The
Senate yesterday censured the Governor of Imo State, Rochas Okorocha,
over his recent order asking northerners in his state to register and
obtain identity cards as part of his administration’s measures to curb
growing insecurity in the country.
Ostensibly, Okorocha
gave the order in reaction to a recent attempt to blow up a church in
Owerri, the Imo State capital, as well as the arrest in neighbouring
Abia State of 486 citizens of northern origin who were travelling in a
convoy of 35 buses to Port Harcourt, Rivers State.
The Senate, which also urged the federal government to restrain the
security agencies from cooperating with the state government in this
plan, advised the governor to henceforth jettison the move, saying it
would further threaten the unity of Nigeria.
The resolution
followed a motion by Deputy Senate Leader, Abdul Ningi, berating the
governor for originating what he described as an obnoxious policy,
describing the move as a gross violation of Section 41(1) and 42(2) of
the 1999 Constitution, which he said gives every Nigerian the freedom to
move and reside in any part of the country.
While citing these
constitutional provisions to buttress his motion, Ningi recalled that
Section 41(1) provides that “every citizen of Nigeria is entitled to
move freely throughout Nigeria and to reside in any part thereof, and no
citizen of Nigeria shall be expelled from Nigeria or refused entry
thereto or exit therefrom”.
He also cited Sections 42(1) A and
B, which provides that “no citizens of Nigeria shall be subjected to any
disability or deprivation by reason of the circumstance of his birth”.
The motion was well supported by other senators who described it as
evil, immoral, unconscionable and condemnable with some of them
describing Okorocha as one of “the people who are not supposed to occupy
the position they occupy”.
While Senator George Sekibo said
the governor should be “reprimanded” for evolving such a policy, others
expressed disappointment that Okorocha, who was born and raised in
northern Nigeria had given the order to move against people of another
ethnic stock living in his state.
The matter got to a head when
Senator Chris Anyawu (Imo East), used the opportunity to take a pound
of flesh against her state governor with whom she once had a face-off
prior to her defection from All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) to
the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).
The
Senate thereafter asked the federal government to stop security agents
from carrying out Okorocha’s order, saying that doing so would
automatically frustrate the success of the exercise.
However,
no senator took interest in a similar example cited by Senator Ita Enang
(Akwa Ibom North-east) who compared Okorocha’s directive with what
obtains in an unnamed community in Niger State, where he said no
preacher is allowed into a church to preach until he had first gone to
register and secured the permission of the emir of the community.

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