Rivers
‘Nigeria Needs Leaders Like Fubara’
A labour leader in Rivers State and former Chairman of the Nigeria Union of Local Government Employees (NULGE), Opobo/Nkoro Chapter, Comrade Lazarus OKo Jaja, has extolled Rivers State Governor, Sir Siminalayi Fubara, in the governance of the state within the past one year in office.
Speaking with newsmen recently in Port-Harcourt, on the quality service delivery mantra of the present administration in the state, Jaja stressed that the Governor exemplifies the kind of leader Nigeria needs.
Such a leader, he said, is one who is able to provide succour to all parts of the state by his administration’s “good and purposeful development agenda”.
He assured the Governor that NULGE will continue to support and pray for him and his government to succeed, not minding detractors’ negative insinuations and distractions.
Comrade Oko Jaja also assured Governor Fubara of the union’s unflinching loyalty and support, in his quest to build better and lasting transformation legacy in the state, and would continue to back his development mantra maximally in these trying times.
The labour leader described the Governor as a detribalised Nigerian leader, whose goodwill and peaceful co-existence has endeared him to all and sundry.
He noted that Governor Fubara has proven to be “a matured national leader with integrity, credibility and transparency, who does not discriminate against anyone, irrespective of his or her religious or political inclination.
“Nigeria needs such a leader to move the country forward developmentally, particularly in these all round trying times”.
While supporting the hunger protest, OKo Jaja urged Rivers and Nigerian youths to as much as decency permits, protest without looting, killing and wanton destruction of people’s lives and property.
He added that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu should immediately revive the ailing national economy by removing fuel subsidy and other disputed sectors of the Renewed Hope Agenda to allow for the phasing out of hunger, joblessness, sickness and deaths.
By: Bethel Toby