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ITU and the roadmap to global digital connectivity

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By Sonny Aragba-Akpore

At a time when network connectivity locally was wobbling, Nigeria recently joined the rest of the world in formulating a roadmap to ensure global connectivity.
Rising after 11 days of deliberations at the World Telecommunications Development Conference (WTDC 25) in Baku, Azerbaijan, the country’s representative, the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC), signed to ensure that digital benefits get to its population.
Of the 2.2billion global population that is offline, no fewer than 23 million reside in Nigeria, located in underserved and unserved communities across the country. ITU plans to bridge this divide by 2030 as part of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Universal, meaningful connectivity at the centre of global strategy for human-centred digital development was the fulcrum of WTDC 25.

​Indeed, Member States of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) agreed on a roadmap to bring connectivity to everyone around the world as the World Telecommunication Development Conference (WTDC-25) closed in Baku, Azerbaijan, on November 28, 202.
“The Baku Action Plan agreed at WTDC-25 sets the agenda for human-centred digital development driven by telecommunications and information and communication technologies with focus on the needs of developing countries, underserved communities and vulnerable populations, according to ITU documents.
It states that “with an estimated 2.2 billion people worldwide still offline, the four-year plan spanning 2026 to 2029 supports efforts to advance universal, meaningful and affordable digital connectivity for an inclusive and sustainable digital future.”
“As conveyed to the WTDC-25 Opening Ceremony on behalf of the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev, Baku became the place where Member States and partners agreed on practical outcomes to guide ITU’s development work for the next four years,” said Rashad Nabiyev, Azerbaijan’s Minister of Digital Development and Transport. “Working alongside our partners, Azerbaijan has contributed to shaping these outcomes. The adoption of the Baku Declaration, which includes a reference to the COP29 Declaration on Green Digital Action, reflects our shared commitment to an inclusive and sustainable digital future.”
The Baku Action Plan, the principal outcome document of WTDC-25, includes new and revised resolutions to guide ITU’s digital development work, recommendations for ITU’s Telecommunication Development Sector (ITU-D), and new initiatives addressing key digital development priorities in ITU-D regions. The plan also sets out new and revised questions on issues to be addressed by expert ITU-D study groups.
“The outcomes of WTDC-25, contained in the Baku Action Plan, reflect the needs, priorities and aspirations of our membership in a forward-looking and results-oriented agenda for digital development and impact,” said Cosmas Luckyson Zavazava, Director of ITU’s Bureau of Telecommunication Development. “The Plan outlines the roadmap of action to bridge the remaining digital divides, while addressing the unique needs of Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and Small Island Developing States. We look forward to delivering tangible results and accelerating digital transformation by working with governments and regulators to create an enabling policy and regulatory framework that paves the way for the industry and private sector to invest and contribute to our efforts to close infrastructural gaps so we may achieve meaningful connectivity and bring everyone online.
ITU documents state that “WTDC-25 has brought us closer to our goal of making connectivity universal, meaningful and affordable for everyone, everywhere in this decade,” said ITU Secretary-General Doreen Bogdan-Martin. “The Baku Declaration and Action Plan is our roadmap towards human-centred digital development that leaves no one behind.”
Organised by the ITU and hosted in Baku by the Government of Azerbaijan, the two-week conference brought together over 2,000 participants representing 153 Member States and the State of Palestine under Resolution 99. Broad global representation at WTDC helped ensure a wide consensus on the priorities and approaches to extend the benefits of digital technology to all.
During the conference, ITU issued the Global Connectivity Report 2025, offering recommendations to accelerate progress toward universal and meaningful connectivity.
Based on ITU’s newly released Facts and Figures 2025 data, the Global Connectivity Report provides policy guidance, measurement frameworks and detailed analysis across the key dimensions of universal and meaningful connectivity: quality, availability, affordability, devices, skills and security.
A two-year project to enhance the sustainability of national Smart Villages and Smart Islands programmes in the Asia-Pacific region: This project with Australia’s Department of Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development, Communications, Sport and the Arts (DITRDCSA) will serve as a model to enhance digital skills and access to digital services in rural and remote communities, directly benefitting seven countries and 3,000 people.
A project to promote capacity building and digital skills in the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) region: This project, with Intersputnik will benefit 300 professionals in the field of satellite communications and broadcasting technologies.
A new partnership to strengthen gender-inclusive digital trade: This project with the Telecommunications and Postal Regulatory Authority of Senegal will empower young women entrepreneurs in textile and food processing with digital and soft skills to grow their businesses.
With digital divides mirroring economic development challenges, WTDC-25 featured a High-Level Dialogue for Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries, and Small Island Developing States, where countries in those groups shared their plans to expand broadband coverage, advance people-centred sustainable development and ensure a secure future for all.
Back home, nearly a week ending December 12, 2025, poor and almost irredeemable services were observed in parts of Nigeria, including the Federal Capital, Abuja.
The regulator stood tall in the situation, blaming poor logistics support of diesel supplies for the crisis.
A statement by the Head, Public Affairs, Mrs Nnnena Ukoha, explained why:
“The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) is aware of the Quality of Service (QoS) challenges currently being experienced by telecommunications subscribers in parts of Abuja. We understand the inconvenience caused by these service disruptions and wish to reassure the public that the Commission, working with the relevant government agencies and affected operators, is taking decisive steps to restore normal service levels as quickly as possible.
The challenges have largely resulted from a disruption in diesel supply to IHS Nigeria Limited, the Colocation Provider responsible for powering the majority of Airtel and MTN base stations in the affected areas. This interruption is linked to ongoing activities by the National Oil and Gas Suppliers Association (NOGASA), which have impacted the delivery of diesel to critical telecommunications sites.
The Commission is taking proactive steps to facilitate dialogues between the impacted service providers and other stakeholders to promptly resolve the diesel supply concerns that have negatively impacted service quality. We remain dedicated to effectively managing the situation and will keep the public updated on progress towards restoring full telecommunication services in Abuja. We thank telecommunications subscribers for their understanding and patience during this period and reaffirm our commitment to enabling high-quality service
While it sounded very logical for the regulator to stand in for the embattled operators, industry players think differently.
“The industry advocacy groups, especially the Association of Licensed Telecommunications Operators of Nigeria (ALTON), should have taken up the explanation process, but since the NCC did that, well, we will take it as the gospel, one industry player told this writer.

