Tag: south east

  • South East insecurity threatens Nigeria’s two-legged tripod – By Ikeddy Isiguzo

    South East insecurity threatens Nigeria’s two-legged tripod – By Ikeddy Isiguzo

    By Ikeddy ISIGUZO

    IS South East still a part of Nigeria? The Constitution says so. Like almost everything in the Constitution that is observed in gross breach, insecurity in the South East is treated as the region’s headache.

    Nigeria is a tripod standing on two legs? Those familiar with a tripod know it stands on three legs. Pre-civil war Nigeria stood on three legs. The war damaged one of the legs.

    Nigeria paid a lot of attention at damaging that leg. In the past eight years, particularly, the Muhammadu Buhari administration made it clear in words, deeds, and indeed, that it would act without concerns for the damaged keg.

    Rogue elements are on the increase in the South East. They spawn because those who are doing nothing to restore sanity in the area are mostly beneficiaries of the confusion. The Federal Government, vested with exclusive constitutional and legal provisions and resources to manage insecurity is unconcerned.

    When a leg of a tripod is damaged, the cook treats the damaged stand with extra care, knowing that without such care, as he stirs, the pot and its contents are at a high risk of being upturned. And there are consequences.

    Mischief makers see the serial unrest as a chance to de-brand the South East such that it is not an investment destination, unfit for human sustainable living. The media optics highlight these opinion.

    A May 2023 report on Nigeria’s security by Abuja-based security outfit, Beacon Intel said of 675 people killed, 5.2 per cent or 35 were in the South-East, making it the safest region in the country. They got a minimal mention in the media.

    What is unique about the South East is the sit-at-home orders.

    Only on 7 July 2023, Mr. Victor Onyenkpa, Chief Operating Officer, KPMG Africa, raised a point about the unease of doing business in the South East at a symposium in Aba to mark the 70th birthday of C. Darl Uzu, a known investor in infrastructure, estates, and lead private sector promoter of the Enyimba Economic City Development. He graphically showed billions of Naira were lost to the sit-at-home orders, and how South East’s GDP was shrinking. The facts cannot be disputed.

    The media, difficult to define in the digital era, are in a race to list the commotion in the South East right to how many markets were in disarray in a day. A colleague who arrived from Lagos on Thursday was shocked to see people on the streets of Aba. There was another sit-at-home that was to last a week. The impressions are that people imprison themselves to avoid the gunmen who have taken over the streets.

    Intensity of the madness varies from State to State, city to city. Our spaces have been conceded to mere criminals with whatever names and causes they choose to glorify their assault on Nigeria.
    Our Governors should be comprehensively ashamed of themselves. Why are they in office? To have convoys? To disperse resources as they please? To ensure that their people are decimated while they firm up alliances that create more turbulences in the South East?

    Are they so afraid to lose their empty empires that they cannot ask questions, the right questions? What fill their days? Debauchery? Meetings? Photo opportunities? The competition to amass more resources?
    Our Governors – just five people – cannot hold a meeting to restore dignity to their cherished offices. They are only visible in agitated competitions to damage the South East more through their utterances or loud silences.

    One of my teachers describes what is going thus: “In effect, we have two parallel governments in each of the five States. And neither is of any benefit to the governed. Perhaps, we should say three governments – the federal manipulating the other two, benefitting from the chaos. The Governors should be ashamed of themselves”.

    The other two governments are the gunmen who order sit-at-homes and enforce them and State governments that do nothing except budget billions of Naira as security votes to extend their comfort. What happens to the people does not matter.

    Some insight from the Owerri Prison break of 2021. According to Dennis Amachree, a former Assistant Director of DSS, “There was enough intelligence, enough actionable intelligence. Actionable in the sense that it allows for space for people to execute it, one week ahead of the event and of course, 72 hours before the event and then 48 hours before the event.

    “So, three times, the Nigeria Police Force was informed by the DSS that this is going to happen.

    “Apparently, nothing was done (to stop the attacks). You can see that the Governor was referring to that particular report that it’s not IPOB (Indigenous People of Biafra).”

