By Fred Itua
In a nation where impunity often wears the cloak of political legitimacy, and where public office is sometimes mistaken for personal fiefdom, Governor Monday Okpebholo of Edo State has quietly but firmly drawn a moral and administrative line in the sand. With a single announcement, concise, unapologetic, and decisive, he has reignited the flame of public hope and redefined what it means to govern with integrity, empathy, and uncompromising discipline.
The recent government directive banning illegal revenue collection by unions and private consultants, most notably the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW), Road Transport Employers Association of Nigeria (RTEAN), and their likes, goes far beyond a mere administrative pronouncement. It is a clarion call that the old order, built on systemic exploitation and unchecked abuse, is being dismantled brick by brick. This is not just a policy decision; it is a bold, moral reckoning that places the people of Edo State at the centre of governance.
Governor Okpebholo’s move is emblematic of a new kind of leadership; one that listens, acts, and protects. It is a searing indictment of the machinery of extortion that has, for far too long, preyed on ordinary citizens under the guise of ‘revenue collection.’ It is also a potent reminder that discipline, when rooted in justice, is not oppression but protection.
What makes this intervention extraordinary is not merely its content but the context. These unions and consultants were not just acting in defiance. They were previously empowered, within limits, by the State. The courage to revoke that authority in the face of abuse reveals a Governor who does not make excuses for corruption nor shield wrongdoers under the familiar umbrella of political loyalty. Governor Okpebholo has chosen principle over patronage, people over politics.
At the heart of this announcement lies a vision: a reformed revenue system that is efficient, transparent, and people-focused. The days when drivers, traders, and transport workers lived in fear of extortionists masquerading as union enforcers must now become a relic of the past. Okpebholo’s insistence on ending cash-based levies and encouraging the public to report illegal activities speaks volumes of a government that is not only aware of the people’s pain but is determined to end it.
In contrast to the previous administration, which often turned a blind eye or even benefited from these networks of exploitation, Governor Okpebholo is charting a new course. This is governance not of silence and complicity but of action and clarity. His zero-tolerance stance on corruption and administrative irregularities is not performative. It is surgical. It cuts deep, and it cleanses.
But, the implications of this policy go far beyond the borders of Edo State. Okpebholo is laying down a template for what responsible governance should look like in Nigeria. His approach provides a powerful model for other governors and, indeed, for the federal government to rethink the ethics of public revenue collection, citizen protection, and institutional discipline.
By criminalizing the economic sabotage perpetuated by these unions and mandating security agencies to arrest and prosecute offenders, the administration is sending a thunderous signal: governance under Okpebholo will not tolerate disorder disguised as tradition, nor exploitation justified by bureaucracy.
In this bold pursuit of justice, the Governor is not alone. He is inviting the people; ordinary drivers, traders, market women, and commuters to become stakeholders in accountability. With the creation of a dedicated Special Taskforce and the release of a direct contact for whistleblowers, he is institutionalizing citizen participation in governance enforcement. It is not only brilliant, it is revolutionary.
What emerges is the portrait of a Governor who is both empathetic and firm; accessible yet uncompromising, and visionary, but not divorced from reality. In an era where politicians often govern from a distance, Okpebholo is a man on the street, listening to whispers in the market and turning them into policies at the top.
Edo citizens can breathe a little easier, not just because their tormentors are being called to order, but because they have found in Senator Monday Okpebholo a leader who is not afraid to wield the hammer of justice where necessary. They can trust that this is an administration where the rule of law is not a slogan but a standard. Those who were once untouchable can no longer hide behind acronyms or authority.
The implications of this singular act reverberate far and wide. It signals the end of backdoor governance and ushers in an era of transparency, sanity, and public trust. In time, this decisive move may well be remembered as the moment Edo State began its journey into becoming a benchmark for ethical leadership in Nigeria.
In Governor Okpebholo, Edo State has found more than a leader; it has found a guardian of the people’s rights, a sentinel of order, and a custodian of public trust.
And in the heart of a weary nation desperate for integrity, this latest move by Governor Monday Okpebholo is nothing short of revolutionary.
Itua is the Chief Press Secretary to Governor Monday Okpebholo of Edo State.