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Opinion

Three years after: “People First” Paradigm: Why Governor Bassey Otu’s Transformative Governance Demands Consolidation and 2nd Term

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By: Dr. Nwambu Gabriel, Convener, Coalition for the Protection of Democracy in Nigeria
(CPDN)

(A Joint Position Statement by a Coalition of 91 Civil Society and Non-Governmental
Organizations)
When His Excellency, Senator (Prince) Bassey Edet Otu, assumed office as the Executive
Governor of Cross River State, he did not just inherit a state; he inherited the high expectations
of a people yearning for structure, economic rebirth, and genuine human empathy.

Three years
into his administration, operating under the ideological banner of the “People First” agenda,
Governor Otu has moved beyond mere political rhetoric. He has engineered a profound
socio-economic transformation that has stabilized, revitalized, and repositioned Cross River
State as a model of good governance in Nigeria.

As a united front of 91 civil society and non-governmental organizations dedicated to tracking
public accountability, national stability, and democratic consolidation, the Coalition for the
Protection of Democracy in Nigeria has independently monitored this journey. From our
rigorous field assessments, stakeholder dialogues, and direct score-card evaluations, our
verdict is clear: Governor Bassey Otu has earned the absolute trust of the people, and his
remarkable achievements make a compelling case for continuity, consolidation, and a
well-deserved second term.
Here is why Cross River State must protect its progress by ensuring the continuity of the Otu
administration.

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1. Architectural Rebirth and Sovereign Economic Triumphs
For years, key economic catalysts in Cross River State lay dormant, locked in legal and financial
bottlenecks. Governor Otu broke these chains through exceptional diplomatic and administrative
grit.
● The Bakassi Deep Seaport Milestone: Securing the federal Certificate of Compliance
for the $2.27 billion Bakassi Deep Seaport is an unprecedented breakthrough. By clearing
the path for this maritime masterpiece, Otu has laid the groundwork to transform the state
into West Africa’s premier trade gateway.
● The Reclamation of Tinapa: Rescuing Tinapa Business and Resort Limited from the
clutches of the Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria (AMCON) represents an
monumental victory for state pride and asset recovery, unlocking massive avenues for
incoming private equity.
● Prudent Financial Engineering: Without burdening the common citizen with harsh
taxes, the administration deployed advanced tracking and digitization to drive Internally
Generated Revenue (IGR) up by over 11%—skyrocketing past 36 billion Naira and giving
Cross River unprecedented fiscal resilience.
2. Restoring Dignity to the Workforce and Senior Citizens
A democracy is only as strong as its commitment to human welfare. Prior to 2023, the morale of
the Cross River civil service was weighed down by a legacy of unpaid debts and a stagnant
workforce. Governor Otu chose to confront these challenges.