    If Governor Hope Uzodinma blamed outsiders for the attack, did he know who they were? What was done about them.

    The prison is near the highest concentration of security in Imo State. A look at the places close to Owerri Prison – Government House, headquarters of the police and the Department of State Services, DSS, the army brigade on Obinze is not too far away. The invaders released more than 1,800 prisoners. Was anyone sacked for the breach?

    There have been more attacks in Imo and other South East States since then.

    Our homeland is turning into a wasteland. Deserted, distressed, denied, decimated. Traditional weddings, festivals and funerals used to be our local tourism and funnelled resources into the local economy. They are all gone. Insecurity constantly erodes our culture. Fear has become our living.

    Anything done, or not done about insecurity in the South East affects Nigeria, shrinks the country. There is a poor understanding of the insecurity in the South East when it is treated as insecurity of the South East. It is a Nigerian situation situated in the South East.

    Is Nnamdi Kanu the issue? Not any longer. The Federal Government and those rogues on the streets manipulate his name into the crises. The Court of Appeal freed him. Why would the government still hold him?

    What stops the Federal Government from making a formal complaint to the Finnish government about Simon Ekpa who makes the sit-at-home broadcasts?Has the Federal Government told Finland about the dedicated menace Ekpa is?

    Government’s complicity is too obvious that few seem to expect any solution from government. Is there any part of Nigeria that has more check points than the South East? Outside extorting the people and taking advantage of the young ladies in their locations, what else do they do?

    The promise by the new Chief of Defence Staff to deploy more troops to the South East simply means more militarisation of our spaces. There are enough reasons to know that better uses of troops in place is required.

    We lost the civil war. We did not lose our senses. The challenge is for us to find solutions that we can take to willing partners to secure our spaces. Only our actions would prove that we have had productive meetings.

    The South East must act fast. The contest – global, local – for space keeps intensifying. The same contest encompasses the environment, economics, power, politics, and more importantly, the politics of power.

    Power is never enough. Its dynamics ensure that those who think they are masters of the power of politics still feel inadequate.

    Meetings where more time is spent praising the nuances of breaking the kolanuts than dealing with the killing of our people, our homeland, are no solutions. We must act more purposely. Details of what can be done and how to do them are not matters for public consumption. As Okokon Ndem would say during the civil war, when surrounded by enemies, we must be eternally vigilant; we cannot afford to sleep.
    Next week: More on this matter.

     

    Isiguzo is a major commentator on minor issues.

  • IPOB speaks on ordering week- long Sit-at-home in South East

    IPOB speaks on ordering week- long Sit-at-home in South East

    The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has finally reacted to a viral audio message circulating on social media asking residents of the southeast to observe a one-week sit-at-home from July 3 to 10.

    According to IPOB, the audio didn’t emanate from them, saying they haven’t ordered any week -long sit – at -home.

    The sit-at-home order, purported to have come from IPOB, with the tag #FreeNnamdiKanu, is aimed at forcing the Federal Government to release Nnamdi Kanu, who has been in the custody of the Department of State Services (DSS).

    The audio message claimed that there will be dire consequences for anyone who ventures out on the said dates.

    But the media and publicity secretary of IPOB, Mr Emma Powerful, told DAILY POST upon enquiry on Wednesday, that the audio message was not from his group.

    “You must know whom madness sit-at-home is, and the criminal who is illegally destroying our land.

    “I will issue an official press release against it in two to three days to the date declared in the audio, but for now, the leadership (of IPOB) has asked me not to give it attention or attraction,” he said.

    IPOB had first declared every Monday a sit-at-home day in the South East, as a way to compel the Federal Government to release its leader Kanu, but later canceled it, upon plea that the exercise was taking a toll on the economy of the region.

     

  • Why South-East can’t get Senate Presidency – ACF Chieftain

    Why South-East can’t get Senate Presidency – ACF Chieftain

    Alhaji Musa Saidu, a chieftain of the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF) says the South-East can’t get the Senate Presidency of the 10th National Assembly, because it failed to learn from its past mistakes.

