Late Chief Tony Anenih.
A former Chairman, Board of Trustees of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Chief Tony Anenih has reportedly died at the age of 85.
Reports say Anenih died at a private hospital in Abuja today, Sunday, 28/10/2018.
A source close to the family, who confirmed the development but chose to remain anonymous said the children of the elder statesman would issue an official statement in Abuja soon.
The former minister of works, who lost his eldest son, Eugene, in May, 2017, after the death of his wife, Patricia, turned 85 in August.
The State Chairman of the PDP, Chief Dan Orbih, said that the party would make its position on the matter known at the appropriate time.
Meanwhile, the Edo State Government and the former governor of Delta state, Chief James Ibori have commiserated with the Anenih family over the death of its patriarch.
Governor Godwin Obaseki, in a statement this Sunday evening, said that the entire state was saddened by the loss.
Obaseki described the late politician as a leader who made immense contributions to the development of the state and the country.
He also said that the guidance of the deceased elder statesman would be missed, especially as the country prepared for the 2019 general elections.
Also Chief Ibori has described the death of Chief Anthony Akhakon Anenih as the end of a remarkable era in Nigerian politics. He said the late Chief Tony Anenih was in a class of his own as he was almost unsurpassed in political strategy for four decades.
In a statement signed by Tony Eluemunor, his Media Assistant, Ibori said that Chief Anenih was depository of political wisdom, a library of contemporary Nigerian political history and the nation’s foremost political tactician for decades.
Ibori said that Anenih’s life should be studied like a book by anyone who wants to go far not just in Nigerian politics, but in life generally, because he drew himself up by his own boot straps and remained almost unequalled as a political leader and pathfinder since the 1970s till his retirement after the last general elections.
Ibori said: “Anenih was a self-made man who did not have the benefit of attending a secondary school but studied at home for his West African School Certificate while he was already in the Police Force. With that certificate in his pockets, the sky was his limit as he attended the Police College in Ikeja, and merited to be selected for further training in the Bramshill Police College, Basingstoke, England in 1966 and the International Police Academy, Washington DC in 1970.
“Perhaps as a sign of what was to come, he served as a Police Orderly to the first Governor-General of Nigeria, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe. He retired as a Commissioner of Police in 1975.
Ibori said that Anenih first served notice that he was a master political tactician while State Chairman of the National Party of Nigeria (NPN) from 1981 to 1983, he spearheaded the late Dr. Samuel Ogbemudia’s election as civilian Governor of Bendel State.
When democracy returned, he was National Chairman of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) in 1992 and 1993, and masterminded the election of Chief M. K. O. Abiola as President. Yet, it was in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) that he was nationally recognised as “Mr. Fix It”, a tag the Daily Independent newspaper actually gave him. From 1999 until his retirement in 2015, he played great roles in the party as Minister of Works, National Leader, Chairman of BoT, etc, helping to decide the political direction of Nigeria. There is no doubt that very few Nigerians have played the masterly roles that Anenih routinely played.
“I was lucky to have been very close to Chief Anenih as he took me under his wings. I learnt a lot from him. Even in my darkest moments, he believed in me. His memory will ever remain green in my heart. May God grant him eternal rest and grant his family the fortitude to bear this massive loss” Ibori said:
GIPHY App Key not set. Please check settings