Aba Revival: Governor Otti’s Water Scheme As A Governance Game-Changer
Posted on July 17, 2025
EBERE UZOUKWA, PhD

With the historic flag-off of the Aba Regional Water Scheme on July 16, 2025, Governor Alex Chioma Otti, OFR, has ignited a transformative revival in Abia State’s governance landscape. More than just a project to restore water supply, the initiative—launched at Christ the King Catholic Cathedral (CKC), Aba—is a bold declaration that public infrastructure can once again serve the people, that leadership can be trusted, and that dignity can be restored where it was long denied.
For over three decades, the Aba Regional Water Scheme lay abandoned—neglected, vandalized, and reduced to a shadow of its former self. Past administrations offered empty promises while residents of Aba, particularly in suburban and low-income areas, endured untold hardship. Daily life revolved around the relentless search for water—long treks, unsafe sources, mounting health risks, and declining productivity. That bleak chapter is now closing.
Governor Otti’s intervention does more than rehabilitate infrastructure; it redefines governance itself. Through the Abia Integrated WASH Accelerated Programme (AIWAP), the administration envisions a city where clean, safe water flows into every home. This people-first vision prioritizes the vulnerable—women, children, and the urban poor—who have borne the brunt of systemic service failures. It is a revolutionary approach that places human need above political optics.

The impact of the revived water scheme is far-reaching. It is a public health strategy, reducing the prevalence of waterborne diseases. It is an education reform, freeing children from hours spent fetching water so they can remain in school. It is an environmental intervention, reducing reliance on plastic sachet water. It strengthens emergency response by ensuring reliable access to water for firefighting. Most importantly, it rekindles hope—it tells Abians that their lives matter.
This commitment to impactful governance is further evident in the administration’s achievements through the Ministry of Power and Public Utilities. The recently commissioned WASH facility at Okigwe Motor Park, Umuahia—powered by renewable energy—features a borehole, water storage systems, sanitation infrastructure, and public standpipes for commuters. Similar projects are underway in other high-traffic locations, demonstrating a coordinated attack on open defecation, poor sanitation, and environmental degradation.
In the energy sector, the story is one of deliberate progress. Communities long trapped in darkness are now being illuminated through the restoration of grid electricity and the deployment of solar-powered mini-grids. These efforts are reviving rural enterprises, schools, and social spaces. Dormant agencies under the ministry have been reactivated, resourced, and empowered to ensure effective monitoring, maintenance, and service delivery.
What sets Governor Otti apart is his unwavering focus on results and resilience. When development partners unexpectedly withdrew from the Aba Water Scheme earlier this year—a move that could have stalled the entire initiative—the administration refused to retreat. Instead, it returned to the drawing board, mobilized alternative financing, and pressed forward. This refusal to give up reflects a rare political will anchored in competence, determination, and integrity.

Unlike previous administrations that left behind a legacy of neglect and broken promises, Governor Otti’s leadership is systematic and intentional. His government doesn’t chase headlines—it builds systems. It doesn’t trade in empty rhetoric—it delivers measurable value. It doesn’t fear inherited decay—it confronts it head-on, clears it out, and replaces it with institutions that work for the people.
The previous collapse of the Aba Regional Water Scheme was symbolic of a broader governance failure—looted pipelines, gutted facilities, and shattered hopes. Today, those same pipelines are being restored not just with steel, but with vision. Under Governor Otti, governance is reclaiming its true purpose: to serve, to uplift, and to restore dignity.
The Aba Revival is not a mere slogan—it is a living reality unfolding before the eyes of every Abian. It is visible in flowing taps, well-lit streets, clean public toilets, and policies that put people before politics. With this water scheme, Governor Otti has not only reconnected pipes—he has reconnected government with its people.
Abia is rising—not on propaganda, but on systems that function, services that reach, and leadership that delivers. The revival is real. And it has only just begun.
Dr. Ebere Uzoukwa is the Senior Special Assistant to the Governor of Abia State on Public Affairs.