Nigeria governors forum & plot to remove Amaechi
By Odimegwu Onwumere
Dr. Dennis O'Grady
tells us in "Bottom Line - Personal" that change has a bad reputation
in our society. But it isn't all bad — not by any means. In fact, change is
necessary in life — to keep us moving... to keep us growing... to keep us
interested.... Imagine life without change. It would be static... boring...
dull.
And Max Planck tells us in "The Philosophy of Physics" (1936)
that an important scientific innovation rarely makes its way rapidly winning
over and converting its opponents; it rarely happens that Saul becomes Paul.
What does happen is that its opponents gradually die out and that the growing
generation is familiarized with the idea from the beginning.
With the news that Governor Chibuike Amaechi of
Rivers who is also the Chairman of Nigeria Governors Forum (NGF) was able to
thwart a coup that was plotted against him by persons from certain quarters in
the NGF, is an indication that Amaechi should look beyond the mere foiled coup
and watch that there are people who do not want to make their threats open to
remove him as the NGF’s chairman, but are silently on revenge mission for only
reasons best known to them.
It could be recalled that in September last year,
when the NGF said that it was about to find a lasting solution to the country’s
security challenges and unanimously agreed on what to do, the suggestion gradually
widened as the Northern governors opposed to the decentralisation of the
Nigerian Police Force. We learnt then that in a communiqué reportedly signed by
the Northern governors on this issue of state police exposed the height of
betrayal of persons to the position of the Amaechi as the chair of the NGF. The
NGF sang with discordant voices at that stage, with the authentic refusal of
the Northern Governors for the creation of state police.
I contributed a piece on that issue and warned that Amaechi
should read the handwriting on the wall in the NGF’s house and know that it would
be very hard to reduce the pains and inflammation the state “Nigeria” is
causing us, because some people hardly would agree on what Dr. Dennis O'Grady had told us in "Bottom Line -
Personal" that change has a bad reputation in our society. But it isn't
all bad — not by any means. In fact, change is necessary in life — to keep us
moving... to keep us growing... to keep us interested.... Imagine life without
change. It would be static... boring... dull.
Nigeria is one, but different Nigerians. I told him that
he is the chair of the NGF does not mean that he is loved by all in the NGF. I
said that how else would we not agree on this if the Northern governors had the
effrontery to thwart a decision the NGF agreed upon and perhaps was nailed by
the NGF’s chair, which was always the norm in every meeting. I asked if the
renegades would not be expunged from the meeting. But Amaechi in his
charismatic self told the world after, that the NGF was intact – there were no
qualms to quake about the discordant voices.
As we have also read in the news that Amaechi was
seeking for a second term in the NGF’s fold, it is a good development owing to
his fundamental rights. But the idea to scheme him out by some forces believed
to be outside the NGF’s fold, hinging their point that NGF does not allow a
chairman to run for a second term in office, is the ugliest side of the group’s
politics, instead they would tell us that there were people who are not happy
with the height Amaechi has attained in the politics of the country.
In leadership, you
do not expect the leader to be championing the cause of others other than those
he or she was elected to head or spearhead. In my estimation, I think Amaechi
has done well in this area. Initially, the NGF was not all this known, except
as Amaechi becomes its Chair. He has shown how a servant-leader can credibly
perform. Amaechi became a servant first in the NGF, which compelled the anti-Amaechi
to first see him as its leader and later want him booted out. Why?
Amaechi has shown in
the NGF what was written in the Christian Bible, precisely in the book of
Matthew 20:25-26: Jesus called them together and said, "You know that the
rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their high officials exercise
authority over them. Not so with you. Instead, whoever wants to become great
among you must be your servant. But those seeking for Amaechi’s removal remind
me of what was contained in the book of Philippians 2:3-5: Do nothing out of
selfish ambition or vain conceit, but in humility consider others better than
yourselves. Each of you should look not only to your own interests, but also to
the interests of others. Your attitude should be the same...
If Amaechi had
become a stooge of the presidency in his position, Nigerians would have
condemned him. Now, he is not against the presidency, but working with the
dictates of the NGF, detractors are at his jugular, as if there had been any
personal agenda of his other than that of the NGF in adding voice to the
dictates of the Executive. I can’t remember anywhere that
Amaechi is leading in the NGF by hitting people’s head; rather, he has been coalescing
his counterparts around a shared vision.
It is time the anti-Amaechi forces in and outside
the NGF should beware. You can’t weaken truth by killing the truth-bearer. It is
grateful that some members in the NGF saw the reason Amaechi should continue
and eschewed those forces that wanted to impose a chairman on the Forum. It is however noteworthy of Amaechi who had shown in the
NGF what Richard Petty and John Cacioppo instruct in the book, "Attitudes
& Persuasion" that the nature and structure of belief systems is
important from the perspective of an informational theorist because beliefs are
thought to provide the cognitive foundation of an attitude. In order to change
an attitude, then, it is presumably necessary to modify the information on
which that attitude rests. It is generally necessary, therefore, to change a
person's beliefs, eliminate old beliefs or introduce new beliefs.
Amaechi has brought
about transformation and reformation in the Nigeria Governors Forum, and this
could be why those who suffer from the Old Order and Beliefs do not want him.
However, Dr. Dennis O'Grady had told us in "Bottom Line - Personal" that
change has a bad reputation in our society. But it isn't all bad — not by any
means. In fact, change is necessary in life — to keep us moving ... to keep us
growing ... to keep us interested.... Imagine life without change. It would be
static... boring... dull.
--
Odimegwu
Onwumere, is the
Coordinator, Concerned Non-Indigenes In Rivers State (CONIRIV)
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