Editorial
Rivers LG Polls And Credible Leadership
Over the years, one major challenge that seems to have defied numerous political theories and policies of the Nigerian state is the issue of instituting a workable accountable and development-oriented local government administration that could propel the desired positive change in the lives of the nation’s rural populace.
Hitherto, Nigerians had hinged the abysmal performance of local government councils on the inability of the Federal Government under whose supervision it was to monitor and control the affairs of local governments, to effectively carry out their responsibility.
This conviction generated concerted calls for a constitutional review of the local government system, subsequent upon which the creation and supervision were shifted to the component states in the 2010 Constitution as amended.
Sadly, the recent outburst by the Senate President, David Mark, chiding the 774 local government councils across the country over their abysmal performance, more than ten years after the constitutional reform, should be a source of concern to the citizenry.
Mark had, in his appraisal of the local government councils, rated the local administration as having performed below expectations, describing them as “mere conduit pipes for siphoning public funds”.
He declared, “all the local government chairmen do is to go to Abuja, collect their allocations and sit down in hotels and share the money and disappear into thin air”.
Alluding to the negative remarks by the Senate President, the Rivers State Governor, Rt. Hon. Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi, in a recent public function, berated most of the council chairmen in the state for showing very poor performance in the last three years.
And to checkmate the negative activities of the councils, the state government unveiled stringent plans that would identify and arrest such ugly situations through the Rivers State Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs.
The state Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, Dr. Tammy Danagogo, at a project commissioning in the Akuku-Toru Local Government Area, said the ministry had commenced assessment of the various local government chairmen in the state.
Danagogo disclosed that the assessment would focus on projects initiation by the local government chairmen, and hinted that close monitoring of activities of council helmsmen was necessary in order to infuse transparency and purposeful leadership at the grassroots.
It is unfortunate, that the avalanche of criticisms, including those from the Deputy Leader of the Rivers State House of Assembly, Hon. Hope Ikiriko, who took a swipe at some of the immediate past local government chairmen, for non-performance, point to the fact that the monitoring strategy of the state government has its obvious flaws.
We are more disturbed with the low performance of most of the past local government chairmen, against the backdrop of the fact that Governor Amaechi’s administration has lifted the burden of payment of primary school teachers’ salary as well as the construction of primary health centres, which hitherto, took a huge chunk of the local government allocations from the federation account off the third tier drivers.
No doubt, major allegations behind the poor performance of most of the outgone local government chairmen are negative influence of political godfathers who are equally pushing for the return of the same chairmen to office for a second term, and the unbridled passion of these chairmen for quick wealth at the expense of the poor electorate.
It is, therefore, our view that, while the electorate prepare to cast their votes for trusted persons in the forthcoming local government elections in Rivers State, the various political parties should make haste to present credible candidates that can drive the process in the desired direction.
We also call on the Rivers State Independent Electoral Commission (RSIEC) to emulate the Prof. Attahiru Jega-led Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in ensuring the conduct of more transparent, free, fair and credible elections that would enlist the confidence of the citizenry in the country’s democracy.
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