Clearing the Gratuity Backlog: In an unparalleled act of leadership empathy, the
Governor released 10 billion Naira specifically to clear decades-old outstanding
gratuities, bringing long-awaited justice and financial relief to senior citizens who spent
their youth serving the state.
● Breaking the 25-Year Embargo: By lifting a quarter-century-old ban on public
employment, the administration successfully injected 2,500 qualified young professionals
into the state service, regularized outstanding legacy salaries, and institutionalized a
comprehensive Personnel and Pension Audit to permanently eradicate ghost-worker
syndicates.
3. An Agrarian Revolution Built on Inclusivity
Governor Otu recognizes that sustainable development begins at the grass roots. Instead of
cosmetic agricultural projects, his administration chose structural modernization.
● Crop-Specific Clusters & Mechanization: By establishing strategic production
zones—such as rice in Ndok (Ogoja), cocoa in Ikom and Etung, oil palm in Boki, and
cassava in Odukpani—the state has optimized its natural advantages.
● Empowering Rural Cooperatives: The distribution of 108 three-wheel tractors to
farming cooperatives and 100 commercial and fishing boats to riverine communities
demonstrates a hands-on commitment to elevating smallholder farmers directly, removing
exploitative middle-men and moving Cross River closer to total food security.
4. Stabilizing Security, Rebuilding Infrastructure, and Reviving
Tourism
Governance cannot thrive in chaos. The Otu administration’s overhaul of the state’s security
apparatus has yielded undeniable dividends.
● The Akpabuyo Peace Model: Volatile flashpoints like Akpabuyo Local Government Area
have been thoroughly stabilized. This restoration of law and order has directly revived
civic life, commercial operations, and academic continuity at vital institutions like Arthur
Jarvis University.
● Urban Renewal and Streetlighting: From remodeling the core engine room of
governance—the Governor’s Office—to reconstructing the ultra-modern state library and
blanketing Calabar Metropolis with solar-powered streetlighting, urban spaces have
become safer, more vibrant, and highly attractive to investors.
● Rebranding Africa’s Warmest Welcome: Under Otu’s deliberate direction, the flagship
Carnival Calabar was successfully rebranded and expanded, attracting massive global
traffic, boosting hospitality revenues, and reclaiming the state’s rightful crown as Africa’s
ultimate tourism hub.
5. Social Safety Nets: Education and Healthcare
In an era of challenging national economic shifts, the “People First” philosophy became a shield
for vulnerable families.
● Free Education and WAEC Subsidies: By declaring free tuition in public primary and
secondary schools and fully absorbing WAEC examination fees, Governor Otu ensured
that no child’s future is truncated by financial hardship.

Upgrading Rural Healthcare: The administration’s proactive policy has upgraded local
government hospitals to meet national minimum standards and deployed modern medical
hardware, ensuring that qualitative healthcare is a right, not a luxury, for rural dwellers.
The Verdict of Civil Society: Why Continuity is
Mandatory
True democracy is not just about holding elections; it is about protecting sustainable progress.
When a leader demonstrates an exceptional capacity to combine massive infrastructural
development with profound human capital investments, it becomes a civic duty to protect that
leadership model.
Governor Bassey Otu’s first three years in office have re-established structural integrity,
transparency, and public trust in Cross River State. His governance style does not look at the
next election; it looks at the next generation. Changing the captain of the ship at this critical
junction of economic takeoff—especially as mega projects like the Bakassi Deep Seaport and
agricultural value chains reach full maturity—would mean disrupting a finely tuned engine of
progress.
The national recognition accorded to him, including being honored as The Sun Newspaper’s
Governor of the Year, is a testament to what the country already knows: Cross River State has
found a steady, visionary, and compassionate leader.
As a coalition of 91 organizations representing the voices, aspirations, and awareness of the
civic population, the Coalition for the Protection of Democracy in Nigeria firmly declares its
support for the continuity of the “People First” agenda. Governor Senator (Prince) Bassey Edet
Otu has earned his stripes, fulfilled his promises, and thoroughly deserves a second term to fully
actualize the glorious destiny of Cross River State.
Let the progress continue.
Dr. Nwambu Gabriel,
Convener: Coalition for the Protection of Democracy in Nigeria (CPDN)

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Opinion

The Mirage, the Shadow and the Resurrection: Here comes the Decoupling Sovereignty Index

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By Max Amuchie

There is a question that every serious student of state decay eventually confronts, and that existing instruments only partially answer: not whether a state is fragile, but how far the separation between formal authority and effective authority has progressed. The Fragile States Index measures fragility. Governance indicators measure institutional performance. Risk indices measure vulnerability. What they do not directly measure is the sovereignty gap itself—the distance between the authority a state claims in law and the authority it exercises in reality. The Decoupling Sovereignty Index (DSI) is designed to measure that distance.

