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What we’ve in Rivers is coalition of Renewed Hope family -Dr Worlu declares
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..says Fubara has huge responsibility to restore peace in Rivers
…he cannot run govt in isolation of others
.. it is up to Fubara to decide whether he wants peace or war
The Chairman of Obio/Akpor Local Government of Rivers State, Dr Gift Worlu has said what is in Rivers today is a rainbow coalition of Renewed Hope family.
Dr Worlu who is apparently not happy with the state of governance in Rivers state affirmed that ”
Yes, there’s a renewed hope family that all of us belong to in our state.
He made the affirmation in a chat with journalists in Abuja on Thursday insisting that what is available in Rivers state is a coalition rainbow of the Renewed Hope family.
Using real life examples to drive home his point, Worlu explained that ‘You know, in our churches, sometimes you have a particular church having an event and inviting other churches to join them and they will all come together under what is called the body of Christ.
” We don’t quarrel about it.But when politicians come together in the interest of peace, in the interest of protecting their interests, in the interest of justifying, in our case now, the goodwill that we have enjoyed under the presidency of Asiwaju Ahmed Bola, Tinubu as a state, don’t forget that politics is local, all politics is local.
“And Rivers people, we have seen what we have never seen before. The kind of goodwill that we have enjoyed, whether it is in terms of projects in Rivers State executed by the federal government, whether it is in terms of appointments of our sons and daughters, whether it is in terms of the good relationship that we enjoy from the President, we have decided as a people that the time has come for us to keep party aside and work together in the overall interest of our state and the people and that’s what I mean.
“I belong to the PDP. But when it comes to the issue of the election that is coming in 2027, I am not PDP. I am for Asiwaju Ahmed Bola Tinubu.
“I am a member of the Renewed Hope family. That’s the point I’m making. And all of us are in that Renewed Hope family including the Governor and that’s where the FCT Minister is leader.
On the crisis rocking the state he said:”Well, in my place, there’s a saying that when a husband and wife have issues, and the matter is brought to the Council of Chiefs. The duty of the Council of Chiefs is to put aside the differences and see how they can bring them together. But ultimately, these two individuals will go to their house, and the Council of Chiefs will go to their own houses.
” It is what the both of them make of what the Council of Chiefs has told them that will tell whether there is peace or not. I talked to you before about poor handling of affairs.
“If you wake up this morning and you decided to dress in the way you are dressed, it’s your personal matter. Nobody has a right, not even maybe your husband. Maybe he can say, oh, I like the way you are dressed, or I think you should do this but it’s your personal matter.
“But when it has to do with a matter of even what your husband will eat, because it affects him, you need to ask him, darling, what if I do this or I do that? Then when you talk about the state, you know that you cannot decide as you like. I also talked to you about the issue of incompetence.
“We saw the Governor of Delta State defect recently. You saw how that defection happened. We saw which other governor defect. A lot of governors have defected, even Bayelsa State.
“The day he defected, he did so with people. He called people around, because it’s not your personal thing.
“When it happened in Rivers State, what did you see? It was one man standing alone. That’s not leadership, because leadership as I know it, It is said that if you think that you’re a leader and nobody’s following you, you’re just taking a walk.
“So the man has the yam. He has the knife. He’s the governor. He decides how he wants things to be. If he wants peace, he will decide. If he wants war, it’s up to him.
“What he needs to do since he became Governor, since he came back after the emergency rule, of course he came back and we’re already in office as chairman. We’ve never had a meeting with him.
“He has never called us. He has never called the Assembly for any meeting. He has not called the elders of the party and the system that he belongs to.
“See, as chairman of council in my local government, I know who my leaders are. If I want a meeting to hold, I reach out to them. I say, leader, I think we should do this and that and there should be a meeting for us to agree on how to move forward. That’s how it’s done. It doesn’t make me leader.
“But I am responsible for what happens in my local government. Of course, you saw the event that we had on Sunday. You saw the crowd there. You saw the enthusiasm of the people.
“It’s a function of the organic unity of purpose that we have in that local government, all of us working together.I have very senior members of the party in my local government including the FCT Minister and for every singular action that I take including coming to this studio, I let them know. If they say don’t go, I stay back because I believe they probably know more than me, they probably have a better understanding of things more than me.
“I can go back later and say, leader why did you say that I shouldn’t go? And they will explain to me. You have to have a relationship with people. But like I told you, a personality that is introverted and for crying out loud, this is where sometimes I think that there should be science in our politics.
“You don’t just throw up people, you don’t just allow anybody to become anything. We talked about testing people for drug use before we allow them to go into office, then you should also think about the personality of the individual.