    Saidu, also the leader of the Arewa Community in Southern Nigeria, said this on Tuesday in Abuja.

    “I want to say without fear of contradiction that the South-East has no justification to start asking for the Senate Presidency of the 10th National Assembly, because it is not part of those who voted for the APC.

    “The South-East can’t be in contention for the Senate Presidency because its people didn’t vote for the APC,” he said.

    Saidu was reacting to the demand by the South-East Senate caucus asking the APC to zone the position to the South-East for fairness and justice.

    “You are talking about fairness and justice, when you didn’t even vote for the APC during the 2023 general election.

    “Other zones voted massively for the party and the President-elect, Sen. Bola Tinubu, while you decided to give your votes entirely to the Labour Party.

    “How can you come out to say that the President-elect should zone the Senate Presidency to South East, when you didn’t vote for him.

    “Supposing he didn’t win the election, would he be in the position to zone the Senate Presidency,” he said.

    Saidu said that the South-East had similar problem with President Muhammadu Buhari in 2019 when it demanded for the position of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF).

    “When you ganged up to defeat the APC even in the stronghold of the president-elect, what were you thinking of. The Senate Presidency is not for free, you have to work for it.

    “You are calling for equity and fairness, but you decided to concentrate your votes for LP, is there fairness in that.

    “I think that the zoning the Senate Presidency to South South is not entirely a bad idea, because the zone performed better in terms of voting for the APC in the last election, ” he said.

    The Senate South-East Caucus, had on May 7 urged the APC to zone the Senate Presidency of the 10th Assembly to the South-East for fairness and justice.

    Reading the communique at the end of a meeting in Abuja, Sen. Ifeanyi Ubah(YPP-Anambra) also urged the President-elect, to ensure that the position was zoned to the South-East.

    “The incoming administration of Tinubu must correct this anomaly by ensuring that the South-East is given the opportunity to produce the next Senate President.

    “The President-elect should be sensitive to the times in Nigeria and ensure the country continues to thrive on the part of equity, unity and fairness to the tripod of Nigeria (Hausa, Igbo, Yoruba) and the geopolitical zones.

    “With the side-lining of the South-East from producing the Presidential candidates of the major political parties before the general elections, the only means through which the zone can be compensated and given a sense of belonging is for the zone to produce the next Senate President.

    “This will restore confidence of the people from the South-East and South-South geo-political zones and indeed all Nigerians in the unity of the country.”

    He added: “The APC must rise above primordial and political interest.

    “It must also shun the winner takes all syndrome and pursue ethno-religious inclusivity and a strong, virile, united, progressive, prosperous, equitable and just democratic nation.

    “The South-East has been denied the chance of producing the president of Nigeria since 1966.

    “The South-South has produced president for six years and also had Deputy Senate President In the outgoing administration.

    “The only zone in the South that has not been favoured is the South-East.

    “The South-West has President, the North-East has Vice-President. It is only just that the least position at the moment that can assuage the South-East is given the chance to be the President of the 10th Senate”.

  • 10th NASS: Why Senate Presidency should go to South-East – Imo Senator

    10th NASS: Why Senate Presidency should go to South-East – Imo Senator

    Sen. Osita Izunaso (APC-Imo) says he is most qualified for the Senate Presidency of the 10th National Assembly, going by situations on ground.

    Izunaso said this when he spoke with in Abuja on Monday, saying that the South-East should be allowed to produce the Senate President for the 10th Assembly for justice, fairness and equity.

    He said he had the experience and capacity needed to ensure stability and a cordial working relationship between the Executive and Legislative haven been a lawmaker since 2003.

    Izunaso, also a former APC National Organising Secretary, said he was the most qualified ranking Senator, adding that allowing the South-East to produce the Senate President of the 10th assembly would help calm nerves in the zone.

    He said he was the only ranking Senator in the country’s political history that had worked as a staff of the two chambers of the National Assembly and later served as elected representative of the people.