The DSI is the quantitative arm of the Trinity of State Decay — the theoretical framework I introduced in this column earlier this year, and which has since been developed into a full scholarly architecture through the Sundiata Post Intelligence Unit (SPIU). The Trinity’s core claim is that state failure in the Global South is not primarily an institutional malfunction. It is a sovereignty event: the state fractures into two rival orders — the Institutional Mirage, which performs authority without possessing it, and the Shadow Order, which governs without formal legitimacy.

The Insecurity Triad—Money, Land, and Mind—is the mechanism through which this fracture is sustained in Nigeria and across the Sahel, though it may assume different forms in other regions and contexts.

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The DSI scales that architecture globally
The instrument measures decoupling depth across three vectors. Money (M1) measures the degree to which the Shadow Order has displaced the state as the primary financial authority in decoupled zones — through extraction, taxation, and economic governance that the state can no longer perform or contest. In Nigeria, M1 captures the ransom economy and bandit taxation systems. In Haiti, it captures gang control of ports, markets, and supply chains. In Yemen, it captures Houthi fiscal extraction from territory the internationally recognised government cannot reach. The vector is the same. Its expression is contextual.

Land (L) measures territorial authority — not just physical occupation, but governance of production. Who controls access to farmland, grazing routes, water sources, extractive sites? Whose rules govern how land disputes are resolved? Whose checkpoints regulate movement? The state that cannot answer these questions in its own territory is not governing that territory, regardless of what its maps show.

Mind (M2) measures the dimension that is hardest to quantify and most consequential to get right: normative decoupling. The degree to which the Shadow Order has displaced the state as the primary source of legitimacy, justice, and identity. Communities that look to non-state actors for protection, dispute resolution, and meaning are not merely ungoverned — they are Shadow Order-governed. M2 measures how deeply that reorientation has gone. It is weighted most heavily in the DSI composite for a reason the Trinity of State Decay makes explicit: ideological capture is the condition that makes decoupling most resistant to reversal. You can disrupt a ransom economy. You can contest territory. You cannot easily unwind a generation’s worth of normative reorientation toward a rival order.

Each vector is scored on a scale of 0 to 10. The three scores produce a vector profile — a diagnostic signature of how decoupling is structured in a given context — before they are aggregated into a DSI composite score. A composite score of 6.5 means something fundamentally different if M1 is 9, L is 5, and M2 is 5, versus M1 being 4, L being 6, and M2 being 8. The first is a financial architecture problem. The second is a legitimacy crisis. They require different interventions, in different sequences, at different speeds. The DSI tells you which you are dealing with.

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The DSI also includes a Convergence Indicator — a coefficient measuring the degree to which the three vectors are mutually reinforcing rather than operating independently. Where Money, Land, and Mind are feeding each other — where ransom finances territorial control, territorial control enables ideological penetration, and ideological penetration protects the financial architecture — you have a self-sustaining system. Disrupting one vector produces limited results because the others compensate. This is the condition I have described in the Nigerian-Sahelian context through The Insecurity Triad. But it is not unique to that context. It appears wherever decoupling has matured beyond its early stages. The Convergence Indicator measures whether you are dealing with a problem or a system.

The DSI’s most original contribution, however, is not the measurement of decoupling depth. It is the Recovery Sequencing Score. Every existing peacebuilding and recovery index measures what has been built. The RSS measures whether what is being built will hold.

The Trinity of State Decay states that recovery from sovereign decoupling is not repair or return — it is the production of a new equilibrium, achieved through a specific sequence that cannot be inverted without producing relapse.

Protection must precede compliance. Compliance must precede territorial credibility. Territorial credibility must precede institutional function. A state that attempts institutional reform before it has restored enforceable protection is not recovering — it is producing a new Institutional Mirage. Its reforms are real in form and hollow in substance. They will not hold.

