijaws and Urhobos of the Warri, their local government areas remain strongholds of the PDP.

    Even in Delta Central, his home constituency, none of the top leaders who helped establish the APC in the state were with him. He had earlier schemed most of them out of the party. Great Ogboru was pushed out. Festus Keyamo even as the only federal minister from the state could not get a leg room because of the manipulations which Omo-Agege entrenched to be the Lord of the Manor. His brash, ego and ambition fueled takeover of the party meant that he became a big fish in a very small pond. Aggrieved APC members saw the elections as pay back time.

    Other reasons for the failure must include the fact that with the tsunami caused by the Obidients group in the state, and the failure of INEC’s BVAS and iREV, those who thought they could do election business as usual were shocked by INEC’s zeal to make the BVAS and iREV work in the Gubernatorial and House of Assembly elections.

    Almost all the candidates fell for the new scam in town after the Obidients wreaked havoc in the Presidential Election. Remember the Obidients and the Christians propelled by the desire to stop Alhaji Bola Tinubu’s Moslem-Moslem ticket,  easily swept aside the old guards to register their voice forcefully in the state. The scramble for the youth votes saw the APC candidate and others courting a plurality of newly emergent groups, who all claim to be the engine room of the Obidient group in the state. They were easily duped.

    Even the Labour Party candidate fell for it. He attempted to rev up a nonexistent campaign, spurning offers from the APC candidate to step down for him and mobilise the Obidients in his favour. In his desperation, Omo-Agege fell for most of these groups of young men and women, evidently scammers, who all claim they will replicate the seeming magic of the Presidential Election in the state, for him. They were, however, nowhere to be found on election day. Instead, it was the old women and men, the Igbos and non-Deltans, and the Christian community who came out in their numbers.

    There is no doubt that a swat of Deltans, beaten black and blue, pauperized and traumatized by the wicked and grossly incompetent  General Muhammadu Buhari APC government, wanted nothing to do with Ovie, who as DSP was the number five citizen of Nigeria in the last four years. He did not hide his uncritical adoration  of the President. Not once did he empathize with the common people who could not get their own money to take care of their needs. Secured in his huge retinue of security details, he seemed unconcerned about Deltans who lived a scarred live, induced by the runaway insecurity of unrestrained killer herdsmen, kidnappers and sundry terrorists. The APC candidate is the Delta Star face of this bad government. Rewarding him with their vote was out of the question.

    In his quiet moments, when it is between him, his conscience and his God, Ovie Omo-Agege knows he could not have and did not win the gubernatorial elections of 18th March, 2023. The courts, when they eventually sit can only confirm the will of the people of Delta State who wanted the streetwise Sheriff Oborevwori, who collects his certificate from INEC today, to be their governor.

  • Guber election 2023: Why Deltans rejected Omo-Agege – By Akpomudiare Justin

    Guber election 2023: Why Deltans rejected Omo-Agege – By Akpomudiare Justin

    On March 18th 2023, when the people of Delta State went out to vote for a  civilian governor, the greater majority may have heeded the advice of an  erudite French poet who urged that virtuous minds should actively and  vigorously scorn the vices that wicked minds stimulate, it was therefore not  surprising that the majority of voters in Delta state rejected Senator Ovie Omo-Agege, the face behind the stealing of the national symbol of Legislative  authority in the National Assembly in full glare of a global audience.  Furthermore, voters in Delta State have several other reasons for an outright  rejection of Senator Omo Agege that bear further explication.

