A
detachment of soldiers has taken over the Rivers House of Assembly following
the fracas that erupted there on Tuesday and continued today. The
soldiers took over when two opposing youth groups numbering over 2,000, some
pro-Governor Chibuike Amaechi, some against, attempted to storm
the Assembly this morning.
They
had disparate missions: to either prevent the five renegade lawmakers from
sitting or to aid them. There
was a clash between the youths and one was reportedly shot. No one knows who
actually fired the shot.
The
pro-Amaechi group, which is under the auspices of Ikwerre Youth Movement, IYM,
was this morning led by Tony Okocha, the Chief of Staff, while the other group
of youths under the aegis of Grassroots Democratic Initiative, GDI, is loyal to
Nyesom Wike, the Minister of State for Education.
The
police had earlier cordoned off Moscow Road leading to the Assembly complex,
Bank Road adjacent the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, Port Harcourt branch, and
the state secretariat.
Speaking
on the crisis, Mrs Ibim Semenetari, Commissioner for Information, confirmed
that there was mass protest this morning, adding that there is an attempt to
cause mayhem in the state. She
also said that the Governor has been having consultations with security
agencies to ensure that there was no breakdown of law and order.
An
ethnic bent is now being read into the crisis as Councillors of Asari Toru
Local Government area the constituency of the Speaker of the House, Otelemaba
Dan-Amachree, have vowed that they will resist any attempt for another ethnic
group, (referring to Evans Babakaya Bipialaka from Okrika) to usurp their slot
(Kalabari).
Bipialaka
told some journalists that after he was ‘elected’ yesterday he wanted to
commence sitting today but found that security personnel had cordoned off the
Assembly complex.
“We
will come back tomorrow to commence sitting,” he vowed.
One
of the five lawmakers, Mr Kelechi Worgu, representing Omuma Constituency, vowed
in a telephone chat with a local radio station in Port Harcourt this
morning that “the battle has just started. Any how we must sit.”
At
the time of the report, the opposing youth groups were milling around
government gate inching to enter despite the heavy presence of the police.
Some
youths actually entered the Government House at exactly 11.50 a.m. and there
was shooting of tear gas canisters by Government House policemen to disperse them.
There was confusion at Government House at the time of this report.
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