Gov. Godswill Akpabio |
•Personally supervises his beating
The Akwa Ibom state
House of Assembly has descended into a serious crisis after the state governor,
Godswill Akpabio, personally supervised the beating of a lawmaker he suspected
to be politically opposed to him and his loyalists.
Mr. Akpabio, witnesses said, watched as his loyalists
manhandled Onofiok Luke, chairman of the House Committee on Finance and
Appropriations, who was accused of being rude to the governor after he rose in
defense of another lawmaker accused of challenging a loyalist of the governor
at a caucus meeting held two days earlier.
The incident happened November 2 at a funeral service in
honour of the mother-in-law of a state lawmaker, Gabriel Tobi, held in Etim
Ekpo local government area of the state.
Mr. Akpabio had at the event summoned some lawmakers and
tongue-lashed them for doing nothing after Victor Udofia, a lawmaker
representing Ikono/Ini state Constituency, allegedly attacked his loyalist,
Aniekan Akpan, a member representing Ukanafun state constituency, at a caucus
meeting of the House.
Witnesses say as the governor fumed and abused Mr. Udofia,
who was not at the event, an equally furious Mr. Luke rose in defence of his
colleague, telling the governor to abandon his divide-and-rule tactics in the
interest of the state.
The governor had directed the speaker of the Assembly, Sam
Ikon, to immediately activate a process that would lead to the suspension of
Mr. Udofia from the House. But Mr. Luke reportedly shot back, saying Mr. Udofia
committed no offence and that any move to punish him would be resisted.
Angered by Mr. Luke’s audacity, Messrs Ekon and Ntuen
descended on him, hitting and punching him repeatedly.
Mr. Akpabio simply looked on, our sources said.
The fight, we learnt, only ended after Paul Ekpo, the state
Chairman of the Peoples Democratic Party, intervened.
The Akwa state House of Assembly is now divided along those from the governor’s minority Annang ethnic group and those from the majority Ibibio ethnic group.
The Akwa state House of Assembly is now divided along those from the governor’s minority Annang ethnic group and those from the majority Ibibio ethnic group.
Some lawmakers accuse Mr. Akpabio of financially empowering
legislators from his ethnic group and then using them to undermine the speaker
and other lawmakers from Ibibioland.
Messrs Ntuen and Ekon, who attacked Mr. Luke, are from Mr.
Akpabio’s Annang ethnic group while Mr. Luke is Ibibio.
Ibomcelebs learnt that after
the incident, Mr. Akpabio directed his aides to embark on a tour of media
establishments to compromise them and get them to drop stories on the accident.
Concerned that the incident might do further damage to his
image, our sources within the administration said, the governor also hurriedly
convened a press conference where he allegedly bribed reporters with N50,000
each not to report the incident.
Mr. Akpabio could not be reached to comment for this story.
But his spokesperson, who is also the state Commissioner for
Information, Aniekan Umanah, confirmed there was a disagreement between Mr.
Onofiok and the governor.
Mr. Umanah said while talking to the governor on the day in
question, the lawmaker raised his voice against Mr. Akpabio.
“Other members asked him not to shout because he was talking
to the governor,” Mr. Umanah said. “Later, everything calmed down.”
The commissioner added via a text message, “I was there in
person. Nobody beat up Onofiok talk less of doing so before the governor.”
Mr. Onofiok could not be reached for comments. But a source
close to him said he had been under pressure from Governor Akpabio in the last
few days to address the media to say he was never beaten by the governor’s
loyalists.
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