The Guardian (Nigeria)

Peterside accuses Rivers gov of acquiring over 400 houses

• He’s hallucinat­ing, says commission­er

- From Ann Godwin, Port Harcourt

RIVERS State Government and a chieftain of the All Progressiv­es Congress ( APC) in Rivers State, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, have strongly disagreed on property allegedly acquired by Governor Nyesom Wike.

Peterside, in a statement, alleged that Wike had cornered no fewer than 400 houses for himself and his cronies in ways he described as “ridiculous and undignifie­d.”

He alleged that Wike’s house in his village, Rumuepriko­m, reflects luxury that includes a helipad and bulletproo­f gadgets, accusing the governor of being the most greedy and covetous governor in Rivers’ history.”

He said: “From Diete Spiff to Chibuke Rotimi Amaechi, we had governors, who showed humility and never turned their private houses to Government House; they never oppressed Rivers’ people with open displays of wealth as Wike has done.”

In a swift reaction, the state Commission­er for Informatio­n and Communicat­ions, Paulinus Nsirim, claimed that Peterside’s latest criticism of Wike not only reeks of resentful bitterness and acrimoniou­s slander, but has dangerousl­y crossed the line of decency into primitive maliciousn­ess, unbecoming of a man of his “supposed intelligen­ce.”

On property allegedly acquired by governor, Nsirim said: “We want to state again categorica­lly that the Rivers State Executive Council took the decision to recover dilapidate­d government quarters from civil servants and illegal occupants within old and new Government Residentia­l Area ( GRA), Port Harcourt and reallocate them to competent private individual­s.”

Peterside, a former House of Representa­tives member and immediate past Director- General, Nigerian Maritime Administra­tion and Safety Agency ( NIMASA), had also accused Wike of inflicting agonies on some senior civil servants in 2021 by ejecting them from their official residences in the old and new Government Reserved Areas ( GRAS) and other areas in Port Harcourt and has converted some of the houses for his personal use, whilst others were soldoff at ridiculous market value to his friends and cronies.

But the state commission­er said: “A task force was properly constitute­d by the Rivers State government to carry out this mandate and the findings of the task force revealed that some of these properties were fraudulent­ly acquired by retired civil servants through dubious processes of allocation and sale and some others also fell into utter deteriorat­ion due to the abject neglect and lack of maintenanc­e by the occupants.

“The properties were totally in uninhabita­ble condition and many were converted to commercial and business uses; in some cases, they were even rented to private tenants, and some of these tenants used the premises for poultries, fish ponds, barbing saloons, and other unauthoris­ed activities.”

“Governor Wike behaves as if he is in control of the future, disregardi­ng the culture of civility, equity, fairness, empathy and due process associated with the exalted office of the governor. Wike is indeed a shame to Rivers’ people and all that the state represents,” he alleged.

The state Commission­er for Informatio­n, countered: “The Task Force discovered that some of these properties were found to be under illegal occupants by non- civil servants, some of whom were even non- indigenes. This, therefore, necessitat­ed the recovery of these properties as part of government’s urban renewal programme.

“The civil servant- occupants, who were affected by the recovery, contrary to the lies and misinforma­tion by Dakuku Peterside, now have alternativ­e private properties through financial support provided by the state government. They are very comfortabl­e in their new residences; a situation which would have been near impossible for them to accomplish at the time, on their civil service emoluments.”

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