February 2, 2026

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OUK left office over 18 years ago, yet he remains relevant in today’s political conversations. Why?

You claim he did nothing during his time as governor. If that were true, why is he still loved by the people of Abia? A man who served two terms as governor, was named the “Action Governor” by then President Olusegun Obasanjo, became a first-tier governor from 1999–2007, and is now a serving senator, could not have achieved all this without overwhelming public support and satisfaction.

Abia has three senatorial districts. Which of them has surpassed the track record OUK laid? None.

So why all the noise?
Why the constant accusations?
Why the hatred?

As a matter of fact, OUK should be immortalized as a hero, not vilified.

Why is no one talking about the administrations that came after OUK—the T.A. Orji and Okezie Ikpeazu governments? Is it because they never asked critical questions about the state’s resources, or because they did not challenge the system?

It is becoming obvious that anyone who does not praise the Otti-led administration is immediately labeled as evil. But governance is subject to scrutiny and accountability. This is democracy. We Abians deserve transparency.

Repainting and maintaining already existing roads is part of the job Governor Otti was elected to do. It should not be treated as an extraordinary achievement or used as a tool to silence criticism.

OUK, as an elder statesman and the political father of Abia, cannot sit back and watch mediocrity, deceit, media whitewashing, and sycophancy become the foundation of leadership. I applaud the senator for speaking up, and I encourage every well-meaning Abian to rise against this abnormality.

So let me ask simple questions:
1. How many rural or urban roads has this administration created that never existed before?
2. How many new, modern hospitals has it built?
3. How many new schools has it established?

What has this administration done differently—apart from media propaganda?

So far, none.

Accountability is not hatred.
Scrutiny is not sabotage.
Asking questions is not opposition—it is democracy.

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