    At first there were some Deltans who were willing to embrace the democratic  notion of such a politician entering the race for the highest office in Delta state,  if only in the hope that reelection concerns might motivate other political actors  to behave in the voters’ best interest, but the entry of Senator Ovie- Omo Agege  into the race further allowed closer scrutiny of his public records. Under public  scrutiny it was unearthed that he had a fuzzy and shady past record in the  United States of America where he was reportedly disbarred from practicing  Law in the United States of American for an offence he committed in 1995  which involved a case of forgery and fraud for which he was charged in the Los  Angelese County Superior Court with case number BA111331hich indicated in  the charge sheet that on or about March 7, 1992 h3 committed the crime of  forgery of check in violation of Penal Code section 470, felony. Where he signed  a check in the name of Elpert Defrietas in the amount of $890 and attempted to  pass the said check as a true and genuine check knowing that the check was  forged with the intent to defraud the Bank of America, Ahined Mahome and  Elpert Defrietas among other counts. He was convicted for Forgery on  November 30, 1995 and in April 12, 1998 the state bar court issued an order  suspending him from practicing Law in Carlifornia for two year effective May  30, 1996.

    Many Deltans were keenly aware, unlike in the United States where he could  not escape accountability and the Law that he escaped accountability in Nigeria  owing to the protection he received from his principals and the reward he  received for debasing democracy, receiving the position of a Deputy Senate  President for stealing the national legislative mase in the chamber of the  national Assembly, he thus became a poster boy for all the policy missteps and  governance mishaps of the APC regime in the eyes of Deltans, the failings of the  Government became his failings, and they were ample; such as the Naira Re design a policy that brought so much anguish to voters that they took unabated  into the polling units.

    The hardship of the naira re-design was accompanied by many others,  including unrelenting fuel queues, the severe insecurity of lives and property  where many Deltans could not farm or fish in their homelands, while those who  harmed them were protected by the same people that Omo-Agege served and  venerated. By all metrics, it was clear to all Deltans that voting for Omo-Age  was like bringing the ant-infested wood into the Government House in Delta  state.

    While, these burdens weighed heavily on Senator Omo-Agege with respect to  accountability, which is requirement that elected leaders or public officials  have to answer to the common citizens regarding their actions, decisions or  indecisions during the time they are or were occupants of the public offices, the  test for transparency, which is allow for public scrutiny of what a public official  did or does in and out of public office, was even a more difficult test for Senator  Omo-Agege; many Nigerians and particularly Deltans were shocked that Ovie  Omo-agege voted against E-transmission of polling units results using BVAS  after boasting and lying to the whole world that he single-handedly wrote the  2022 Act. Having claimed to have authored the Act he vehemently and publicly  voted against the most important part of the Act that the public yearned for.

    Furthermore, although he was voted into the Senate to represent the entire  Delta Central Senatorial Area, he concentrated most of the constituency  benefits he obtained from the office in his home town Orogun, which in the  annals of Urhobo history contrasted completely from the template of even  development for Urhoboland which the foremost urhobo leader, late Chief

    Mukoro Mowoe demonstrated, when he influenced the location of Eku hospital  Urhobo College and the Government College Ughelli which spread  development even across the length and breadth of the community.

    Like the community, individuals were not also spared his narcissistic venom,  Urhobos and Deltans alike who could have been helped to attain higher  pedestals were set back by the personal ambitions and vengeful desires of  Omo-Agege to be the pre-eminent and only force in Delta, both, strong grounds  for this premise is laid by reports that he lobbied against excellent performers  from Delta state including , Sir Richard Odibo: who after his nomination for the  position of National commissioner for the Board of Census Commission, he  clandestinely instigated petitions to have him removed until other Deltans  strongly intervened to block his petition; he was similarly involved in lobbies  against illustrious Delta sons such as Barr. Mike lgini that Nigerians have  generally acknowledged and applauded for his incorruptibility competence and  integrity throughout his service in INEC; within the political patronage circles  that elevated him, he turned his back against Great Ogboru, the force of whose  political whirlpool swept him into political prominence and in the same way he  turned his back against Chief Joe Omene whom he described as an insurgent  leader after riding on his support.

    It therefore did not come as a surprise that he was rejected at the polls by most  Deltans because of his personal, community and national failings,  indeed,Senator Omo-Agege was never really a serious contender for the  position of governor of Delta state, his opportunistic dalliance in the APC could  not deceive the Delta people who knew him well for what he truly stands for, a  man that stimulates scorn due to his many vices.

