April 25, 2026
Iheanyi Frank Chinasa
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Iheanyi Frank Chinasa

The recent decision by the former Abia Chief Liaison Officer in Abuja, Hon. Iheanyi Frank Chinasa to leave the Labour Party for the All Progressives Congress has stirred strong reactions across Abia’s political landscape. Predictably, interpretations have split along partisan lines.

To some analysts aligned with the current Abia State administration, the move reads as ingratitude — a departure from the platform that swept through the state in 2023. Some even interpret the defection as blind, senseless and ill-conceived.
To voices within the APC, it is a calculated gain — another step in the party’s wider South East consolidation ahead of 2027.

Both readings are political. Neither fully explains the social meaning of this defection for the people of Bende.

Hon. Chinasa’s political identity has never been built on Abuja endorsements or party slogans. From his early days in public service, his brand has been rooted in ward meetings, town union engagements, and direct community projects across Bende. His traditional title, _Agu Bende_ — the Tiger of Bende — was not conferred by a party caucus. It was earned in the villages, by constituents who saw in him a willingness to confront difficult terrain.

Seen through that community lens, the defection carries a different weight.

Remaining in the Labour Party today means political comfort in Abia. It is the ruling party in the state, with control of patronage, visibility, and grassroots goodwill following the 2023 elections. Exiting that space for the APC — a party still rebuilding trust in the South East — is not the path of least resistance. It is the path of a bold and courageous warrior, who is accustomed to the intricacies and complexities of wading through seemingly difficult political terrains in pursuit of grassroots development for his good people of Bende.

That choice reframes the conversation. It suggests a politician who is weighing party loyalty against what he believes is a broader platform to attract federal attention, infrastructure, and investment to Bende. Whether one agrees with the calculation or not, the risk is real. And in politics, as in community life, taking risk for one’s people is the oldest definition of courage.

The biblical David did not face Goliath because the odds were good. He stepped forward because the cost of silence was higher. For a representative from Bende, the “Goliaths” are familiar: youth unemployment, post-primary school infrastructure decay, agricultural value-chain gaps, and the sense that federal presence ends at Umuahia.

If Hon. Chinasa believes a new political alignment gives Bende stronger bargaining power for roads, schools, and jobs, then the defection is not abandonment. It is a gamble that the end — grassroots development — justifies the turbulence of the means.

That is the essence of _Agu Bende_. The tiger does not hunt where the grass is already low. It moves to where the need is greatest, even when the territory is contested.

Bende deserves more than partisan applause or partisan outrage. The social question is simple: Will this move bring more clinics to Itumbauzo? More classrooms to Nkpa? More enterprise grants to Uzuakoli youth?

If yes, then history will record the defection as strategic service. If no, then the risk will have been in vain. But the motive — to exchange personal political comfort for a chance at wider leverage for his people — should be acknowledged even by critics.

Hon. Chinasa has placed his political capital on the table. Time, and delivery to Bende’s 13 communities, will be the final judge.

Defections will always be interpreted in Abuja and Umuahia through the lens of 2027. But in Bende, they should be measured by 2025, 2026, and the daily realities of the farmer, the teacher, and the student.

To call the move ingratitude misses the point. To call it mere strategy also misses the point. At its core, it is a test of the very attribute that gave him the name _Agu Bende_: the courage to leave safe ground when he believes his people’s future lies across the river.

Bende will be watching — not the party register, but the project register.

Paul Nkume, a Public Affairs Analyst writes from Akoli Imenyi

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