“If somebody is to occupy the office of accountant general and he is not somebody who is talking too much, that is fine. But for you to be governor of a state, you must talk oh because you remembered how Nigerians were saying we have not heard from our leader, we have not heard from the President because you must talk.
Is not the leader that made any mistake, I am only talking generally the way we go about leadership selection.
Probed to further expanciate he said:”Yes, I am saying that so many other things should be considered. He said this because from a human resources perspective, when you want to hire somebody and I teach this in the school, when you want to hire somebody for a job, you look at the person’s technical competence.
“For example, for you to be a journalist, you have your training as a journalist. Then your character is also important. Your height may be considered and so many other things will be considered.
“The matter in Rivers State is certainly a development we don’t mind that there is peace, so long as it is anchored on justice and understanding.
“And when there is finally peace, people should take responsibility for sustaining it and in this case the Governor has very huge responsibility to ensure that there is peace in Rivers State.
News
Reps Move to Modernise Price Control Law, as Bill Pass Second Reading
By Gloria Ikibah
The House of Representatives on Wednesday pushed forward sweeping reforms to Nigeria’s price control regime, as lawmakers approved key bills for second reading amid spirited debate on parliamentary procedure.
Leading debate on the Bill to amend the Price Control Act, Ahmed Munir, declared that the 1977 legislation had become obsolete and ineffective in the face of present-day economic realities.
“The original intent of the 1977 Act was global, to protect ordinary Nigerians from hoarding, price gouging and artificial scarcity. However, the mechanisms it put in place and the list of commodities it covered are completely out of sync with the economic realities of 2026.
“As it stands today, the Price Control Act is blindly a dead letter law,” he said.
He criticised the existing penalties as “laughably low” and faulted the Act for failing to define essential goods in line with the needs of modern households.
He stressed that the amendment would not amount to a return to rigid price-fixing.
“While inflation has external and structural drivers, we cannot ignore the local menace of unscrupulous middlemen, artificial hoarding and predatory price-fixing by cartels, taking advantage of the vulnerability of our people. The current 1977 Act fails us in two major ways — obsolete penalties and vague and outdated definitions.
“This amendment does not seek a return to archaic, heavy-handed price-fixing, which we know destroys businesses. Rather, it introduces a smart, balanced and realistic regulatory framework.
“This bill is not about suffocating the free market. It is about putting a civilised guardrail on it. It ensures that while businesses make legitimate profits, the desperate situation of our citizens is not weaponised against them by cartels,” Munir argued.
According to him, the proposal will “bring transparency to supply chains and give teeth to the regulatory bodies like the Federal Competition and Consumer Protection Commission”.
He urged colleagues to back what he described as “this vital, people-centred bill.”
When put to a voice vote by the presiding officer, Speaker Tajudeen Abbas, the House unanimously adopted the motion and referred it to the Committee on Commerce for further legislative action.
News
BREAKING: ‘Hope Is Here’: Reps Rally Support for State Police Ahead of Crucial Constitutional Vote On Thursday
…as Deputy Speaker, Regional leaders declare House united on security reform
By Gloria Ikibah
The House of Representatives has intensified its push for the establishment of state police, declaring that lawmakers are prepared to take decisive legislative action to address Nigeria’s worsening security challenges.
Addressing journalists alongside zonal and caucus leaders of the House, Deputy Speaker Benjamin Kalu said the National Assembly was determined to complement the efforts of the Executive through constitutional reforms that will strengthen policing and improve response to insecurity across the country.
The bill sponsored by Deputy Speaker Kalu and 14 other lawmakers, was passed on February 20, 2024, it seeks to transfer “Police” from the “Exclusive Legislative List ” to the “Concurrent Legislative List”, effectively empowering states to have state to have state-controlled policing.
It proposes 16 alterations to the constitution and introduces a comprehensive framework to ensure cohesion accountability, and uniform standards between the federal police and state police.
The bill also seeks to establish State Police Service Commission as distinct from the Federal Police Service Commission with clearly defined roles and jurisdictions.
Kalu argued that while Parliament had continued to exercise its oversight powers by summoning security chiefs and government officials, lawmakers must also deploy legislative solutions to tackle the root causes of the nation’s security crisis.
The Deputy Speaker noted that the House had always positioned itself as a platform where national challenges are debated and practical solutions developed through legislation.
He said: “When we say that security of lives and property is a primary purpose of government, what do the executive think that that particular section refers to? Does it consign the three arms of government? And if yes, what is the executive doing? While we call them to order as Parliament and as allowed by Sections 88 and 89 of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 as amended, the question becomes, have we done our part in regards to the expectation of 88 and 89 as it consigns legislative functions?
“We have always referred to the Parliament, the House of Representatives, as the solution hub where hydra-headed problems of the country are presented and solutions given to them in security and legislative tool to cure it.
