The Rivers State House of Assembly has claimed that Governor Siminalayi Fubara and his Deputy breached the peace agreement brokered by President Bola Tinubu.
themomentng reported that the assembly on Thursday commenced Fubara’s impeachment process.
Speaking during plenary, the Majority Leader of the House, Major Jack, stated that President Tinubu had brokered peace between Fubara and the Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyesom Wike, twice, but the governor had reneged.
He said, “The governor and his Deputy have continued to act as tyrants and have no good plans for transparency of good governance in Rivers State.
“They have repeatedly breached and backtracked on peace agreement facilitated by the president of this country Bola Tinubu.
“The governor and his deputy failed to heed to the terms of agreement reached during the peace parley in December 2023 and another one in 2025”.
Meanwhile, the Rivers State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has rejected moves by the Rivers State House of Assembly to initiate impeachment proceedings against Fubara and his deputy, Ngozi Odu, warning that such action could destabilise the state.
In a statement issued on Wednesday, the party leadership said it had taken note of what it described as “unfortunate developments” emerging from the House of Assembly.
While acknowledging that the legislature is an independent arm of government with constitutional oversight powers, the APC insisted that resorting to impeachment was unacceptable.
According to TVC, the party said it could not remain silent while unresolved internal crises from the Peoples Democratic Party were allowed to spill over and threaten the stability of an APC-led government in Rivers State.
The APC said the impeachment threat appears to be linked to budgetary issues, which it argued do not justify such an extreme legislative measure.
The party recalled that during the period of emergency rule in the state, a budget was transmitted to the National Assembly by President Bola Ahmed Tinubu in May 2025.
It noted that the budget was subsequently approved by the Senate on June 25, 2025, and by the House of Representatives on July 22, 2025, with a total allocation of ₦1.485 trillion.
According to the APC, the budget was designed to run for one year, until August 2026.
The party added that the governor is not constitutionally compelled to present a supplementary budget if he is satisfied with the existing appropriation.
The APC further pointed out that the Constitution permits a governor to continue spending for up to six months into a new fiscal year, insisting that the impeachment threat lacks legal and moral justification.
The Rivers APC urged members of the State House of Assembly, particularly those elected on the party’s platform, to resist what it described as external pressure aimed at destabilising the government.
“We will do everything possible to ensure that the APC-led government of Rivers State is not undermined through internal disagreements,” the statement said.
The party called on lawmakers to immediately discontinue the impeachment process, warning that it could damage the image of the APC and derail ongoing development efforts in the state.
The APC urged political actors to uphold democratic principles and allow governance to prevail, rather than permitting political rivalries to disrupt peace and stability in Rivers State












