Educational authorities in the South East of Nigeria should show the televised appearance of Mark Okoye, the CEO/GM of the South East Development Commission (SEDC), before the Senate Committee on the South East to every primary and secondary school student in the region. Those in tertiary institutions should be required to write papers analyzing what went right and what went wrong.
What unfolded before the cameras was more than a routine oversight hearing. It was a teaching moment, not just for the actors involved but for the people of the Southeast in whose name they all sat.
The vigorous debate it has generated on social media should not be allowed to disappear into the graveyard of the information superhighway.
What should have been a routine Senate oversight hearing quickly descended into a spectacle. The expectation was that Mark Okoye would present a report on the commission’s activities, senators would ask questions, make observations, and ensure that the commission’s activities aligned with the needs and aspirations of the people of the Southeast.
This is how parliamentary oversight works across the world; from Accra to Kigali, from Nairobi to Freetown. When done properly, it aligns public expectations with executive performance and ensures that those entrusted with public resources remain accountable to the people.
More than N16.6 billion was at stake. What was really on trial was whether Southeast managers of public institutions can deliver results; whether those charged with holding them accountable are capable of doing so; and whether the people of the Southeast care enough to follow, question, and engage with the democratic process.
For the first time in a long while, those interests collided in one public arena.
At the hearing, Mark Okoye did not explain, to the satisfaction of many observers, how the commission spent N3.6 billion in six months. While he claimed that the commission had only N12 billion left in its account, members of the committee informed him that records from the Central Bank of Nigeria showed a balance of N13 billion. There was also a heated exchange over N153 million reportedly spent on a one-room liaison office in Abuja. Okoye struggled to explain the expenditure clearly. He later argued that the figure covered more than rent and included operational costs, though the explanation failed to settle concerns.
The perfect storm featured a flawed character in the person of Senator Orji Uzor Kalu, leading what often appeared to be an inquisition of a once-touted wonder kid, Mark Okoye. Under the glare of cameras and before hungry, angry constituents, Okoye appeared unprepared for the moment.
His presentation lacked the transparency and honesty expected of a public official summoned to account for the stewardship of public funds.
Several interpretations have emerged regarding why the encounter unfolded the way it did. Your interpretation depends largely on your view of the actors, your understanding of the SEDC’s mission, and your grasp of the role of checks and balances in a democracy.
One group remains outraged that Senator Orji Uzor Kalu, a man whose own record raises uncomfortable questions about accountability, was leading the probe. As governor of Abia State, he presided over a system in which the legislature rarely held the executive to account. Had such oversight existed, it might have spared him the conviction that sent him to prison in 2019 for diverting billions of naira in state funds.
Kalu regained his freedom through a Supreme Court ruling based on jurisdictional technicalities. He did not get out of jail from any court’s determination or declaration of innocence. To add what we call ‘insult to the injury,’ he later secured a court injunction preventing a retrial. Imagine the audacity! For many observers, watching him preside over an accountability hearing was irony strectched too far.
Others looked at Mark Okoye’s public humiliation and saw yet another intellectual attempting to impress ordinary people with pie charts, PowerPoint slides, and graphs while standing before an audience yearning for roads, jobs, security, electricity, and opportunities.
Mark Okoye’s original sin in this SEDC adventure may have been his failure to read the room.
The Southeast is not a Harvard lecture hall. It is not an IMF workshop. It is not an NGO conference where colorful graphics and polished presentations are accepted as proof of progress.
The Southeast is a room filled with people waiting for tangible improvements in their daily lives. They want long-term vision, yes. But they also want short-term evidence that somebody is moving in the right direction. In that room, graphs do not substitute for results.
The speed with which people descended on both Mark Okoye and Orji Uzor Kalu reveals something deeper: the Southeast has run out of patience.
The excuses that began in 1999 have expired. The emergence of Governor Alex Otti in Abia State has made it increasingly difficult to explain away decades of poor governance. Many people now look back at the Kalu-Theodore Orji-Okezie Ikpeazu years and see twenty-four wasted years.
It is becoming harder to fool all the people all the time.
That is the dilemma facing many leaders in the Southeast today. The judgment of the people is instant and often merciless. The urgency of the region’s challenges leaves little room for nuance or ceremony. The failures of successive political classes have eroded the reverence once reserved for men and women in positions of authority.
As people across the Southeast watched the public trial of Mark Okoye, one question rose above every argument, every statistic, every accusation, and every defense:
Is Mark Okoye the leader we have been waiting for, or should we look for another?
That question is no longer directed at Mark Okoye alone.
It now hangs over governors, senators, ministers, commissioners, agency heads, traditional rulers, and every member of the political class.
The era when leaders could toy with the destiny of the Southeast and expect endless patience is drawing to a close.
The hearing may have begun as an oversight session on the SEDC’s affairs. It ended as a warning to an entire generation of Southeast leaders.
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Rudolf Ogoo Okonkwo teaches Post-colonial African History, Diasporic African Literature, and African Folktales at the School of Visual Arts in New York City. He is the author of “This American Life Sef.” His latest book is “A Kiss That Never Was.”