Rivers

Lawyers, Others Count Losses In Rivers

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Residents of Rivers State
are still counting their losses as Governor Nyesom Wike reopened the judiciary and the House of Assembly.
A Port Harcourt-based politician, Mr Stanley Oribi told our correspondent in Port Harcourt that the state had returned to normalcy.
Oribi said that nothing was working in the state because of the impasse between lawmakers and state government.
A lawyer, Mrs Roseline Ngeri, expressed regrets that suspects languished in police custody, while cases of awaiting trail inmates in the prison were stalled because of the closure of courts.
A politician, Mr. James Agbebi, said the state seemed to be administered on emergency rule as the legislature was closed down.
Agbebi said that the state was in stagnation as there was nothing to direct the growth and development of the state.
A trader, Mrs Franca Josiah, said that before Wike reopened the courts and the state legislature, things were not normal.
She said business thrive better now as there was higher patronage of goods by customers in the market.
In his own remark, a student of University of Port Harcourt, Choba, Mr Loveday Abite said it was one of the best things that had happened in Rivers State in the last one year and six months.

 

Margret Ogwama/ Igechi Ogbonda

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