Zoning Tears a Senatorial Axis Apart in Bayelsa State : A Lesson for Every Political Bloc
By Wahalaupdate Editorial Desk
A fresh layer has been added to the unfolding zoning controversy rocking the political space of Bayelsa State, as prominent legal voice Patrick Indaikienyu weighs in, calling for both caution and collective responsibility.
A Protest Without Violence, But Heavy With Meaning
As our correspondent on ground captured, yesterday’s procession in Yenagoa was calm, coordinated, and deeply symbolic.
From the early hours, groups of youths, women, and community stakeholders from Brass gathered in clusters, holding placards with inscriptions such as “Equity Must Prevail,” “Let the People Decide,” and “Zoning is Justice, Not Manipulation.”
The crowd moved in an orderly march along the Melford Okilo Express Road, their chants measured, not chaotic, projecting unity rather than unrest. Security presence remained visible but non,intrusive, reinforcing the peaceful nature of the demonstration.
Eyewitness accounts indicate that the protesters maintained discipline throughout, avoiding confrontation while making their message unmistakably clear:
the system must not silence the people it was designed to serve.
The procession terminated at the OTITA Headquarters, the designated screening arena, where representatives of the group submitted their position to relevant authorities.
The Legal Voice: A Call for Structured Inclusion
Barrister Indaikienyu, speaking amid the development, took a balanced but firm stance.
While acknowledging the foundational importance of zoning, traced back to the equity-driven philosophy of Melford Okilo, he emphasized the need for stakeholder engagement over rigid imposition.
According to him, the path forward is neither unilateral exclusion nor blind adherence, but a collective review process:
The youths, chiefs, women, and critical stakeholders of Brass must sit together, assess the situation, and determine whether Senator Benson Agadaga should be screened and permitted to seek another term.
The Undercurrent: Democracy on Trial
Yet beneath the calm tone lies a deeper tension.
A growing segment of the electorate is asking a difficult question:
How long can any perceived undemocratic position be imposed on the people before it fractures the very system it seeks to protect?
Because when political arrangements, no matter how noble in origin, begin to feel like restrictions rather than frameworks, resistance becomes inevitable.
And this resistance is no longer confined to one political party, it is cutting across all lines, signaling a broader institutional concern.
Zoning vs. Electoral Freedom: The Strategic Fault Line
At its core, this crisis reveals a structural contradiction:
Zoning demands fairness over time
Democracy demands choice in the moment
When these collide without clarity, legitimacy begins to erode.
If zoning is enforced without consultation, it risks being labeled undemocratic.
If ignored, it risks long-term marginalization.
Why This Matters Now
What unfolded in Yenagoa is more than a protest, it is a signal.
A reminder that:
Agreements must be transparent
Leadership must be inclusive
Systems must evolve with the people
Final Analysis
The voices from Brass are not merely contesting a candidacy, they are challenging a process.
If that process continues to be perceived as imposed rather than negotiated, it may distort the very rights democracy seeks to protect.
Power, like a well-run institution, must rotate, adapt, and remain accountable.
Bayelsa stands at a defining moment,
and history is quietly taking notes.

