Rivers state governor, Nyesom Wike, has stated he doesn’t have sleepless nights over the possibility of his predecessor and former benefactor, Rotimi Amaechi, being made a Minister.
Wike has denied the widely held belief that his administration was attacking Amaechi, so as to ensure that President Muhammadu Buhari does not give him a ministerial appointment.
The governor says he’s only interested in how the state’s funds were managed under the former governor.
Speaking through his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Opunabo Inko-Taria, the governor tried to convince Nigerians that he won’t be bothered if Amaechi becomes a Minister.
Hear him out;
“So, what is he (Ameachi) going to do to him (Wike) as a minister or Federal Government appointee? Wike has not told anybody that he does not want President Buhari to appoint Amaechi as a minister. He has never said it; these are just insinuations and innuendos.
“If Mr. President, known for his mantra of zero tolerance for corruption; is saying that he is not going to appoint anybody with a stained image as a member of his cabinet and Rivers people are saying that Rotimi Amaechi is not qualified for an appointment, there is no problem with that.
“But the truth is that paint Amaechi black, if he (Buhari) does not want to appoint him (Amaechi), he will not. Paint Amaechi white, if the President is not interested in him, he will not appoint him.
“The talk about whether Amaechi should be appointed into Buhari’s cabinet is just the feeling from Rivers’ people and not the governor himself. He has never discussed the issue of whether Amaechi should be appointed by Mr. President or not.
“The governor is more interested in how the funds of Rivers State were spent; whether they were judiciously spent or they were just frittered away. That is the interest because it is annoying that when we took over, we met an empty treasury.
“They forgot that you are supposed to pay salaries; you are supposed to open the judiciary. The governor gave the judiciary N300m for takeoff and he also had to pay some of the students abroad who were owed allowances. Civil servants, pensioners and footballers, who were owed salaries, were paid.”
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