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| Victor Oko-Jombo. |
The crisis rocking Rivers State has taken an entirely new dimension following the emergence of another faction speaker of the State House of Assembly.
The
factional Speaker, Victor Oko Jumbo, representing Bonny Constituency, was
elected speaker of the State Assembly signaling the total collapse of the peace
deal brokered between the parties by President Bola Tinubu, returning all
involved in the impasse to the trenches.
This
development might be a response to the opposition All Progressives Congress’
(APC) directive to the 27 Assembly members to impeach Governor Fubara.
Oko-Jumbo
takes over from the former factional Speaker of the House, Rt. Hon. Eddison
Ehie, who resigned as both Speaker and member of the House on December 31,
2023.
Ehie,
who represented Ahoada-East Constituency 2 in the House, was later appointed as
Chief of Staff to Governor Fubara.
The
location where the election that produced Oko-Jumbo, a staunch supporter of the
state governor, was held couldn’t be ascertained as at press time.
The
emergence of the Bonny-born politician as the factional Speaker of the State
House of Assembly came barely 48 hours after Fubara declared that the majority
27 members of the House, who defected from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP)
to the All Progressives Congress (APC), as non-existent.
The
governor spoke when a delegation of Bayelsa State political and traditional
leaders visited him at Government House, Port Harcourt, on Monday.
He
had said: “Let me say it here, those group of men who claim that they are
Assembly members, they are not existing. I want it to be on record.
“I
accepted that peace accord to give them a floating (soft-landing). That’s the
truth. There is nothing in that peace accord that is a constitutional issue. It
is a political solution to a problem. I accepted it because these are people
that were visiting me and we were together in my house.
“These
are people that I have helped in many ways when I wasn’t even a Governor. Yes,
we might have our disagreements, but I believe that one day, we could also come
together. That was the reason I did it.
“But
I think it has gotten to a time when I need to make a statement on this thing,
so that they understand that they are not existing. Their existence and
whatever they have been doing is because I allowed them to do so. If I don’t
recognize them, they are nowhere, that is the truth.”

1 Comments
The 27 Assembly members are elected into office by Rivers people so as Gov Fubara, so he cannot invalidate that by saying he does not recognise them.
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