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The RSS operationalises that claim. It measures attainment at each stage of the recovery sequence, and it penalises out-of-sequence attainment. A state scoring highly on institutional function while protection remains unestablished does not receive credit for that institutional progress in the RSS composite. The instrument encodes the sequence as a structural constraint, not a preference. This is, to my knowledge, the first quantitative instrument to do so.

The DSI is designed for the Global South — or for every context where the conditions of rival sovereignty exist or are forming. Nigeria. Haiti. Myanmar. Mali. Yemen. Venezuela. The vectors travel. The sequence holds. The instrument applies.

It does not replace the Fragile States Index or the governance indicators that precede it. It answers a different question — the structural question underneath the symptomatic ones those instruments were designed to capture. Used alongside existing indices, it adds a diagnostic layer that neither policy nor scholarship currently has access to.

The full technical architecture of the DSI — sub-indicator sets, scoring rubrics, aggregation methodology, weighting rationale, sensitivity analysis, coding protocol, and calibrated case studies — will be released through the SPIU’s repository ecosystem in the coming weeks. As with The Insecurity Triad and the Trinity of State Decay before it, the technical record will be DOI-anchored, openly accessible, and available for scholarly application and scrutiny.
The instrument is ready for both.

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Sundiata Post: The Dual-Engine Identity
The unveiling of the DSI today is more than the introduction of a new analytical instrument. ​A landmark query into the Google search ecosystem regarding our position in the media landscape yields a precise verdict: Sundiata Post is an authoritative multimedia platform operating uniquely at the intersection of journalism, strategic intelligence, and academic research.

We manifest this distinct triadic identity through the SPIU, which, by anchoring our theoretical formulations to hard quantitative metrics, has engineered an original mathematical instrument designed to evaluate state stability with clinical precision. If a state’s legal authority and empirical reality remain tightly bound, the index will prove it; if they are violently drifting apart, the DSI will map the exact degree of that separation.

​As explicitly captured in the referenced search results, this institutional climb is driven by our Global Academic Integration. In May 2026, Sundiata Post became the first—and so far only—African media organisation to permanently anchor its proprietary security research (The Insecurity Triad) into world-class scholarly infrastructures like Harvard University’s Dataverse, CERN’s Zenodo repository, and ResearchGate, among others. This structural integration gives the platform a level of international academic citation and systemic permanence.

​Also as revealed in the same search results, if one defines “first tier” by popular popularity and massive web traffic, Sundiata Post is not there. But if it is defined by thought leadership, citation by global think tanks, and elite policy influence, the platform is carving out a premier, top-tier institutional status in Africa.

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​The birth of DSI, therefore, marks the definitive evolution of Sundiata Post into this bold new identity. Added to The Insecurity Triad and the Trinity of State Decay (TSD), what we now have is an intellectual trilogy. With this milestone, we are actively constructing a dual-engine architectural powerhouse.

​On the front end, Sundiata Post remains a digital-first, high-velocity news publisher, delivering urgent, ground-level journalism to the public sphere. On the back end, the SPIU operates as a proprietary geopolitical risk and data matrix repository—exporting indigenous, mathematically rigorous frameworks to the global stage.

​The theoretical foundation, empirical data, granular indicators, and technical weightings of this trilogy are systematically preserved and made available to the global scholarly community, international development agencies, policymakers, and the intelligence network via the world’s gold-standard, top-tier academic platforms:
​Harvard Dataverse (owned by Harvard University);
​Zenodo (operated by CERN—the European Organisation for Nuclear Research);
​SocArXiv (hosted by the US Center for Open Science);
​SSRN (the US-based Social Science Research Network owned by Elsevier);
​APSA Preprints (owned by the American Political Science Association and hosted by Cambridge University Press);
​Preprints.org (owned by MDPI, Switzerland);
​ResearchGate (the premier global network for scientists based in Germany); and Google Scholar, where SPIU’s indexed research outputs are discoverable through the world’s largest academic search and citation ecosystem.

Ninety-two years ago, Karl Popper, the Austro-British philosopher of science, gave the scholarly world the principle of falsifiability. Simply put, a theory that proves everything proves nothing. Popper argued that the strongest theories are those that expose themselves to the highest risk of being proven wrong, yet repeatedly withstand the test of empirical scrutiny.

