Opinion
Orji: The Shame Of An Action
Nigeria, like other
countries, is bound by a constitution. But where the problem lies is the implementation of the constitution which is also the grundnorm. Like the Constitution, so are other laws and policies in the nation which are hardly enforced.
The truth is that Nigeria is not a nation yet. It is a mere geographical expression. A country that only exists on paper.
There are three tiers of government in the country and each tier has its own civil service. The federal civil service is controlled by the federal government while the state civil service is controlled by the various state governments. Local government councils also have their workforce.
The president heads the federal civil service while the governors are in-charge of the workforce in their respective states. The same applies to council chairmen in the local government areas.
One thing that characterizes civil service in the country and perhaps elsewhere is its poor condition of service. But even in the midst of this, the service enjoys immunity, if you like call it job security. This privilege is hardly enjoyed by workers in the private sector.
That is why I think the recent directive by the Abia State governor, Mr. Theodore Orji, that non-indigenous civil servants in the state be relieved of their appointments as a sad development capable of creating disunity in the country. Indeed, it has already created one.
The question now is where lies the unity we have been preaching as a nation all the time? What surprises me is that Igbos are more affected by the governor’s action than non-Igbos. What is the rationale behind this action? Is it to employ Abia State indigenes in their place?
No doubt, Governor Orji’s action has caused some hardship to the displaced persons and their families. For instance, the affected civil servants from Enugu State are already crying to their governor to absorb them. One wonders what the Enugu State governor should do in the circumstances. To sack non-indigenes in his state in order to accommodate his people?
I feel particularly pained that it was these same people that voted the governor into office few months ago. Why did he did not include this action in his manifesto to the people?
Governor Orji’s action is a shame and has to be abhorred by all. His action comes at a time when other state governors are appointing non-indigenes into their respective state cabinets and other exalted positions.
For instance, in Lagos State, an Igbo man was appointed a commissioner. This act is replicated in Rivers State where Governor Chibuike Amaechi appointed a non-indigene as commissioner. Also in the same state, the governor’s Chief Press Secretary is a non-indigene.
Rivers is one state where a glut of non-indigenes exists in its civil service. Should the governor decide to flush out non-indigenes from the service, what will be its effect on the people and the nation at large?
Orji’s misdemeanour is a slight on the rights of Nigerians which is enshrined in the constitution. The right to live and work at any where in the country has been specifically desecrated by the unfortunate act of the Abia State governor.
Truly, Governor Orji has threatened the unity of the country. Last year in the United Kingdom, five Nigerians from Igbo extractions contested parliamentary election. Three of the few won seats in the House of Commons. Can that happen in Nigeria. If other governors were to adopt Orji’s maxim as a model, what will be the fate of non-indigenes serving in other states’ civil service?
I think the Governors Forum should act now. The only remedy left for Orji is to reinstate the sacked civil servants. If he is unable to pay the new wage, he should explore other options to generate revenue such as effective taxation which the Edo State governor, Adams Oshiomhole, uses to create wonders in Edo.
It is unfortunate that Governor Orji treated his own people the way he did. If his action is not nipped, what will happen in the remaining period of his tenure.
Ogwuonuonu wrote from Port Harcourt.
Frank Ogwuonuonu
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