You’re nothing, you only exist because I want you to – Fubara blasts Rivers lawmakers

Governor Sir Similanayi Fubara

Governor Sim Fubara of Rivers State says the existence of the members of the State Assembly is tied to his generosity and magnanimity.

Speaking while addressing a delegation of political and traditional leaders from Bayelsa State who visited him at the Government House in Port Harcourt, the state capital, Fubara said the assembly members do not exist.

The visit is aimed at finding a lasting solution to the political crisis in Rivers State and an improved relationship between both states.

Fubara said the Peace Accord he signed with his predecessor, Minister of the Federal Capital Terrritory, FCT, Nyesom Wike, was political and not constitutional, hence the lawmakers have no legitimacy to speak except the one he confers on them.

Fubara said the lawmakers are existing based on his recognition which is hinged on the Peace Accord initiated by Tinubu.

He said: “Those group of men who claim that are Assembly members are not Assembly members, they are not existing. I want it to be on record. I accepted that Peace Accord to give them a floating.

“That is the truth. There was nothing in that Peace Accord that’s a constitutional issue; it’s a political solution to a problem.

“And I accepted it because these were people that were eating in my house, these were people I have helped pay their children’s school fees when I wasn’t even a governor. So, what is the thing there?

“We might have our division but I believe that one day, we could also come together but it has gotten to a time when I have to make a statement that they are not existing.

“Their existence is me allowing them to exist. If I de-recognise them, they are nowhere. I want you to see the sacrifice I have made in allowing peace to reign in our state.”

Fubara and Wike have been at daggers drawn since he assumed office as governor.

The face-off led to some lawmakers defecting from the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, to the All Progressives Congress.

To ensure peace, Tinubu had ordered both factions to sign a peace deal which included recognizing the aggrieved state lawmakers loyal to Wike.

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