    “In 1992, I worked as the Chief Press Secretary to the Speaker of House of Representatives, Agunwa Anakwe. I also served as the Chief Press Secretary to Senate President, Chief Evans Nwerem with the return of civilian administration in 1999.

    “I had earlier served as Chief Press Secretary to the Minister of Youth and Sports, Chief Jim Nwobodo from 1995 to 1997 and retained same position with the Minister of Labour and Productivity from 1998 to 1999.

    “Haven been first elected into the House of Representatives in 2003 and later into the Senate in 2007, I am one of the most ranking Senators in the incoming 10th Assembly,” he said.

    He said he had also served as chairman of various committees, including:Rules and Business, Local and Foreign Debts, Housing, Gas, Foreign Affairs and Sports Development among others.

    Izunaso added that he sponsored many bills and led debates during plenary sessions.

    He said that with the election of Sen. Bola Tinubu as President-elect and Vice President-elect Sen. Kashim Shettima, the two top-most political offices in Nigeria had been taken by the South-West and North-East.

    “Political expediency, quest for national stability and cohesion dictate that the number three political position and the head of the Legislative arm of Government should go to the South-East.

    “And I am the most qualified and ranking Senator to take up that position and I have been consulting and meeting with critical party stakeholders, including my state governor on this,” he said.

    He added that he had also been meeting with other governors from the zone and had been receiving calls from stakeholders both within and outside his party urging him on.

    He said that the best way to douse ongoing tension, especially amongst those calling for sessetion was to have a man from the region in the top three political positions in the country.

    “My emergence as the Senate President of the 10th assembly will not only help douse tension in the South-East zone, but will give its people a sense of belonging.

    “Historically, the Nigerian federation has always rested on the tripod of three dominant ethnic groups of Hausa/Fulani, Yoruba and Igbo.

    “Under the current political dispensation, the Yoruba and Hausa/Fulani which now include Kanuri have produced the President and the Vice-President.

    “Having not produced the president of the country since independence except for the six months stint of Gen. Aguiyi Ironsi as Military Head of State in 1966.

    “The intense Igbo sentiment against political exclusion and marginalisation in Nigeria is justified,” Izunaso said, adding that this could be addressed if the South-East was allowed to produce the Senate President.

    He said the development would ensure inclusiveness and help arrest the agitation for Biafra in the South-East, especially among young people who had been misled by IPOB activities and other separatist movements.

    “To dilute this equation needs a strong Igbo patriot who will also be a Christian. The South-South geopolitical Zone has served as Vice-President and President for a combined period of eight years since return of civil rule in Nigeria in 1999.

    “The North-West has produced President twice with late President Umaru Yar’adua and outgoing President Muhammadu Buhari ditto for North-East that produced a Vice-President in person of Alhaji Atiku Abubakar from 1999-2007.

    “The North-East has again retained the Vice-Presidency. The most disadvantaged geopolitical zone in Nigeria since 1960 remains the South-East.

    “The 10th National Assembly gives us the opportunity to address the situation,” he said.

  • Amb. Ojukwu submits commission’s report on violence in South-East to Soludo

    Amb. Ojukwu submits commission’s report on violence in South-East to Soludo

    Amb. Bianca Ojukwu, Secretary of the 17-Man Truth, Peace, and Justice Commission, has submitted its report on violence in the South-East to Gov. Chukwuma Soludo of Anambra.

    The commission was constituted by Soludo to look into the remote and immediate causes of the agitations, restiveness, violence, and struggles in the South East as well as document victims and circumstances of death, brutality, and incarceration.

    This is contained in a statement issued by the Commission on Saturday and made available in Enugu.

    The statement said that the “Commission is headed by Prof. Chidi Odinkalu, former Chairman of the National Human Rights Commission”.

    It said that the report was submitted to Gov. Soludo on Friday at the Executive Chamber, Government House, Awka, by Ojukwu who read out a summary of the Commission’s work and later presented the same to the governor on behalf of the Commission.

    Giving a background to the report, Chairman of the Commission, Prof. Chidi Odinkalu, explained that the inception of the report provides a framework of diagnosis for the crises of agitation, violence and victimisation in the South-East.

