IBUKUNOLUWA KING-OKUNEYE
Jude Agbaso, a former Deputy Governor of Imo State, under former Governor Rochas Okorocha, has said the administration of the Senator representing Imo West Senatorial District at the 9th Nigerian Senate is the worst in the history of the state.
Agbaso, who was impeached but eventually cleared by the court eight years after, stated this on Monday while speaking to newsmen in Owerri, Imo State capital.
The former deputy governor, who doubled as the Commissioner of Works under the same administration, described Okorocha’s eight years as locust years, a total failure and the worst in the history of the state.
Agbaso said that the ex-governor was undemocratic and self-centered in his approach to governance.
He said, “Okorocha turned down many sound developmental ideas coming from him and gave deaf hear to words of advice from other concerned citizens aimed at helping him govern the state well.”
He accused the senator of arbitrary allocation of contracts without due procedures which amounted to huge wastage of the state resources.
He explained that his impeachment which was later nullified was because of his insistence during the administration that due process should be followed in every transaction and project of the government.
“Yes I had regrets (being deputy governor to Okorocha) especially when you work with people, you make reasonable inputs, but you are being ignored. I give you an instance again, Rochas Okoroch said he was going to build a 4,000 kilometers of road network.
“I told him, this is a practical impossibility. It is unachievable. I knew what our monthly receivable from the Local Governments was. I knew what they were for the state government.
“I asked him, why don’t we do this in a planned, concise manner. Why will you be telling people, hey Mr A do a contract from here to here; no bill of engineering quantities and no description. So, because of that, I asserted my decision that I wasn’t going to append my signature on any unreasonably given contract.
“And after I left, no contract was officially and properly done. None of them worked. The few roads that were constructed like that, couldn’t even last a season. The painful thing was that Imo people lost so much money under Okorocha,” he said.
According to him, “When the governor tells the civil servants, you can work three days in a week and use the rest of the week to go to the farm. Is that a way to organize the civil service?
“After I left the Ministry of Works, there are no records during the Rochas years. Contracts were awarded in the Government House. No Permanent Secretary, no Director, no Engineer because these are the people that keep records in the ministry.
“So, it became obvious that Rochas does not listen to all these sound policy suggestions. The mindset was to do what pleased him and it is to the exclusion of building strong institutions.”