Background
Chinwoke Mbadinuju was born on 14 June 1945.
politician Governor of Anambra State
Chinwoke Mbadinuju was born on 14 June 1945.
His period in office was noted for internal PDP disputes resulting in a failure of effective government. After leaving office, he was embroiled in court cases over alleged involvement in a political murder. He obtained a Bachelor in Political Science, and a doctorate in Government.
He gained a Law degree from one of the best English Universities, He was an editor of Times International.
Before entering politics he was an Associate Professor of Politics and African Studies at the State University of New New York He was Personal Assistant to Governor of the old Enugu State, Doctor Jim Chris Nwobodo, between 1979 and 1980.
He served as the Personal Assistant to President Shehu Shagari between 1980 and 1983. After the return to democracy in 1998, Chinwoke Mbadinuju became the People"s Democratic Party (PDP) candidate for Anambra State governorship in competition with professor A.B.C Nwosu, who had served four military governors as Commissioner for Health, after a dispute that had to be resolved by the PDP Electoral Appeal Panel.
He was elected in April 1999 and he was the least performed Governor since the creation of the state in 1991.
Mbadinuju had been sponsored by Emeka Offor, an Anambra kingmaker. After a falling out between Mbadinuju and his "godfather", Offor, the power struggle between the two men crippled the machinery of government in the state. By September 2002, unpaid teachers had been on strike for a year and civil servants and court workers had been on strike for months.
The president of the Onitsha branch of the Nigerian Bar Association (National Basketball Association), Mr.
Barnabas Igwe, said state leaders had pocketed the money meant to pay the striking workers. While in office, Chinwoke Mbaninuju passed a law that created the Anambra Vigilante Services, which legally enshrined the Bakassi Boys, a popular if feared vigilante group credited with reducing crime in the state.
Mbadinuju said that crime in the state had reached such an appalling level that something had to be done. He later fell out with another power broker in the state, Chris Uba.
Mbadinuju claimed that he was excluded from the governorship contest in 2003 despite winning the PDP primaries because Uba and President Olusegun Obasanjo opposed his candidature.
In his place, Doctor Chris Ngige ran for the PDP but was beaten by the candidate of the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA). Eventually, after the election was nullified and re-ran, Chris Ngige took the post. Mbadinuju was accused of masterminding the killing although he was in Houston, Texas at the time of the assassination.
Igwe had been a vocal critic of Mbadinuju, calling for his resignation due to the failure to pay government workers for several months.
In January 2006 Mbadinuju was retained in prison custody over the suit. The police claimed the accused had forged a police document exonerating Mbadinuju of the Igwes" killing.