I write to strongly condemn the false and defamatory statements against the Deputy Governor of Imo State Prince Eze Madumere by Sandra Duru published in some media sites. Sandra in her publication said she caught Madumere in bi$exual act with her ex-husband.
She has been making conflicting statements in her quest to blackmail the Deputy Governor of Imo State.
Normally, I would have investigated her story but I did not because she once phoned me to do the fake story for her.
As a Columnist, I have been involved in the struggle for good governance in Imo State with series of media articles. It is on record that I launched the first media attack on Owelle Rochas Okorocha when he became governor of Imo State.
For all my human fallibility, I have sought to make my case with fervour and some measure of clarity. But one thing I hate strongly is blackmail.
I know very well that when you are made a top government official, you should be prepared for rumours and blackmail capable of breaking your heart. You will begin to hear stories you have never heard about yourself in the social media and you must learn to live with them because it is one of the prices one must pay as a leader, and you must develop thick skin.
Being a government official is a really high-risk profession and many public officials live in dread of their faces appearing in flagrante delicto online and doom their careers. Government officials in Nigeria have found themselves trapped by blackmailers, who capitalize on the public’s mounting disgust for wayward behaviour.
But even those who have resisted wrongdoing are not immune. Aided by computer software, blackmailers sometimes fake their quarry’s likeness into not-safe-for-work images. In addition to looking over their shoulders for anti-graft inspectors, public officials contend with blackmailers who are armed with honey traps, video cameras or worse: Photoshop.
Although blackmail is one of the most common ways in which public officials are victimized in Nigeria, it has proven difficult to deal with and has gone largely unaddressed within a human rights framework.
Indeed, targets are often victimized precisely because they have a great deal to lose and feel they are unable to draw on networks of support. It requires a great deal of time, effort, and skill to carefully extricate a victim from a blackmail situation.
Like I said, I hate blackmailers. I can no longer remain silent in this matter. Sandra Duru has sunk into deeper, more unimaginably treacherous nadirs of knavery by the day, and it is about time she is exposed for the sleazy, scandalous rapscallion that she is. It is time to speak up.
Sandra Duru called me on phone by 10 pm in the night in February this year. She claimed to come from Ezimoha Osuama in Isiala Mbano L.G.A of Imo State. She told me to do a story against the Deputy Governor of Imo State Prince Eze Madumere (then Chief of Staff), that her political sponsors will pay me well.
From my talk with her, she was accusing Madumere with the help of a politician who wants to ruin Madumere’s political career. What she doesn’t know is that I have never received a dime from any sponsor. I can state with pride: I have never been for sale to any bidder. Nobody but I dictates what I write.
My friends and admirers know this. I told her to her face that I will not be part of her blackmailing plans. She went ahead to meet other columnists who fall to her arrant nonsense.
I hate people with odiously invidious history of blackmail. I hate crude, boorish, philistine, and disreputable blackmailers and degenerated moral cripples of the darkest dye.
I frown at those who beguile the unsuspecting with titillating lies and innuendoes. Prince Madumere we know is trained in the US and at no time was he accused of homosexual act but trust politics and what can come out of it. People like Sandra Duru should be made to stop their stupid blackmail.
Sandra Duru we know has blackmailed notable personalities in Nigeria. She was said to have blackmailed a onetime Inspector General of Police claiming he slept with her. The unacceptability of blackmail and extortion has been affirmed repeatedly in the international legal and policy sphere. Article 17(1-2) of ICCPR offers the strongest condemnation of blackmail in the ICCPR, stating: “No one shall be subjected to arbitrary or unlawful interference with his privacy, family and home .Everyone has the right to the protection of the law against such interference or attacks.” These instruments do not only condemn forms of blackmail that interfere with the victim’s life by forcing them to buy their privacy for a price. They also condemn those threats that limit the victim’s autonomy by holding them hostage to the whims and demands of their blackmailer.
The forced surrender of goods and possessions, whether in blackmail or extortion, further violates Article 14 of the African Charter, which states that, “the right to property shall be guaranteed.It may only be encroached upon in the interest of public need or in the general interest of the community and in accordance with the provisions of appropriate laws.
Sandra Duru’s false accusation against the deputy governor of Imo State is criminal to say the least and must be condemned. I call on Imolites to speak against blackmail. I call on relevant human right lawyers in Imo State and the civil society to take concrete steps to address the Sandra Duru’s blackmail of the Imo Deputy Governor.
Human right lawyers must commence immediately the process of fighting against this unrepentant blackmailer. She should be called upon to explain herself before the civil society groups. I am not against anyone calling for accountability in governance but I am against disreputable blackmailers. Crime no dey pay.
-Kenneth Uwadi, Mmahu-Egbema, Imo State, Nigeria