The political temperature in Nigeria’s South East flared this week after former Kaduna State Governor Mallam Nasir El-Rufai called on the region’s citizens to take voter registration seriously—an appeal that should have been unifying but instead triggered protests and accusations of ethnic bias.
But for Dr. Ezeh Emmanuel Ezeh, a prominent entrepreneur and leader of the Obidient Movement in the region, the uproar is proof that old politics is still at work—and why Nigeria needs a reset.
“What we witnessed outside Maria Assumpta Cathedral was desperation on display,” Ezeh said in Abuja, referencing the placard-waving demonstrators the Catholic Archdiocese of Owerri described as “hired thugs.” “Power-grabbing for its own sake is over. El-Rufai’s message speaks directly to what we in the Obidient Movement have been saying all along: a new Nigeria is not only possible, it is necessary.”
The controversy traces back to el-Rufai’s appearance at the 2025 Odenigbo Lecture in Owerri, where he urged greater civic engagement. Critics—some allegedly linked to opponents in the ongoing African Democratic Congress (ADC) coalition talks—painted him as an “Igbo hater.” But Ezeh insists this was an orchestrated attempt to divide reform-minded Nigerians.
He argues that zoning the ADC’s presidential ticket to the South is not favoritism but fairness. “Equity and inclusivity are non-negotiable. Nigerians are tired of recycled elites who think politics is a game of thrones. This is about justice and national unity.”
Ezeh’s rallying cry was as much a warning as a call to action: “Apathy is the oxygen of election fraud. If we stay silent, vote thieves will steal the people’s mandate. 2027 will be a defining clash, light versus darkness, progress versus decay.”
Casting Peter Obi as the movement’s moral compass, Ezeh urged Nigerians across divides to rally behind him. “Peter Obi represents ethical, competent, and purposeful leadership. If opposition forces unite behind him, Nigeria has a chance at the future we dream of.”
As coalition negotiations continue and voter registration gathers pace, the Obidient Movement is betting that Nigerians, empowered and engaged, will reject old fault lines and chart a new course for the country.