Anambra mourns Momoh, Okpalaeke

Thu, Feb 4, 2021
By editor
4 MIN READ

Politics

THE Anambra State government has expressed sadness over the passage of the erstwhile Prince Tony Momoh, minister of Information and Culture,  and Simon Uzama Okpalaeke, a former member of the Anambra State House of Assembly.

Momoh was not just a former minister and one of Nigeria’s greatest journalists as well as a leading lawyer, but also a true lover of the people of Anambra State.

When in the late 1980s he set up a committee to fashion out Nigeria’s first information and communication policy, he promptly made a worthy son of our state, Tony Nnaemeka, then the director of the Institute of Journalism in Lagos, the co-chairman of the committee to lead the work.

There were on the committee such other eminent scholars from Anambra State as  Professor Ikechukwu Nwosu, one of the most prolific mass communication writers in Africa. At the end of the day, the committee did a splendid job, further consolidating Nnaemeka’s reputation as arguably Africa’s most rigorous mass communication researcher.

On the two occasions former Vice President Alex Ekwueme made brave attempts at becoming Nigeria’s leader, Momoh was with him every inch of the way. He held the position of director of Publicity at the Alex Ekwueme Campaign in 1998/9 and 2002/3. He was genuinely convinced, like millions of other Nigerians, that Ekwueme was far more qualified and prepared to take Nigeria in a different and better direction than any other presidential aspirant in the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP.

When the PDP betrayed Ekwueme who sacrificed so much to found the party and give it a veneer of national purpose and credibility, Prince Momoh left the party on principle. He joined hands with other prominent Nigerians to establish the Congress for Progressive Change, CPC, which was to merge with others to form the All Progressives Congress, APC, today Nigeria’s national ruling party.

It is a measure of his love of the people of Anambra State that though Prince Momoh attended both the University of Nigeria at Nsukka and the University of Lagos at Akoka where he studied mass communication and law, respectively, he identified more with the UNN, which was founded by the Great Zik of Africa, the man who led Nigeria to independence in 1960.

With the death on February 1 of Prince Tony Momoh, the country has lost one of its finest journalists, a philosopher, a highly principled citizen, a most unassuming public officer, a detribalized Nigerian and, of course, a lover of the people of Anambra State.

Okpaleke

The Anambra State government feels no less sense of loss in the death three days ago of Simon Uzama Okpalaeke, who represented Ihiala Two in the Anambra State legislature from 2007 to 2011.

Though he was in the House of Assembly for only one term, he made a huge impact on his constituency, especially in the provision of infrastructure.

Even when he ceased to hold a public officer, Okpalaeke, a lawyer, industrialist and knight of the church, continued to play a pivotal role in the affairs of not just in his Azia or Ebonesi community but the whole of Ihiala Local Government Area, one of the largest local government areas in the country. His commitment to peace and harmonious social relations is well recognized. He remains an example that a person need not hold a position to be considered a leader anywhere. Indeed, his death at 64 years of a heart attack is tragic.

The Anambra State government condoles with the Okpalaeke family of Azia and the people of Ihiala LGA on the passage of this important son. As in the case of Prince Momoh, we pray for the repose of his noble soul.

– Feb. 4, 2021 @ 3:56 GMT |

Tags: