Sylva’s unwarranted attack on Governor Diri

Uba Group

BY AYIBAINA DUBA

The Bayelsa State Government expresses dismay over the misguided comments of the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Chief Timipre Sylva, while featuring as a guest on a Yenagoa-based radio station on Saturday.

Chief Timipre Sylva’s comments not only lacked finesse but were also indecorous of an exalted citizen of the state occupying a high office.

Coming at a time the state and its citizens are in a celebratory mood as they mark the second anniversary of Governor Douye Diri’s Prosperity Administration, the intention was clearly to dampen morale and score cheap political points.
Interestingly, Bayelsans know better and cannot be swayed by baseless sentiments and the shenanigans of political conflict mongers.

The state government is surprised that having previously been the number one citizen of the state, Sylva displayed crass ignorance about ongoing projects of the Prosperity Government.

While we acknowledge his praises for some of the policies of the Governor Diri administration, we, however, listened to him painfully trivialise some of the newly inaugurated projects of this administration.

For instance, the former governor described the newly inaugurated Igbedi community road as a mere 4.5km road project that does not deserve the invitation of another governor to inaugurate it and that it led to the governor’s wife’s hometown.

Pray, is Igbedi not a community in Bayelsa State that deserves the benefits of government projects like any other community? The Honourable Minister might have forgotten that the first phase of the Glory Drive Road he referenced and is taking credit for is not as long as the Igbedi road he condemned.

In his attempt to pour ice on the historic significance of the road, Chief Sylva chose to ignore the fact that this was the only community in Kolokuma/Opokuma Local Government Area of the state that hitherto was not accessible by road for about 500 years before the Senator Diri administration wiped off their tears. We do not want to believe that the Minister is a killjoy!

Chief Sylva was also economical with the truth and engaging in the usual deceitful politics of the All Progressives Congress (APC) by saying that Bayelsa was dark at night when he arrived in the state. And we ask: which Bayelsa did he visit? Is it the Bayelsa that the Prosperity Administration has installed functional solar-powered lights on all the major roads in the state capital and still lighting up more areas of the city or another state?

If Chief Sylva was referring to darkness arising from a power outage, we expect him to know better than to point accusing fingers at the state government for that. We do not think he deserved to be educated on this as someone we expect should know about the privatisation of power in the country.