Barrister Kenneth Imansuangbon (aka Rice Man) is the proprietor and
Chairman of Abuja-based Pace Setters Group of Schools, lawyer,
businessman and Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship aspirant in
Edo State. He spoke in Benin-City shortly after a thanksgiving service
at the Rev. Dr. Felix Omobude-pastored New Covenant Gospel Church to
thank God for saving his life in a motor accident last November 13.
Excerpts:
Congratulations for surviving an accident late last year. Did you have any premonition?
Yes.
I knew somehow that there were evil persons who were not happy with
what I was doing for the masses. I felt somehow that they were not
happy with the good I am doing, like sharing rice, giving scholarships,
sponsoring essay competitions, football competitions in Edo and across
the country, reaching out to widows and orphans and so on. I knew that
some people don’t like such good things. But there are also some people
that love it.
Each
time I do such things, it is because of my faith in God. The background
I came from is very poor. I lost my father in 1983. From that point in
time, mama (his mother) toiled day and night to provide for our needs.
Mama trained me in black clothes (mourning attires). I am the first of
six children. My mother, Elizabeth Imansuangbon, is a wonderful woman;
very resilient and courageous.
When my father died, she didn’t
abandon us to marry another man. She was very beautiful. She stood by
me. I actually benefited from the sympathy of the public. So, that is
why you see me giving. I can give my knickers, shoes and even pants and
go naked without batting an eyelid. It is in my DNA to have sympathy for
the poor. People think it is because of politics that I feed people,
but if they know where I am coming from, they would know that nothing
can be farther from the truth. My guiding principle is that politics
should have face of humanity.
When I give, I give selflessly; even
when I give in pain. There are certain giving you do, even when you
don’t have. But you’re constrained to give because you could see the
weakness and begging of the people with their eyes and body language.
So, you’re left with no option than to bend over backward to give. At
times, I feel pain. It is not easy to give. At times, I feel, this money
that I am giving, why don’t I keep it for my children? Or why don’t I
use it buy big cars, expensive wristwatches and build a big house? This
house I live in (in Benin) is a rented apartment.
What are the lessons you have learnt from that accident?
That
life is vanity. It’s like a vapour. November 14, I would have died were
it not for the mercies of God. I must say that as a result of the
accident, two things have happened. I have taken two decisions. As a
result of this accident, I would hold on to God the more, serve Him more
than ever, serve the community and the people. I will serve Edo people,
serve Nigeria, serve the world.
Let me also add that the accident
has brought unity to the state. It has synergised both PDP and APC. We
should take politics beyond hatred. Politics is not hate. If you hate
because you’re a politician, then, you’re not a human being. Politics is
love; and that was demonstrated by Edo people the day I arrived from
the overseas treatment. Over 20,000 people were at the airport to
welcome me.
Everywhere was jampacked. For four hours, they
waited-old, young, men, women, children. From the airport, they trekked
with me down to my house (at GRA). It is only love that can make anybody
do that kind of a thing. Those who I never knew prayed for me. Muslims
prayed for me. Imams prayed for me. Christians prayed for me. Everybody
prayed for me.
What was the thought that came to your mind when you lost your dad?
His
death was a huge shock. I felt that it was the end of the world for me,
that I was finished. I thought there was no hope left. Immediately the
doctor pronounced him dead, I felt hopeless. But after his burial, I
knew that I had to hold on to my creator. God gave me hope. God inspired
me. He fired me up. And the Edo people and Nigerians as a whole fired
me up. His death was also a tonic for success.
You rose from rag to riches, grass to grace. What was the turning point?
From
Ewohinmi, my mother would come to Benin when I was in ICE, wearing
black clothes. I am sorry to say this, part of our culture is unfriendly
and unkind to woman. If a woman loses her spouse, for three years, she
is made to wear black clothes. She would come to Benin in her black
clothes to give me foodstuff and other necessities. I knew that the only
way was to succeed. I would tell her, ‘Mama, don’t worry. If it pleases
the God almighty, the end would justify the means’. Today, I am
grateful to God and to my mother. Also, I have a very great wife, Kate.
She is like a bulwark. She is my brain. God gave me a good partner.
Whatever I am today, she is very instrumental to it. And she is a God-fearing woman.
What attracted you to your wife?
Quite
honestly, I don’t deserve the wife I got. Yes, I wanted a God-fearing
woman, a woman that would love the poor. My wife said to me that when
she was young, she used to dream that she was helping the poor on the
street, sharing rice, noodles and all what not. And today, that’s what
we’re doing.
In Edo State, they call you the Rice Man because of you philanthropy. You’re are also a lawyer and politician. What drives you?
What
is dear to me is that I am Kenneth Imansuangbon. I am an ordinary man. I
am like any ordinary Nigerian on the street. But what drives me on is
that one day, we would realize a country of our dream, where everyone
would have job, peace, security, good water system, good educational
system; a country where we would not emphasise tribe, but that which
strengthens us.
Where there would be justice, fairness and equity.
That is my hope for the country. That is actually what drives me on.
Each time people ask: ‘Ken, why are you in politics?’ I am in politics
because I want a better nation. I want a better life for my fellow
Nigerians. What I have seen on the streets of New York, what I have seen
at the Heathrow Airport, what I have seen in Dubai, what is happening
in South Africa can happen in Nigeria, if we have the men with good
heart in government, if we have people in government that would see
themselves as servants of the people rather than as the Lords of the
Manor.
Every chance we have in government is given by God. God
would ask questions. Life is very frail and temporal. On November 13,
2013, I was coming from Akure where I went for the burial of my very
good friend, Deji Falae. Deji had died. Back home, I was almost gone.
But the finger of God stopped death and Satan, and gave me life. God
said, ‘No, touch not my anointed and do my prophet no harm.’
That
was what saved me. And because of that safety, Edo people are together
now. The safety God granted me has bonded the two dominant political
parties (APC and PDP) in the state. The governor and I are friends now.
We’re brothers. Everybody is one now. The accident that almost claimed
my life has unified Edo people. What makes Edo strong is not PDP. What
makes Edo strong is not APC.
What makes Edo strong is not the rich
oil or vegetation in the state. What makes Edo strong is the spirit of
forgiveness, the spirit of unity, the spirit that I can criticize the
Comrade Governor, and the next day, he can come to my thanksgiving.
That’s love. What strengthens us is that the Comrade Governor knows that
I can be the next governor. That he can hand over the key of Government
House to me. And he said during my thanksgiving that God and the people
would determine who would be the governor (of Edo State) after him in
2016. To quote him, ‘It might be Kenneth, it might be Imansuangbon.’
He’s checking out, I am checking in.
Rumour has it that you weep each time you travel abroad. Why?
It
is no rumour. The first time I got to the US, I was crying. I wept. The
American Customs office asked why I was crying. I told him I was crying
because I didn’t know why my country, Nigeria, was not like this (US).
Where did we miss it as a people? That was actually what triggered my
interest in politics. That is the reason I said no matter the hazards in
politics, some of us are ready to live and die for what we believe in
to make a change in our country. This change is coming. This change will
come.
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