    Dr Akpomudiare Justin

    Writes from Ughelli in Delta state

  • Sheriff Oborevwori vs Ovie Omo-Agege: politicians drag me into their fray – By Mideno Bayagbon

    Sheriff Oborevwori vs Ovie Omo-Agege: politicians drag me into their fray – By Mideno Bayagbon

    For one who has shied away from getting actively involved in Nigerian politics, someone who  had rejected all political appointments and had privately vowed, long ago, not to get entangled in it, I am sorry to report I got lured, tempted beyond self interest and found myself in the steamy, sweaty room of this seemingly demonic Nigerian enclave. I temporarily, finally, decided to throw aside the cloak of non-partisanship, and taste, first hand, Nigerian politics in all its glorious and gory dimensions. I got myself swamped in the small, troubled and dirty pond of Delta State politics. What an eye opener it turned out to be. But no, I didn’t fall in love with it.

    We have a local adage, which loosely translated says getting involved in the village square dance usually starts with an innocent shaking of the head, a tapping of the foot or hand claps. All involuntarily, it seems, until one gets lured by the rhythmic drums, the sonorous minstrels, and the enchanting dance steps of the active participants. Before you know it, you are one with the crowd stomping and swaying and gyrating, singing and dancing the night away. So it was with me.

    It all started innocently. News came that the governor of Delta State, Ifeanyi Arthur Okowa, was trying to play God like most politicians who hold political offices in our clime. He was accused of trying, singlehandedly, to choose his successor. Buried in that, for those who know Delta State politics, is an affront on the sensibilities of the people, especially supporters of the Odidigborigbo of Africa, Chief James Onanefe Ibori who most Deltans regard as the leader of the political elites of the state.  It turns out that Okowa and Ibori could not agree on the candidacy of Chief Ibori’s preferred candidate: David Edevbie.

    If you know Delta State politics, you already know that James Ibori is the clone of Bola Ahmed Tinubu who holds Lagos politics in a vice grip. He holds sway in all matters politics such that even when he was in prison in the United Kingdom, he still decided who got what and when in the state. He was highly revered and most Deltans had shut eyes to all his faults. He was well loved and respected. Not to them the odium and infamy which other Nigerians attach to him. So Deltans rose up against Okowa. The belief was that Ibori not having his way is disrespectful and an attempt to reduce his influence and  retire him from dominance of the politics of the state. His adherents saw it as an attempt to demystify him,  and consign him into political irrelevance.

    Let’s take a step back. To his credit, Chief Ibori who was governor of the state from 1999 to 2007 instituted a triangular zonal arrangement in his party, the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, whereby, in turns, the senatorial zones are to present governorship candidates exclusively. Ibori was from Delta Central, he was succeeded by Dr Emmanuel Uduaghan from Delta South who in turn was succeeded by Dr Ifeanyi Arthur Okowa of Delta North. The ball, this time, returns to Delta Central where the three zones in Urhobo were expected to bring forth someone from the Okpe, Sapele and Uvwie axis. The two other zones Ethiope and Ughelli federal constituencies have had their share in Jereton Mariere, Felix Ibru and James Ibori.

    David Edevbie is not from the favoured Okpe zone but Ibori insists it must be him. This irked some Deltans, including yours sincerely. It caused a rumpus among his supporters and Deltans generally.

    But then the Delta Central senatorial zone, Chief Ibori’s home zone, set up a screening committee, headed by Ibori’s right hand man, Chief Ighoyota Amori, for all the candidates from the zone, who were interested in vying for the position. A deluge of names showed up but were finally pruned to three: David Edevbie, Sheriff Oborevwori and Kenneth Gbagi. Eventually, they all went into the primaries of the Peoples Democratic Party. Chief Ibori supported David Edevbie; Governor Okowa supported the dark horse, two-term Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Sheriff Oborevwori, while Kenneth Gbagi, a foundation member of the PDP and former federal minister stood on his own strength.

