Multi billion Rivers state house of assembly complex demolished following rift between Wike & Gov. Fubara

Intrigues continue to trail the political crisis in Rivers State as the state House of Assembly Complex was today demolished.

This was as Governor Siminalayi Fubara presented the N800billion 2024 budget estimates to the Edison Ehie-led group at the Government House the same moment the demolition was carried out, reports Channels TV.

Ehie was recognised by the court as the Speaker of the House while the court restrained Martins Amaewhule from parading himself as the speaker.

The presentation of the budget was held at a hall in the Government House, apparently, due to the “renovation” work at the state assembly complex which started Wednesday morning.

The demolition of the complex was carried out by the state government.

Bulldozers arrived at the Complex around 6am today and commenced the demolition exercise about two months after fire gutted the complex.

Mass Defections, Alliances

Twenty-seven members of the Rivers State House of Assembly, on Monday, had defected from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to the All Progressives Congress (APC).

The 27 lawmakers wave APC flag after a meeting at the Assembly Complex on Monday, December 11, 2023

The 27 members were said to be loyal to Amaewhule, who is an ally of Nyesom Wike, a former governor of the state till May 29, 2023.

The defection of the lawmakers was said to be a direct response to a mass exodus of some grassroot politicians from the APC and Social Democratic Party (SDP) to the PDP last weekend.

Leading the defectors from the SDP and the APC were the deputy governorship candidate of the SDP in the 2023 election, Patricia Ogbonnaya; and former Ahoada-West Chairman, Karibo Wilson.

The politicians dumped their former parties to pitch tent with the PDP group loyal to Fubara.

Similarly, Labour Party (LP)’s 2023 Governorship Candidate in the state, Beatrice Itubo, initiated solidarity talks with Fubara earlier this week as the pressure mounts on the governor.

Godfatherism At Play?

The crisis in the 32-member Assembly had begun as a result of a rift between Fubara and his predecessor, Wike.

In October, the Assembly under Amaewhule served an impeachment notice on Fubara and removed Ehie as the House leader. However, some members of the Assembly loyal to Fubara immediately impeached Amaewhule and made Ehie the new Speaker.

A Rivers High Court sitting in Port Harcourt subsequently restrained the Amaewhule-led group from forcefully gaining access into the assembly complex, pending the hearing of the suit before it.

Wike had revealed his grouse with his successor, saying Fubara hobnobbed with some of his political enemies after getting into office. The FCT minister had described the governor as an ingrate, who wants to hijack his “political structure” in the state. The ex-governor had also accused his successor of burning the state Assembly complex to prevent his impeachment, an allegation the governor denied.

However, Fubara had apologised and said Wike would continue to be his principal.

Also, President Bola Tinubu and PDP governors had intervened but there seemed to be no end in sight to the political upheaval in the oil-rich South-South state.

Meanwhile, elder statesman, Chief Edwin Clark, has again urged the President to call Wike, the current Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), to order over the political situation in Rivers State.

Clark, the nonagenarian leader of the Pan-Niger Delta Forum (PANDEF), accused Wike of godfatherism, saying if all former governors insist on controlling their successors, there will be chaos in the country.

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