Politics

Monarch Insists On Rivers South-East Support For Fubara

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The traditional Prime Minister of Okoloma-Afam Council of Traditional Rulers, Chief Sampson Akaya, has admonished the Rivers South East Senatorial District, comprising Khana, Gokana, Tai, Eleme, Andoni, Opobo/Nkoro and Oyigbo Local Government Areas, to queue behind Governor Siminalayi Fubara in his revolutionary and aggressive development agenda for the state.
The royal father commended Governor Fubara for performing excellently well in the administration of the State so far and assured of his domain’s unflinching loyalty and support to his (governor’s) dispensation in order to move the state developmentally forward in the years ahead.
Chief Akaya also appealed to Governor Fubara to help the people of Ndoki to construct their internal roads in order to effectively bring communities in the local government area together, both in business, commerce and other profitable ventures, while curtailing some social vices as well.
Meanwhile, the monarch has called on Rivers State Chief Executive to, as a matter of urgent necessity, establish a university in the boundary between Okoloma – Afam community, in Oyigbo Local Government Area and her neighbour, Bai Ogoi community, in Tai Local Government Area to promote peace, unity and stability between the ancient Kingdoms.
Speaking with newsmen recently in his palace at Okoloma – Afam, headquarters of Oyigbo Local Government Area, Chief Akaya said, if established, the university would enhance job creation and facilitate businesses would be provided for the people of these communities and others.
He maintained that the establishment of such an institution would address the age long cry against marginalization and underdevelopment of both the Ndokis and Ogonis, noting that with the presence of such school, land dispute, internal strife, killings and other negative vices would be a thing of the past.
Chief Akaya, the ‘Oyi- Natu- Mba’ of Ndoki land and member, Oyigbo Council of Traditional Rulers’, lamented that these Kingdoms had not featured prominently in pro-people development policies and programmes of successive administrations in the state.
The monarch expressed the hope that, if established, the envisaged university would permanently resolve the lingering wranglings of who owns what landed property at the boundaries between the Ndoki people and Bai Ogoi people.

Bethel Toby

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