    Sheriff Oborevwori won with a landslide. Then the war started. And the PDP set itself on  the path of self immolation. Mud slinging. Tons of court cases. Factions sprouted like locus beans and the centre could no longer hold. Life long friends found themselves on different divides, became enemies. Opportunists prowled and preyed on the divisions. The stage was set for political drama of epic proportions. The worst acrimony to hit the party which had held sway since 1999 in the state.

    The winning candidate, Sheriff Oborevwori, became the victim of massive demonization, abuse and denigration. For a man who has an MSc in Political Science, for a legislator who has been a two term Speaker of the House, the ruse was sold that he was an “uncertificated illiterate”. The claim is that Sheriff was not his original name, that his WASC result belonged to someone else and that he never saw the four walls of any university; that the results he parades, belong to someone else.

    The public bought the lies spread all over the social media. Until the truth, like dawning light started rising like a sphinx. His classmates, teachers, lecturers and professors, unlike those of Bola Ahmed Tinubu, started coming out to testify that indeed it is true Sheriff Oborevwori was either their classmate or student. One of his lecturers, who is now the dean of their faculty wrote to testify to the many security agencies sent to all the schools to investigate him, that indeed, Sheriff Oborevwori graduated with a second class, (upper division) degree.

    But the battle and the cases elongated into bitter ego contests. Betrayals were rampant. Decamping from the PDP became the order of the day to the joy and excited hope of the Deputy Senate President, Ovie Omo-Agege, who is the formidable opponent of the PDP and its candidate, Sheriff Oborevwori. An adept political player, the DSP never relented in his quest to exploit the cracks in the PDP to cement his own quest to be the one to occupy Osadebe House, the Delta State Government House, come May 29th, 2023. Somehow, Delta Central became the battle ground. The north and south stood solidly behind the PDP candidate.

    Both Omo-Agege and Oborevwori are from Delta Central occupied solely by the state’s largest ethnic group, the Urhobo. The difference is that, while the PDP candidate represented the Okpe-Sapele-Uvwie side of the Urhobo three federal constituencies, the APC candidate is from the same zone as Jereton Mariere and Ibru who have previously been governors .

    Those who know me know that  once I put my heart and mind to something, I will always side with the oppressed. So it was a given that I will take the side of the badly maligned Sheriff Oborevwori, the street wise guy who by a dint of divine favour, serious hard work and focus rose from the streets of Effurun and Osubi village to be Governor-Elect of Delta State two days back.

    With him I traversed all the rivers and creeks and oceans of Delta State; met all the traditional rulers and chiefs; all the indigenous groups; pounded the streets and villages; knocked on doors; witnessed first hand the Sheriffication of Delta State. I was an eye witness to deviousness and betrayals, to how funny and devilish some of those who call themselves political friends and party members can come to your house on a Monday, eat breakfast with you, take pictures with the candidate and post on social media; come for a meeting on Wednesday morning at 11am and same day at 2pm decamp to the opposition party!

    Let’s end it here for now and leave all the intrigues of the election proper for another day.

     

    Mideno Bayagbon
    (mideno@thenewsguru.ng)

  • Omo-Agege denies plans to reverse teachers retirement age in Delta

    Omo-Agege denies plans to reverse teachers retirement age in Delta

    Sen. Ovie Omo-Agege, the Delta All Progressive Congress (APC) Governorship candidate has denied rumour that he plans to reverse the Harmonised Retirement Age for Teachers in the State.

    Omo-Agege, also the Deputy President of the Senate, said this in a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Mr Sunny Areh on Friday in Warri.

    He described the rumour as the handiwork of the Peoples Demicratic Party (PDP), urging residents to ignore it and vote for him in the March 18 Governorship Election.

    Omo-Agege, who represents Delta Central at the National Assembly, said that the Harmonised Retirement Age for Teachers was passed by the national assembly in January 2021 under his watch as Deputy President of the Senate.

    “That Omo-Agege plans to reverse the recently domesticated Federal law by Gov. Ifeanyi Okowa of Delta in the state when assumes office as governor.

    “For record purposes, senator Omo-Agege is part of the leadership of the National Assembly as Deputy President of the Senate that worked assiduously for the passage of the Harmonised Retirement Age for Teachers in Nigeria Bill into law.