    “The Chairman indicated that the report paints a clear picture that the narrative of the present agitation and violence in the states of the South East is quite complex and not amenable to a single narrative.

    “The interim recommendations, amongst others, include a Bureau of Missing Persons (BMP) within the Ministry of Justice or of Security and Homeland Affairs to document the missing and the disappeared.

    “Other recommendations include professionalization and effective co-ordination of vigilante services in the state, institutionalising deliverables for the Ministry of Security and Homeland Affairs.

    “Establishing an Anambra Integrated Civic Surveillance System as well as establishing an Anambra State Safety and Environmental Commission.

    “The commission will commence its public hearings after the election cycle,” it said.

    Responding, Gov. Soludo thanked the Chairman and members of the Commission for the good job done so far.

    The governor also approved their (commission’s) request to extend time for the conclusion and submission of their final report until the end of 2023.

  • 2023: I urge the South-east to support Atiku in February elections – Arthur Eze

    2023: I urge the South-east to support Atiku in February elections – Arthur Eze

    Anambra-born billionaire, Prince Arthur Eze has urget the South-east to support a northern presidential candidate, Atiku Abubakar, who says it is the best for Ndigbo.

    Eze said support for a northern candidate by Ndigbo will help them form the needed alliance that will help the people of the region attain power in the near future.

    Recalled that the oil magnate does not support the Labour Party presidential candidate, Mr Peter Obi, adding that Obi was not capable of winning the election, and that he (Eze) had told him so during a private visit.

    Eze, who paid a courtesy call to the Director General of Atiku/Okowa Presidential campaign council in Anambra, Prof. Obiora Okonkwo, at the weekend in his country home in Ogidi, called for support for the presidential candidate of the PDP, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar.

    He stated that his (Atiku’s) administration would liberate Nigeria and benefit the South East more than any other region in the country.

    “I urge the people of the South-east to continue the strategic relationship by supporting Atiku Abubakar in the February elections. The long-standing alliance between the North and the South East has always produced many political benefits to the region.

    “I have known Atiku Abubakar to be an honest man, liberal, and a pan-Nigerian who aspires best for the nation, and he is committed to the renaissance of ndi-Igbo.

    “He has demonstrated his huge love and concern for us ndi-Igbo by continuously choosing an Igbo man to be his running mate since 2007 when he picked Senator Ben Ndi Obi; again in 2019 when he picked Peter Obi; and now, Ifeanyi Okowa, an Igbo man from Delta State. He was willing to scale back his ambition if the ticket was micro-zoned to the South-east; only Atiku Abubakar agreed to such terms,” he said.

  • Buhari making every effort to push South East out of Nigeria – Ezeife alleges

    Buhari making every effort to push South East out of Nigeria – Ezeife alleges

    A former Governor of Anambra State and Igbo leader, Chukwuemeka Ezeife, has allege President Muhammadu Buhari-led government of trying to push the South East out of Nigeria regarding the further illegal detention of IPOB leader, Nnamdi Kanu.

    The national security council had stated that Nnamdi Kanu would remain in solitary confinement despite the Appeal Court judgment that discharged him of all charges brought against him.

    Ezeife, appearing on Arise Television’s The Morning Show on Monday, said there is not even an Igbo man in the setup in the security council.

    “Our leader, Prof. George Obiozor, the president-general of Ohanaeze Ndigbo, called me the same day the issue came up and said that he was preparing for us to go see the President to persuade him to release Nnamdi Kanu, and very soon, he’ll organise, get an appointment to go see President.

    “As for the national security council, well, I don’t know how independent the national security council is. But whichever council, national insecurity or security council, should look at the atmosphere and make judgement based on realities on ground.

    “By the way, no Igboman is in that place. And this is one of the things that annoy the young men of Nigeria because the Federal government of Buhari is making every effort to push the South East out of Nigeria.

    “But they cannot push us out of Nigeria. We’re here. We voted with our feet for one Nigeria. The national security council should have done a bit better than joining the government as such.”

