In politics, interviews are often meant to be tools of damage control or platforms for visionary articulation. However, the recent media appearance by Hon. Alfred Bello achieved neither. Instead, it offered a stark, somewhat pathetic glimpse into the mind of a self-acclaimed veteran politician completely detached from present-day realities.
Bello’s performance was less of a political defense and more of a masterclass in delusion—a display that revealed a man who genuinely believes he is articulate, while his arguments crumble under the slightest weight of logic.
At the heart of Bello’s media outing was a desperate, bland attempt to justify his conspiracy to truncate a valid mandate. Rather than offering a substantive political defense, he resorted to baffling pettiness. Chief among his grievances was his alleged inability to see James Faleke despite several invitations.

To reduce the complex, high-stakes political situation of Kogi State to personal bitterness over a lack of physical access to specific individuals is pettiness personified. It exposes a shallow mindset, proving that where statesman-like dialogue is required, Bello prefers the trivialities of bruised egos.
Bello’s discourse exposed a deeply warped understanding of political history and leadership. What he puts forward as “experience” reads more like a textbook example of a gastronomic approach to leadership—politics driven entirely by immediate, self-serving appetite rather than long-term principles or the collective good of the people.
This self-serving philosophy explains his blatant refusal to address the elephant in the room: the string of failed promises made by the Yahaya Bello administration (FGYB) regarding the Okun governorship.
By ignoring these broken covenants, Bello chooses to live in a convenient past, entirely blind to the stark contrast of today’s political reality.
Perhaps the most mischievous element of Bello’s interview was his deliberate attempt to reframe a legitimate cry for justice as mere antagonism. For decades, a significant part of Kogi State has been systematically denied the governorship. The agitation for an Okun governor is not an act of aggression; it is a righteous demand for equity.
A government genuinely committed to peace and progress would view a call for a fair and equitable rotation arrangement as an invitation for constructive dialogue. Instead, Bello weaponizes this struggle, painting the victims of political exclusion as the aggressors.
If there is any takeaway from Bello’s otherwise uninspiring outing, it is the unintended truth he stumbled upon: the Okun governorship will eventually come, irrespective of the present situation.
Justice can be delayed by gastronomic politics and shallow machinations, but it cannot be denied forever. While Hon. Alfred Bello continues to bask in the delusion of his own eloquence, the unstoppable march toward fairness in Kogi State moves forward—with or without him.
– Ponle Adeniyi
ponleadeniyi457@gmail.com



