CC™ PersPective
Peter Obi has long cultivated an image that few Nigerian politicians could match, disciplined, prudent, morally upright. The former governor of Anambra State presents himself as the rare politician who embodies honesty, decency, and fiscal discipline, a clear contrast to a political landscape filled with corruption and opportunism.
Yet the closer one examines his eight-year tenure as the Chief Executive of Anambra State, the more the facade cracks. Obi’s record is riddled with controversies that expose the limits of his celebrated integrity. The thirteen-month strike by state doctors during his administration left hospitals paralysed, denying thousands of citizens basic healthcare. In education, fees at Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu University soared, sparking protests and reinforcing the perception of elitism. While his government renovated schools, critics argue that meaningful new infrastructure was largely absent. Obi’s assertion that quality education cannot be universally accessible only amplified concerns that his policies prioritized status over inclusion.
Democratic accountability fared no better. For the majority of Obi’s governorship, local governments were run by appointed transition committees rather than elected councils, delaying the exercise of grassroots democracy for nearly a decade. By the time elections occurred, the damage to public trust was done.
Financial controversies have haunted Obi too. While no court has proven misappropriation, the Panama Papers revealed overseas corporate interests linked to him or his family, raising uncomfortable questions about transparency. Incidents involving aides intercepted with large sums of cash further added to the perception that Obi’s administration was not as spotless as its supporters claim.
Security policy under his watch casts an even darker shadow. The Awkuzu command of the Special Anti-Robbery Squad became notorious during a kidnapping crisis, with reports of extrajudicial killings and bodies dumped in the Ezu River. Whether Obi personally ordered such actions is unproven, yet as the state’s chief security authority, he cannot escape responsibility entirely.
Beyond office, Obi’s post-governorship conduct has also drawn scrutiny. Following deadly insurgent attacks in Borno State, he described the nation’s violence as “unbearable,” warning of national instability. Yet critics argue that his commentary, often sombre and relentless, offers crisis without solutions, pessimism without a plan. His signature dark attire and grave tone, once a symbol of principled leadership, increasingly conveys a politics defined more by grievance than constructive engagement.
Obi’s political alliances further complicate his moral narrative. He has worked alongside figures he once condemned, reflecting the fluidity, and contradictions of Nigeria’s political system. Remarks such as “Nigeria celebrates thieves” resonate with a public frustrated by corruption, yet they also reopen questions about whether Obi’s own conduct and partnerships live up to the standard he promotes.
Supporters insist that highlighting insecurity, poverty, and governance failures is a civic duty. Critics, however, see a man whose carefully curated image of incorruptibility is undermined by both record and rhetoric. The tension between advocacy and negativity defines his post-office persona and raises a stark question, can any politician claim moral high ground in a nation where every major figure carries controversy?
Peter Obi’s story is not one of black and white morality. It is the story of a politician whose reputation for virtue may have exceeded his record, a man whose carefully constructed image now confronts the full weight of historical scrutiny. In Nigeria’s complex political theatre, the myth of its “cleanest politician” may finally be meeting reality.
Photo Credits: The Insight Lens Project
Adebamiwa Olugbenga Michael is a Lagos-based political economy and policy intelligence analyst and publisher of The Insight Lens Project, providing data-driven insights across Nigeria and West Africa using open-source data.