  • Supreme Court strikes out suit seeking PDP to zone presidency to South East

    Supreme Court strikes out suit seeking PDP to zone presidency to South East

    The Supreme Court, on Friday, struck out a suit seeking to compel the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to zone its nomination of presidential candidate to the South East Geo-political Zone of the country.

    The court, in a unanimous judgment delivered by Justice Adamu Jauro, struck out the suit on the ground that it lacked jurisdiction to entertain the suit.

    Cosmos Ndukwe, a presidential aspirant of PDP and former Deputy Speaker, Abia State House of Assembly, filed the suit against his party.

    He had prayed for an order to compel the PDP to uphold its zoning and rotatory policy.

    Ndukwe, specifically, sought for order of the court to compel the PDP to zone the nomination of its presidential candidate to the South East Geo-political Zone.

    However, Justice Jauro held that the suit was not justiciable on the ground that the nomination of candidates for election is an internal affairs of political parties.

  • South East, North Central not favoured to win presidency – Iwuanyanwu

    South East, North Central not favoured to win presidency – Iwuanyanwu

    Chief Emmanuel Iwuanyanwu, Chairman of the Ohanaeze Council of Elders says limiting the zoning of the country’s presidency to North and South is not in the interest of all Nigerians.

    Iwuanyanwu made the assertion at a meeting organised to inaugurate the council’s Finance and Development Committee on Sunday in Abuja.

    He said if the zoning principle must be observed, it should be across the country’s six geo-political zones. He said this would give every Nigerian opportunity to aspire for the presidency.

    The 57-man committee of eminent Igbo business men, inaugurated by Prof. George Obiozor, the President Ohanaeze Ndigbo Worldwide, was to proffer ways of financing and developing economic activities in Igbo land.

    According to Iwuanyanwu, the South-East and North-Central especially, is not favoured to win the presidency going by the current North, South zoning arrangement.

    “If you want to zone, we have six geo-political zones in the country, zone it along the geo-political zones. If you know you want to zone.

    “You say you are zoning it to the North and South. If you zone the presidency to the North, there is no way somebody from North-Central will get it, unless there is a mutual cooperation from the North-West. which is very big.

    “And if you zone it to the South, even if a zone in the South has been president several times, by this zoning arrangement, it doesn’t stop them from contesting; which is not exactly what zoning is all about,” he said.

    He explained that zoning was to ensure fairness, equity and justice, and to see that the position “goes round”, adding that limiting it to North and South was against the interest of other Nigerians.

    While noting that the North had more Local Government Areas, Iwuanyanwu said eastern states had fewer.

    “Political power is derived from the party and from delegates, and if you look at recent elections, we have fewer local government areas and for you to penetrate to get other places, you have to have money.

    “We were not there when local governments were created, it was created by the military, now they say when it comes to South, the South should go and agree and this is not fair,” he said.

    Earlier, Obiozor, President Ohanaeze Ndigbo Worldwide, said the meeting was also to give effect to matters of immense importance and relevance to Nigerians of Igbo extraction.

    He implored Nigerians of Igbo extraction to stop lamenting, adding that they should critically harness the potential and resources in the region to their advantage.

    “We have all it takes to deliver succor, development and a better and sustainable society for millions of our people and indeed Nigeria.

    “In this wise, our focus will be on economic activities that will engage our youths through employment opportunities and acquisition of skills.

    “This should be in line with our known entrepreneurship models, harnessing of potential in the agriculture value chain through processing, Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) which are the comer stones of Aslan economics.

    “I am conscious of the fact that the tasks we have set for ourselves will not be easy to achieve, but I am happy in the knowledge that they are doable and that we are on the right historical path,” Obiozor said.

    He said that the meeting demonstrated the determined efforts of Nigerians of Igbo extraction to tell their stories in a more positive light.

    He said membership of the newly inagurated committee would be expanded as the need arose to enrich its ideas and mode of operation.

    He said other committees would also be established to handle critical sectors that impacted on the people generally.

