He began his career as a teacher, writer and journalist in Nnewi. He wrote two short stories,
Disaster in the Realms of Love and
Broken Engagement which are both featured in the
Onitsha Market Literature and can be found in the
Library of Congress. As a journalist, he was the Igbo
editor of the Eastern Nigerian Observer Newspaper in 1960 before founding an
Anglican Youth Fellowship magazine called
The Voice of the Youth. He was also a lecturer at
North Carolina Central University,
Durham and head of the Journalism Department at
Shaw University. In September 1974, he co-founded
Winston-Salem Chronicle in
Winston-Salem (a weekly newspaper that focuses on the
African-American community) and in 1986 he founded
The Nigeria Monitor the first
weekly newspaper in Nnewi. He raised local readers awareness on local politics and community affairs, which earned him the nickname
Monitor. However, in the 1990s, the military dictatorship of General
Sani Abacha suppressed
freedom of the press in Nigeria. As a businessman, he introduced the Micro wheel
balancing Machine into the
Nigerian automobile industry to provide young people with employment. As a politician, he was nominated as the
Nnewi North local government chairmanship candidate by the National Republican Convention Party (
NRC) in 1993. ==References==