    “To now suggest that the same law I facilitated its passage into law will be rolled back when I becomes Governor after winning the rescheduled March 18, governorship election is not just stupid and idiotic but farcical,” he said.

    Omo-Agege said that on April 8, 2022, President Muhammadu Buhari assented to the Harmonised Retirement Age for Teachers Bill which then became an Act.

    According to him, Section 1 of the Act clearly states that Teachers in Nigeria shall compulsorily retire on attainment of 65 years of age or 40 years of pensionable service, whichever is earlier.

    Omo-Agege said that few days ago, Gov.Ifeanyi Okowa approved the adoption of the act extending the retirement age of teacher in the state.

    He said that the governor adopted the act exactly one year after the Federal Government had begun its implementation describing it as a belated move borne out of desperation.

    Omo-Agege said that he had a concerted programme to improve the ambience for learning in the state.

    He reiterated his commitment to upgrading the infrastructure in educational institutions, promote teachers as and when due and ensure that on retirement, their gratuity and benefits were paid.

  • Why Deltans will vote Sheriff Oborevwori as Governor – By Mideno Bayagbon

    Why Deltans will vote Sheriff Oborevwori as Governor – By Mideno Bayagbon

    In three days time, Deltans, like in most states in Nigeria, will be flooding voting centres to decide who should be their next Governor. It will be a straight fight between the Speaker of the Delta State House of Assembly, Sheriff Francis Oborevwori and Deputy Senate President, Ovie Omo-Agege. While Oborevwori is of the Peoples Democratic Party, Omo-Agege is of the All Progressives Congress. Nevertheless, put on a scale, the much maligned, abused and denigrated Sheriff Oborevwori stands a better chance of emerging Governor of the state than Omo-Agege. I will explain.

    Of course there are other contestants in the race. Buoyed by the massive votes which the Obidient tsunami wreaked on Delta State, the little known candidate of the Labour Party in the state, Ken Pela, has suddenly revved his formerly nonexistent campaign, is holding court and now believes that the Obidient group will invade the polling centres once again and he will be the beneficiary of their votes. Olorogun Kenneth Gbagi, the habitual contestant for the office of Governor of Delta State, who was the first to hit the road, is also courting the Obidient group and hoping too that they will look his way.

    For the first time in his political career, he was able, during the presidential election, to win the voting units in his Oginibo village. Wealthy and a six month minister in Jonathan’s government, Gbagi has combed the state severally but most Deltans do not see him as a serious candidate or one they should invest their future in. By now too, Olorogun Great Ovedje Ogboru, who was dislodged by Ovie Omo-Agege from the APC where he ran for governor the last time, knows that he stands no chance of winning the race. But they are all in the race with little or no outsider chance of wearing the crown.

    Let me make my position clear and state clearly that I support Sheriff Francis Oborevwori despite the fact that the candidates of the PDP and APC are my friends. And here is why I am lending my support to Oborevwori: I am intrigued by the story of his life, how through thick and thin, he has managed to move from one level of development to a higher one. At every stage of his life, hard work and seemingly divine hands have tended to propel him to higher realms. I am talking about the lived reality of the Delta State Speaker. I m touched by his unparalleled humility, his unquenchable desire to learn, his unabashed association with the common people of the state, what his supporters and himself, have described as his street credibility. It’s amazing that he has lived all his life in Effurun and his village Osubi. So he is a homeboy through and through. He is what Gordons, the comedian, has aptly described as the lion and the lamb: fearless but very compassionate. He is a strong believer in God and an elder of Bishop Oyedepo’s church, Winners Chapel, (Living Faith).

    His zest to learn, to constantly improve on his level of knowledge is commendable. For example, he rewrote his WASC as an upcoming businessman, as former supervising councillor of the then Okpe-Uvwie-Udu local government area, community chairman and as a married father of children in 1998. His classmates and lecturers at the department of Political Science, Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma, speak of him in admirable tones. Even his professors at Delta State University, DELSU, Abraka, in written testimonials to the many security authorities which were spurred into investigating the certificates of the Delta State Speaker, because his opponents sold the lie that he is an “uncertificated illiterate”, assert that he indeed was their student who not only attended classes, passed his exams but indeed defended his thesis creditably and was awarded an MSc degreee.