    He commended Iwuanyanwu for his sterling contributions towards the growth of Ohanaeze Nidigbo Worldwide as a body and the Igbo nation, and Nigerians in all segments of human endeavour.

    He also thanked all those who worked closely with Iwuanyanwu to ensure the success that had been achieved.

    Members of the committee include Amb. Okey Emuche, (Secretary), Prof. Charles Nwaekeaku, Sen. Orji Uzo Kalu, Chief Chukwuemeka Ezife, Sen. Chief Chris Ngige, Chief Jim Nwobodo and Dr Okweslieze Nwodo.

    Others are Chimaroke Nnamani, Dr Obiora Okonkwo, Sen. Ike Ekweremadu, Chief Ogbonna Onu, Chief Martin Elechi, Sen. Sam Egwu, Sen. Pius Anyim, Chief Achike Udenwa, Chief Ikedi Ohakim, Dr Peter Odili, Chief Chibuike Amaechi and Chief Celestine Omehia.

    Chief Ned Nwoko, Dr Ngozi Okonjo Iwuala, Tony Elumelu, Sen. Ken Nnamani, Prof. Barth Nnaji, Sen. Joy Emodi, Chief Mrs Stella Okoli, Nze Ozichukwu Chukwu, Prof. Maurice iwu are also members of the committee among others.

  • Strike: Blackout in Lagos as South-East is thrown into darkness

    Strike: Blackout in Lagos as South-East is thrown into darkness

    Lagos State has been thrown into darkness effective Wednesday following the nationwide strike by electricity workers under the aegis of the National Union of Electricity Employees (NUEE).

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that Ikeja Electric Plc and Eko Electricity Distribution Company (EKEDC) confirmed the development in separate public notices to their customers.

    The DisCo said the picketing of the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) by the union members had plunged customers under their networks into darkness.

    “Due to the ongoing nationwide picketing of Transmission Stations by the NUEE, we are currently experiencing disruption of power supply as most stations within our network have been shut down.

    “Kindly bear with us as we await amicable resolution by the relevant stakeholders. Thank you for your usual understanding and cooperation,” Ikeja Electric said.

    Similarly, EKEDC said the grounding of activities at the TCN-controlled power stations had led to the disruption of electricity supply to customers across the country.

    “In the meantime, we would like to reassure our esteemed customers that we are currently working with the relevant regulatory authorities and the parties involved to reach an amicable resolution. Thank you for your understanding”, the DisCo said.

    Electricity workers strike: Entire South-East thrown into darkness

    Earlier, the Enugu Electricity Distribution Company (EEDC) announced power supply disruption within the South-East due to the strike by electricity workers.

    This is contained in a statement made available by the Head, Corporate Communications of EEDC, Mr Emeka Ezeh, on Wednesday in Enugu.

    “Following the industrial strike embarked upon by the National Union of Electricity Employees (NUEE) at the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN), power stations operations across the franchise area of EEDC plc have been disrupted.

    “As a result of this, all our feeders are out of supply and this has affected supply to our esteemed customers in Abia, Anambra, Ebonyi, Enugu and Imo states,” he said.

    According to him, consultations are ongoing among critical stakeholders in the power sector to address the issue and possibly restore supply.

    “The management of EEDC hereby encourages customers and neighbourhood associations to be vigilant and protect electrical installations within their environment against elements who might take advantage of this outage to vandalise installations,” he said.

    The EEDC spokesman also appealed for continued patience and understanding of the company’s esteemed customers “while this is resolved”.

    TNG reports that NUEE in a notice signed by its General Secretary, Mr Joe Ajaero, had directed its members to stop work effective Aug. 17. The union had earlier issued a 14-day ultimatum to the Chief Executive Officer of TCN on May 18, threatening to down tools if its complaints were not resolved.

    The electricity workers are protesting the non-payment of outstanding arrears owed to former workers of the defunct Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN). NUEE is also protesting the suspension of conditions of service and career paths for workers and the directive by the TCN board to conduct promotion interviews for acting principal managers who are moving to Assistant General Managers among others.