Why Okigwe Must Stand By Truth And Not Propaganda
BY CHINEDUM ANAYO

In politics, noise is cheap. Results are not. And in Okigwe Zone today, the widening gap between both has become impossible to ignore.
The push to normalize a return ticket for a sitting senator must not become an escape route for underperformance.
It is important to highlight that representation is not ceremonial, it is measurable.
Representation is reflected in bills sponsored, motions moved, and the visible impact on constituents.
So the question remains unavoidable: Where are the results?
Under the watch of Senator Patrick Ndubueze, a troubling pattern has emerged —one where claims are loud, but impact is faint.
Okigwe people are increasingly confronted with a narrative that credits one man for nearly every development in the zone. This is not just exaggerated, it is rather misleading.
What is clear remains; No one-term Senator builds an entire zone.
From roads to institutional projects, there has been a persistent attempt to appropriate achievements that belong elsewhere.
The most striking example is the claim of bringing the Federal University Okigwe, Imo State, which was approved alongside other new federal institutions in June 2025 —a project widely known to have been initiated by the administration of Governor Hope Uzodinma.
You cannot inherit credit and call it performance. Politics doesn’t work like that. Even more telling is the contrast across Imo State.
When Governor Hope Uzodinma facilitated the upgrade of Alvan Ikoku Federal College of Education to a university, Senator Ezenwa Onyewuchi did not claim it as his personal achievement.
Likewise, major projects such as the Owerri–Orlu Road, the Orashi Power Plant, and the gas refinery, critical developments within Imo State—have not been appropriated by Senator Osita Izunaso, despite his representation of Orlu Zone. Yet, in Okigwe, even projects like the Owerri–Okigwe Road have been publicly claimed as personal legislative achievements.
This raises fundamental questions:
Why is one Senator claiming everything, while others allow their work to speak for itself?
Why is it that virtually every development in Okigwe Zone is being claimed by one individual?
Why is it that one Senator appears to have “done everything,” while others across Imo State do not make such sweeping claims?
Leadership is not a monopoly of credit —it is a responsibility of service.
Evidently, there appears to be an unchecked pattern of exaggerated and, in some cases, false claims.
For supporters of the status quo, the answer is simple: If the achievements are real, let them speak.
Propaganda is only necessary where performance is completely compromised or lacking.
Even more concerning is the reality on the ground.
Okigwe was meant to be elevated—to gain visibility, influence, and security.
Instead, questions around insecurity and political disconnect have grown louder.
While Governor Hope Uzodinma continues to push aggressively to stabilize and develop Imo State, legislative representation in Okigwe has not matched that urgency. Representation must complement progress—not compete with it or distort it.
Politics Without People Cannot Survive. Politics, at its core, is about people. No leader can thrive while alienating constituents and sidelining key stakeholders.
You cannot antagonize the people and still claim to represent them. Such political ideology cannot be sustained.
At this critical moment, Okigwe stands at a crossroads. The choice is not complicated.
The future of Okigwe Zone cannot be built on inflated claims or political propaganda. It must be anchored on truth, performance, and collective progress.
Between noise and results, choose results.









