The place of 8,809 councillors in Nigeria Constitution – Aninri Example

The ambiguities in the 1999 Constitution is not the reason why our councillors aren’t performing. Neither is the absence of real local government autonomy the cause.

Today, there are 8,809 councillors in the 774 local government areas in the 36 states and Federal Capital Territory.

Officially included as a third tier of government in the 1979 Constitution and solidified in the 1999 Constitution, local government area has specific functions. The constitution shares roles, saying who a good council chairman and an ideal councillor should be.

Until the people at the grassroots know the functions of local government, end of our sufferings is not in sight. We’ll continue to blame the governor and abuse the president – neither of whom we can directly or easily influence by mere complaints in beer parlours. Of course, the governors and presidents make us suffer the most through series of anti-people policies. But they do so using henchmen who live amongst us as brothers and sisters – the councillors.

The primary responsibilities of councillors include making of by-laws that govern their local government areas. A councillor has the power to legislate on the council’s budget; to participate on budget preparation and approval; to make sure funds are allocated efficiently.

Most importantly, councillors has the oversight and accountability function, implying that a council chairman can’t be wasting public money unless they let him do so.

In August 2025, the Federal Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) made the largest disbursement of ₦2.225 trillion to the three tiers of government. Enugu State alone received the sum of ₦230 billion in 2025 from FAAC.

How ordinary people pay salaries of councillors without knowing it

But how does the government generate the money FAAC shares? Simple: from our pockets, from our toils, from our daily sweats and struggles.

My illiterate, poor mother, who is a small-time farmer living in a faraway Oduma in Aninri, has being paying taxes without knowing it. The government does this through a mechanism known as Value Added Tax (VAT). As a farmer, my mother has yam, rice and cocoyam; but she must buy maggi, salts, crayfish, soap, fertiliser and countless other everyday commodities she’ll need even for a simple living. Sometimes she’ll need to call me or her other children on phone.

All this while she’s using those goods and services, she is paying taxes. The companies or the businesses making the supplies are already being taxed 7.5 percent in VAT. The VAT on consumer goods cover almost everyday products, and its hidden in the final price we pay to the shop owner nearby. For example, as my mother buys a bag of fertiliser for ₦50,000 she has paid ₦3,750 in tax. The money goes straight to the government. Now, imagine how much you spend in drinking beer, on transport, buying drugs, paying school fees. Imagine how much you spend in a month on goods and services you need for daily living.

Please imagine the expenses incurred per month by the 240-million population in Nigeria. The 7.5 percent VAT, which is real money from your pockets runs in trillions of naira on monthly basis. That’s the allocation we’re talking about; that’s money from which our councillors are being paid handsome salaries; that’s the money our councillors accumulate to claim superiors and intimidate you; that’s the money the go to costliest hotels to lavish on frivolities.

In other words, the councillor of Oduma ward 2 in Aninri – where my mother resides – is receiving all the financial and illegal benefits from the aggregate sufferings of my mother and my mother’s neighbours in the four communities. She, like all other 9 councillors owe us quality and effective representation in exchange of the VAT from our sweat.

Funny enough, our councillors have their homes next to ours. They’re the government you’re seeing: this is the primary import of the 1976 local government reform which aim is to bring the government to our doorsteps.

Now, think about it. Are you not a fool that you watch your own councillor underperform and sometimes abuse the office while continuing to feed on your daily labour and sufferings?

Imagine all we can achieve when we realise that our councillors are the primary cause of the pains we bear everyday, that we can take immediate and direct actions to wake them up, that we can be better if our councillors are working.

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Revisited: Ekoro Health Center and saga of Hyginus Okorie of Okpanku Aninri

Earlier July in 2022, a very disturbing news of gross misappropriation going on in Aninri healthcare system emerged. Particularly, the case in Ekoro Health Center in Okpanku was the worst.

After media investigation exposed the architect of the decay, one Mr Hyginus Okorie, Bennett Ajah’s administration swung to action.

More facts came to light. For years, Mr Okorie had stolen the supplies of drugs and medical equipments meant for the health facility, according to reports from the chairman’s office. He stole one big generator the government supplied, and another that the good people of Okpanku donated. A big GP tank, meant for the center, was found under his care. Then, approximately ₦13 million naira, fund the state government sent regularly for maintenance of the hospital, was squandered and there was no trace of expenses records.

Why APC e-membership registration is “failing” in Aninri

At first, Bennett Ajah took the matter seriously but was stopped by the defacto chairman, Gabriel Ukpabi, his Secretary to the Local Government, according to sources familiar with the development.