    The Deputy Senate President, on the other hand, has had, and lived, a cushioned life from infancy till date. Son of a former Chief Judge of Delta State who happened to also head the Igbe Society (devotees of a marine spirit religious sect), he went to private schools and graduated with a law degree from the University of Benin where he was a boy about town. His sojourn in America was nearly truncated when he ran into troubled waters with the authorities and was disbarred from practicing law in the United States.

    His return to Nigeria and entrance into politics have seen him progress from one level of political relevance to the other. In the last four years he has served as the Deputy Senate President, a seeming reward for his alleged mastermind of the stealing of the mace of the Senate in a gangster, bravado style; a feat which seemingly saved President Muhammadu Buhari from the threat of impeachment during his first term. Omo-Agege loves and wields power and brooks no foes. A student of power, when he defected to the APC, he easily dislodged the one they call the peoples general, Great Ogboru and all the leaders of the APC in Delta State, seizing the structure and remodelling it in his own image.

    Not known to have established or run any major business in the last 22 years, he is today a very wealthy politician. Indeed, his two years or so engagement in Delta state government saw him developing and acquiring eye-popping mansions in Effurun and Orogun his village, a home in the US where his family resides till date. He owns one of the biggest mansions in the billionaire enclave of Asokoro which he acquired when he was SSG of Delta State.

    A leader of men, Ovie knows how to court and use men to his given ends. Ruthless in the pursuit of power, his rumoured romance with the Odidigborigbo, James Ibori, who nurses a personal grudge against Governor Ifeanyi Okowa for sidelining him in choosing his successor, has so far led to some defections from the ruling PDP in Delta State to Omo-Agege’s APC. Chief James Ibori, who many see as the leader of the PDP in Delta State, and who is still highly respected, has not raised any objection to some of his supporters defecting to the APC.

    However, his cousin and successor in office, Dr Emmanuel Uduaghan, who is a strong pillar of the Ibori political family is one of the notable exceptions. He has chosen to take a stand for Sheriff Oborevwori who he believes will do a better job of governing Delta State than Ovie Omo-Agege. He and others are not comfortable with Omo-Agege’s style of politics. They level many allegations against him. One of these is that Ovie Omo-Agege stands accused of being clannish in warehousing projects to himself and his brother Jimmy; and in siting all of the federal government projects, his office as Deputy Senate President attracted to the state, to his village. There are six major ones.

    The first of this, which was warehoused and is now a major cash cow, is the Pipeline Surveillance contract. Unknown to many, there are three companies involved. But the general public know of only Tompolo’s. A company owned by Omo-Agege’s brother, Jimmy, has a huge chunk while the running mate to Omo-Agege, Osanebi, supplied a company name which has the third tranche of the contracts. Evidently, we now know why the youths whose names were used to obtain the surveillance contracts were not paid their stipends all these months until shortly before the presidential elections.

    That apart, every single federal government project approved for Delta State was not just warehoused, the five of them were all sited in the Orhomoru-Orogun, the village of the Deputy Senate President. The rest of Delta Central which he represents at the Senate, was left empty and not considered fit to have any of these projects.

    Recall too that not once in the last eight years that his party, APC, has wrecked the economy and thrown majority of Nigerians into abysmal poverty, did Ovie speak out in the interest of the people. Not even when terrorists, killer herdsmen, kidnappers and sundry other merchants of death took over the country. Also in our sensitive religious climate, Omo-Agege was the first politician to publicly endorse Tinubu’s Moslem-Moslem ticket. Which is not surprising since he is not known to be a Christian. I find his “self above others” kind of politics unacceptable and Deltans do not deserve his kind of leadership at this critical time.