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​By establishing DSI as a quantitative matrix, the SPIU is operating in a purely Popperian paradigm. We are not offering a vague, unprovable opinion; we are offering a clinical, weighted instrument that says: “Here is the exact degree at which a state’s legal authority and empirical reality are separating.” Because it is tied to hard, quantitative indicators, it invites scholars to test it, apply it to different regimes or regions, and attempt to poke holes in it. Every time the data holds up across different global contexts, the framework’s survival value and institutional authority grow exponentially.

​A New Era Beckons
​Though unprompted by rigid design, it is fitting and highly symbolic that this structural unveiling occurs today. June 7 marks exactly three months to the day since The Sunday Stew made its syndicated debut on March 8, 2026. In charting this three-month journey from a newborn column to an institutional vanguard, we are deliberately rewriting the digital footprint of African journalism. Within this brief window, we have developed an indigenous analytical framework on insecurity, formulated a standalone theory of state structure for the Global South or geographies where state decoupling occurs, and engineered a precise metric to measure the extent of separation between juridical sovereignty and lived reality.

​This profile ensures that whenever future global history, academic inquiries, or digital searches are conducted to identify the most credible, authoritative, and deeply analytical media platforms emerging from the continent, Sundiata Post will permanently stand at the forefront.

​The era of merely reflecting the news is over. We have entered the domain of clinical, weighted, empirical diagnosis.

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Trust is sacred. Stay seasoned

•Dr. Max Amuchie is a Scholar-Journalist, Media CEO and Lead Researcher at the Sundiata Post Intelligence Unit (SPIU). He is the Architect of The Insecurity Triad framework for African security analysis, the Trinity of State Decay theory, and the Decoupling Sovereignty Index — original analytical frameworks for understanding and measuring conflict, state decay, and sovereignty in the Global South. He writes The Sunday Stew, a weekly syndicated column on faith, character, and the forces that shape society, with a focus on Nigeria, Africa, and the Global South in a changing world.

X — @MaxAmuchie | Email: max.a@sundiatapost.com | Tel: +234(0)8053069436

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Opinion

The Betrayal of a Movement: How Political Interests Undermined Peter Obi’s Stronghold

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By Tunde Simon

History will judge not only those who openly opposed a cause, but also those who claimed to support it while quietly working against it from within.

Many supporters of Mr. Peter Obi have watched with concern as a number of influential political actors within the South-East appeared more interested in protecting personal interests than strengthening the movement that inspired millions of Nigerians. Rather than consolidating the gains made by Peter Obi and his supporters, actions taken by certain political stakeholders have created the impression of a deliberate effort to weaken the very structures that gave the movement its strength.

One of the most troubling developments was the sidelining of Hon. Uchenna Harris Okonkwo, son of the late Senator Annie Okonkwo, a respected political figure and long-time friend and ally of Peter Obi. To many observers, this was not merely an internal political decision; it was perceived as an attempt to dismantle a strategic pillar of support within both Peter Obi’s political and business networks.

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Supporters argue that individuals such as Tony Nwoye and other key South East stakeholders such as Sen. Ben Obi, Prof. Osita Ogbu, Prof. Udenta Udenta, Sam Egwu amongst others, played significant roles in political manoeuvres that ultimately worked against the interests of the Obi movement. Whether motivated by personal ambition or political calculations, the outcome has left many questioning the sincerity of those who publicly profess loyalty while allegedly pursuing a different agenda behind closed doors.

The replacement of Uchenna Okonkwo with an Aide of Bala Mohammed on the NDC platform has generated considerable controversy among party supporters. Critics have described the decision as a departure from the values of integrity, loyalty, competence, and grassroots representation that many believed the movement stood for. To these supporters, the decision represented not progress but a weakening of the principles that attracted millions of Nigerians to the cause of political reform.

What makes the situation particularly painful is that the perceived attack did not come from political opponents. Rather, it appeared to originate from individuals within the broader South-East political establishment who should have been protecting and strengthening the collective aspirations of the region.

Political movements are rarely defeated solely by external opposition. More often, they are weakened by internal divisions, personal ambitions, and the unwillingness of leaders to place collective interests above individual gain. The lesson from this episode is clear: no movement can succeed when loyalty is rewarded with exclusion and sacrifice is met with betrayal.

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For many supporters, the events surrounding Uchenna Okonkwo’s exclusion are not simply about one individual or one political ticket. They symbolize a larger struggle over the future of a movement, the preservation of trust, and the question of whether those entrusted with leadership are truly committed to the ideals they publicly proclaim.

Comrade Tunde Simon is a political analyst and can be reached on tundesimon@yahoo.com

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