It’s true that officials from the Local Government Service Commission came down to Aninri to see for themselves. And that was all: they saw for themselves. But nothing happened.

Why does Hyginus Okorie’ saga floated today?

“What the chairman [Prince Ugochukwu Nwanjoku] should do is check various persons he entrusted with various duties in the council for accountability,” Benson Nnaji, a PhD student of political science at Enugu State University of Science and Technology said.

“Chairman cannot do everything, that’s why he has assistants in vital areas. But the chairman is to blame if anything goes wrong. Nobody knows about the assistant, and that’s why he has to make each appointee do his or her work very well,” Nnaji concluded.

There is only but a minor change in Aninri healthcare system today. And those, like Hyginus Okorie, who actively wrecked the system, are still walking freely among his Okpanku brothers whom his actions brought immeasurable shame, pain and so many unwarranted deaths.

Like before, most of the health workers still live and do businesses in Enugu city; they are paying some quack nurses to “sign for me”; they don’t go to work. While the poor, sick rural dwellers suffer and die of preventable diseases, the health workers receive their full “ransoms” for the losses in the name of regular salaries.

Yet, there is a supervisor for health in the council today.

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Why Rep Anayo Onwuegbu will still win in 2027 – Analysis

As dates for campaigns for 2027 elections draw nearer, political hopefuls are getting serious with their calculations.

In Aninri/Awgu/Oji-River federal constituency plots, conspiracies and schemes are already underway; with them lie the thrills and betrayal that would spice the drama during the electioneering campaigns. But Engr. Anayo Onwuegbu, member representing the zone in the House of Representatives, has enormous advantages.

He has already joined the All Progressives Congress (APC) alongside Governor Peter Mbah and others. Also, he has promised, or have started providing, support for President Bola Tinubu’s second-term reelection bid. In other words, Engr. Onwuegbu is in the right and powerful circles both at the state and federal levels – an unequal advantage that makes him taller than any prospective opponents in the coming race.

But his strength will come mostly from the fact that most of the hopefuls that would be competing with him are plain idiots.

In Aninri, some persons can no longer hide their intent to challenge the lawmaker at the polls. One of them, deploying his loyalists on social media, has started badmouthing Engr. Onwuegbu, claiming that he is occupying the chance meant for the people of Aninri. This man’s strategy is easy to see through – he hopes to exploit people’s sentiments and unite the council area against Onwuegbu.

But that strategy shows the brains of a fool, and it’s not going to hold water. For one thing, the plan fails to consider the interests of one man who holds greatest influence in Aninri politics at the moment.

Emerging from the shadows, Prince Ugochukwu Nwanjoku rode to prominence when Governor Mbah “anointed” him candidate for Aninri chairmanship in August 2024. Since then, the young man, after winning, has worked tirelessly to fasten his grips to power.

Time and time again, he has said publicly his intentions for second-term in 2026. And he has the governor’s ears like no other Aninri chairman ever did, having secured his present position without the help of the so-called kingmakers in Aninri politics.

Governor Peter Mbah would be relying on Nwanjoku to win Aninri in 2027, and the young man is absolutely capable. All his plans are not known, but it certainly can’t be his plan to support anyone from Aninri to go to House of Representatives in 2027. He would be upsetting the existing status quo which he is benefiting well from.

Presently, powers are equitably shared among the three main micro-zones in Aninri. Engr. Magnus Edeh and Lloyd Ekweremadu – from Nenwe and Umunne-Ato zones – are State Assembly member and Commissioner for Youths and Sports respectively, while Prince Nwanjoku – from Oduma zone – is the chairman of the council.

Since the choice of the candidate for federal constituency would be decided early 2026, Nwanjoku is not likely to allow clannish prejudice to direct him. If he supports Aninri man going for House of Representatives he would be writing himself off as the chairmanship candidate in the next council elections around October 2026.

And the Ndumeze Prince, an ambitious person, is certainly not going to place anyone’s interests above his. His smartest moves must include working to foil any Aninri man’s attempt to replace Anayo Onwuegbu in 2027. If he does that, he himself would have ample opportunity to go for the seat in 2031.

The chairman also knows that he cannot afford support a losing candidate. And, so far, all of them who are showing interest for Onwuegbu’s seat are losers going by their credentials.

A lot is still certain to change between now and the decision dates. But constant is the fact that Prince Ugochukwu Nwanjoku is a core, smart politician. If Governor Peter Mbah – the ultimate godfather – chooses to support Anayo Onwuegbu, Nwanjoku will deliver the lawmaker’s reelection bid with accuracy.

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