    Among political pundits, the thinking is that the biggest threat to Oborevwori’s aspiration, currently are not the Obidient gang but the boast among supporters of the APC candidate that Omo-Agege is more adept at handling elections, given his history in the state, than the one they call Street-Wise. Already, using federal might, he has had the Divisional Police Officers in Ughelli North and South, as well as the ones in Agbarho, redeployed and replaced. The Army too, his supporters boast will be available to ensure the methods the APC used in enthroning Alhaji Bola Ahmed Tinubu during the presidential election, are brought to bear on Delta State.

    One can only appeal that the will of the people should be allowed to decide who govern Delta State from May 29th.

  • UPDATE: Constitution Review: Senate okays 35 amendments

    UPDATE: Constitution Review: Senate okays 35 amendments

    The Senate has approved 35 items out of the 44 Constitution Alteration Bills forwarded to State Houses of Assembly for concurrence.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that 24 out of the 36 assemblies voted for the 35 items with complete exclusion of financial and administrative autonomies for local government councils.

    Senate’s resolution to this effect , followed motion on Tuesday, moved by Sen. Opeyemi Bamidele on behalf of the Deputy Senate President, Ovie Omo-Agege, who chaired the Senate Committee on Constitution Review.

    The 35 items read by Bamidele were: Constitution (Fifth Alteration) Bill No 3 (Change of Names of Afikpo North and Afikpo South Local Government Areas (Ebonyi),
    Constitution (Fifth Alteration) Bill No 4 (Change of Name of Kunchi Local Government Area (Kano State).

    “Constitution (Fifth Alteration) Bill No 5 (Change of Names of Egbado North and Egbado South Local Government Areas (Ogun) and Constitution (Fifth Alteration) Bill No 7 (Correction of the name of Atisbo Local Government Area (Oyo).

    Others were Constitution (Fifth Alteration) Bill No 8 (Correction of Name of Obia/Akpor Local Government Area (Rivers);
    Constitution (Fifth Alteration) Bill No 9 (Financial autonomy of State legislatures and State Judiciary).

    “Constitution (Fifth Alteration) Bill No. 10 (Enforcement of Legislative Summon); Constitution (Fifth Alteration) Bill No. 11 (Inauguration of Members-Elect), Constitution (Fifth Alteration) Bill No. 21 (Deletion of reference in the Constitution to the provisions of the Criminal Code, Penal Code, Criminal Procedure Act, Criminal Procedure Code or Evidence Act).

    “Constitution (Fifth Alteration) Bill No. 22 (Provision for Intervening Events in the Computation of Tine for the Determination of Pre-Election Petitions, Election Petitions and Appeals therefrom).

    “Constitution (Fifth Alteration) Bill No. 24 (Expansion of the Interpretation of Judicial Office); Constitution (Fifth Alteration) Bill No. 25 (Appointment of Secretary of the National Judicial Council);

    “Constitution (Fifth Alteration) Bill No. 29 (Devolution of Powers (Airports));
    Constitution (Fifth Alteration) Bill No. 30 (Devolution of Powers (Fingerprints, identification and criminal records).

    “Constitution (Fifth Alteration) Bill No. 31 (Devolution of Powers (Correctional Services), Constitution (Fifth Alteration) Bill No. 32 (Devolution of Powers (Railways)

    The upper chamber accordingly directed the Clerk to the National Assembly to transmit the 35 Bills that have so far met the requirement of the provision of Section 9(2) of the Constitution to President Muhammadu Buhari for assent in line with the provisions of the Acts Authentication Act.

    It also urged the following State Houses of Assembly – Gombe, Jigawa, Kebbi, Kwara, Oyo, Plateau, Sokoto, Taraba, Zamfara that were yet to forward their resolution on the Bills to do so in fulfillment of their constitutionally imposed legislative obligation to the Constitution amendment process.

    Some of the nine bills bills that failed passage at the State Houses of Assembly were the one that sought for Abrogation of the State Joint Local Government Account and Provide for special Account into which shall be paid all Allocations due to Local Government Councils from the Federation Account and from the Government of the State; and for Related Matters”.