What Ibas Fixed: A Legacy of Responsible Intervention

What Ibas Fixed: A Legacy of Responsible Intervention

By Okechukwu Adigwe

When Ibok Ette Ibas was appointed Sole Administrator of Rivers State following the declaration of a state of emergency on 18 March 2025, the public reaction was mixed. Scepticism hung in the air like mist over the Bonny River. To many, the emergency governance order was controversial. But to those who were watching closely, it was also an opportunity, an unusual but urgent necessity to restore order in a state that had been teetering dangerously between political paralysis and institutional collapse.
Six months later, the tension has eased. The machinery of government is functioning again. There is no war. There is no collapse. Instead, there is a clear record of impact. It is a record that is quiet, deliberate, and rooted in the simple principle that governance exists to serve people, not to dominate them.
From the very beginning, Ibas understood that his was not a political appointment in the conventional sense. His job was not to play the game of politics, but to steady the ship of state. And this he has done, often without fanfare or noise. Yet beneath the surface, his administration introduced reforms that are now being felt in the daily lives of ordinary Rivers people.
Perhaps the most symbolic of these is the revolution in pension payments. For decades, pensioners in Rivers State were subjected to endless verification exercises and bureaucratic delays that turned retirement into a nightmare. Many died without receiving what they were owed. Under Ibas’ leadership, the state has witnessed its most transparent and humane pension payment process in years. In July, 2.8 billion naira was paid to 583 pensioners, directly into their accounts. No endless queues. No humiliating waiting rooms. Just respect, dignity, and efficiency.
But that was only one example. Beyond the pension reform, the Ibas administration moved swiftly to plug leakages in government finances. Departments were audited. Payments were tracked. Civil service operations were restructured to minimise delays and eliminate ghost workers. These are not glamorous reforms. They do not make for front-page headlines. But they lay the foundation for a more efficient state bureaucracy, one that can serve the incoming administration and the people of Rivers State with integrity and focus.
Security, too, demanded immediate attention. Political unrest had left many communities anxious and vulnerable. Rather than deploy intimidation or brute force, the Ibas team initiated strategic engagement with security agencies, traditional rulers, and youth leaders. The emphasis was always on dialogue, de-escalation, and coordinated intelligence. As a result, incidents of politically motivated violence declined significantly in the months following the state of emergency. Rivers became quieter, not because the people were silenced, but because they were finally being heard.
A less discussed but no less important aspect of the Sole Administrator’s tenure has been the repositioning of the state’s public image. When the emergency was declared, Rivers was in the headlines for all the wrong reasons … chaos in the state house, fractures in governance, and legal uncertainty. Ibas and his team chose not to counter these perceptions with propaganda but with performance. Through town hall meetings, strategic media engagement, and the consistent release of verifiable updates, they told a new story, one based on responsibility rather than rhetoric.
This was governance not as spectacle, but as service. And it was grounded in truth. The administration never claimed to have all the answers. What it offered, instead, was presence, consistency, and a refusal to politicise key issues. The tone was respectful. The posture was firm. The agenda was clear, which in simple clear terms was: fix what is broken, stabilise what is fragile, and pave the way for democratic continuity.
One of the most innovative elements introduced was a platform for weekly public feedback. Through structured media monitoring and digital sentiment tracking, the administration was able to respond swiftly to misinformation and public concerns. When critics misrepresented government action, the response was never personal or combative. It was factual. And it was visible. Whether through short statements, published op-eds, or direct service interventions, the administration’s approach was to correct without confrontation.
In the grassroots, this approach manifested as town hall meetings in all three senatorial zonesRivers East, Rivers West, and Rivers South-East. These were not political rallies. They were interactive governance sessions. At each event, citizens spoke and the government listened. In several instances, issues raised at the town halls received immediate attention. A school without teachers was flagged and acted upon. A community battling erosion was included in emergency infrastructure planning. A women’s cooperative in need of support was linked to a state micro-credit scheme.
These acts may appear small in isolation. But taken together, they point to a new philosophy of governance—one that values listening over lecturing, and that sees power not as entitlement but as responsibility.
This all happened in a climate of extreme political hostility. The Sole Administrator had every reason to defend himself in the press, to engage in political back-and-forth, to posture and perform. But he chose a different path. He stayed focused. He stayed quiet. He prioritised work over war. That, in many ways, is his most defining legacy.
It is also why, despite doubts at the beginning, there is now a broad consensus that the emergency intervention, while not conventional, was not wasted. Critics may still argue that six months is not enough to change the course of a state. And they are right as transformation takes time. But six months can stabilise a sinking ship. Six months can restore confidence. And six months, if used well, can be the start of something lasting.
As the tenure of the Sole Administrator draws to a close on 18 September 2025, plans are already in motion for a seamless handover to Governor Siminalayi Fubara. This transition is expected to be orderly, without rancour, and with the administrative machinery in sound working condition. That, too, is part of the Ibas legacy. He will not be remembered as someone who tried to hold onto power, but as someone who prepared the ground for its peaceful return.
Emergency governance is never the ideal path. It is a response to dysfunction, not a replacement for democracy. But when executed with integrity, humility, and discipline, it can serve as a stabilising bridge. That is what Ibok Ette Ibas has offered Rivers State, that is a bridge back to order, decency, and continuity.
Rivers now stands on the edge of a new chapter, not broken, not bitter, but steady. It is a testament to what responsible stewardship can achieve in the midst of uncertainty. And while the Sole Administrator will soon exit the scene, his contributions will remain woven into the fabric of the state’s recovery story.
For in the end, the measure of leadership is not how loudly it speaks, but how responsibly it acts. On that score, Ibas has quietly succeeded.
Okechukwu Adigwe writes from Port Harcourt

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