“Whilst we call the chief service chiefs to come and meet with us to dialogue, while we call ministries of finance, budget office and all the others, there is the need for us to use legislative tool to block the car.”
Kalu praised members of the constitutional amendment committees and regional leaders of the House, describing them as the driving force behind the ongoing efforts to reform the nation’s security architecture.
“These men here are the real leaders of the House of Representatives who have been working night and day.
“When I mean night and day, I mean literally night and day.”
According to him, lawmakers have concluded that the current constitutional framework governing policing is inadequate to meet the security expectations of Nigerians.
“We have discovered that leaving the law as it is will not give us that expectation that all Nigerians have placed in the expectation basket with regards to curing the issue of insecurity.
“Therefore, we decided to prioritise the issue of unbundling security-related problems, response time through the legislative tool of legislation, targeting policing”, he said.
He disclosed that consultations on state policing had attracted broad support from critical stakeholders, including the Inspector-General of Police, governors and the Executive arm of government.
The Deputy Speaker argued that constitutional provisions, particularly Section 214 and related clauses, would need to be amended to pave the way for state police.
“And we said as it is today, the structure which has been agreed to by the IGP and his team, national consensus has also arisen on it, the executive have bought into it, the governors have bought into it, that there is the need for state police.
“The Constitution as it is, especially Section 214 and other consequential amendments in that particular Constitution, would not birth the state police that will guarantee what we’ll be looking for in the space of security.”
Kalu revealed that the House will move to vote on the constitutional amendment proposals, with state police placed high on the agenda.
He added that the announcement was intended to reassure Nigerians that lawmakers across the six geopolitical zones and the Federal Capital Territory were united in support of the proposal.
“So we are here to announce to Nigerians that hope is coming, that hope to have a better response time to incidents of crime is here, that we have decided, do talk, that by tomorrow we’ll be voting on the Constitution and in that we’ll be prioritising state police.
“This is us telling our supporters, our constituents across the nation, that your leaders are represented here, that the six caucus leaders, including the FCT 37, they are here, regional leaders and zonal leaders are here and all of us are together on this mission.
Dismissing reports suggesting that efforts were underway to frustrate the proposal, the Deputy Speaker insisted that the House remained firmly committed to the reform.
“The Speaker has asked us to come and address Nigerians to assure them that hope is coming and there is nobody stopping us from going ahead with state police.
“We’ve read a lot of things on the news that people are trying to stop it. No, the Parliament is marching forward and by tomorrow we’ll be concluding on this”, he noted.
Expressing confidence in the next phase of the constitutional amendment process, Kalu said lawmakers expected strong support from state governors and Houses of Assembly once the proposal leaves the National Assembly.
“This is what we have come to inform you that hope is here and by tomorrow state police will make it in our constitutional amendment.
“We are hoping that by the time we finish tomorrow it will be going to the states and because we have seen the body language of the governors of these 36 states, which is in support of state police, they will work hand in hand with their Houses of Assembly to ensure that it is returned back to Mr President for his assent as quickly as possible”, he added.
The Deputy Speaker also issued an urgent appeal to lawmakers currently carrying out oversight assignments across the country to return to Abuja for the vote.
“We’re also using this opportunity to invite our members who are currently handling oversight function across Nigeria. Let them cut it short and fly in. It’s an emergency situation.
“They should cut it short and fly in tomorrow. We want all our members to be in the House so that will show our constituents that we are in support of state police and that security is priority on our list”, he said.
The proposed state police framework remains one of the most closely watched constitutional amendment initiatives before the National Assembly, with supporters arguing that decentralised policing will improve intelligence gathering, strengthen local security responses and help address the country’s persistent insecurity challenges.
News
Blackout hits Abuja, Nasarawa, AEDC explains
Abuja Electricity Distribution Company has announced an electricity outage in parts of the Federal Capital Territory and Nasarawa State.
AEDC disclosed this in a notice on Wednesday.
The disco said the outage is due to a technical fault on the transmission company of Nigeria (TCN) 132kV Apo – Karu – line 1.
Consequently, bulk electricity supply has been disrupted in areas in Abuja and Nasarawa, including in Karu, Nyanya, Jikwoyi, Kurudu, Orozo, Karshi, Mararaba, Ado, New Nyanya, New Karu Uke, Masaka, Auta Balaifi, Keffi, Nasarawa Toto, Akwanga, Nasarawa Eggon, and environs.
The disco, however, assured electricity restoration.
“The technical team of the Transmission Company of Nigeria (TCN) is currently working to restore power supply around 3:00 pm today, 10th June 2026.
“We regret the inconvenience this may cause and appreciate your patience and understanding,” AEDC stated.
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