Tag: Ahmadu Bello

  • Man bags 18 months imprisonment for stealing tricycle

    Man bags 18 months imprisonment for stealing tricycle

    A Jos Upper Area Court 1, on Thursday sentenced a 28-year-old man, Usman Yusuf to 18 months imprisonment for stealing a tricycle worth N450, 000.

    The Judge, Lawal Suleiman, sentenced Yusuf after he pleaded guilty to a charge of stealing.

    Lawal held that the convict should serve-out his term without an option of fine.

    He said the sentence would serve as deterrent to others who would want to engage in such crime.

    Earlier, the Police Prosecutor, Sgt. Ibrahim Gukwat, had told the court that the tricycle driver Sani Abubakar reported the matter at the Laranto Police Station on July 22.

    Gukwat said the accused boarded the tricycle from Ahmadu Bello way and told the complainant to take him to Rano filling station Bauchi Road, Jos for N500.

    “On getting to the filling station the accused told the complainant that he mistakenly told him Bauchi Road instead of Zaria Road.

    “The driver agreed and took him to the Rano filling station at Zaria Road, but on getting to the destination the accused punched the complainant on his neck and took the tricycle,’’ he said.

    According to the prosecutor, the complainant screamed for help and some people came to his rescue and arrested the accused.

    Gukwat said the offence contravened Section 95 of the Penal Code Law of Northern Nigeria.

    The accused, who pleaded guilty to the charge, begged the court for leniency saying “I will never do it again, it is the devil’s handiwork, please have mercy on me.’’

  • Long queues at ATM points, bank halls in Jos after holidays

    Long queues at ATM points, bank halls in Jos after holidays

    ATM cash dispensing points and bank halls witnessed long queues in Jos, the Plateau capital, as business activities resumed while workers returned to work after the Eid-el Fitr holiday.

    Correspondents of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), who went round the city, observed that some ATM points were not dispensing, putting pressure on the few that were doing so.

    At the Ahmadu Bello Way in Teminus area, anxious customers were seen waiting for their turns to make withdrawals, with some of the customers telling NAN that they had just returned from their villages and needed “a little cash”.

    “I am just returning from Langtang and want to get some money before going to the hostel,” Martins Agai, a student of the University of Jos, told NAN.

    A housewife, Larai Mashat, who sells hand bags, told that NAN she closed her shop since Friday and traveled to Bokkos for the break.

    “I have just returned and want some money to meet immediate domestic needs,” she said.

    The story was the same at the banking halls with many people depositing proceeds from sales made during the break.

    A middle-aged woman, who refused to disclose her name, said she was in the bank to deposit monies collected during Church service on Sunday.

    At the Secretariat branch of First Bank, NAN met a long queue of customers undergoing the usual screening process before being allowed in, with the situation even rowdier inside the hall as customers struggled through bodies to undertake one transaction or the other.

    A visit to some offices, especially at the State and Federal secretariats, showed that people had returned to work after the weekend that dovetailed into the two-day holiday on Monday and Tuesday.

    NAN noticed heavy vehicular and human traffic at both secretariats as the refreshed workers resumed normal activities after the break.

    Mr Pam Dung, a civil servant, who works with one of the state ministries, told NAN that he was happy to be back to work after the break.

    “I am happy to be back after the break; I am fully refreshed, both mentally and physically, and ready to give my very best,” he said.

    Mrs. Sarah Aji, another civil servant, said that she used the break to reflect on her life and the future of her children.

    “Now that I am back, I am very determined to put in my best toward a better Plateau and Nigeria,” she said.

    At the Federal secretariat, the scenario was the same as workers were seen at their duty posts, while eateries closed during the break, roared back to life.

  • Foundation donates furniture to Katsina schools

    Bala Usman Foundation has donated 2,400 pieces of primary school furniture to two primary schools in Katsina State.

    The Foundation’s desk officer in Musawa, Alhaji Lawal Baro, said that the furniture was donated to Lawal Baro, Primary School Musawa and Matazu Model Primary School.

    Baro told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Musawa on Monday that the gesture was to encourage enrolment in schools.

    The official also said the foundation had offered free eye treatment to 1, 500 people and another 6,000 patients treated of various ailments under its community healthcare outreach programme.

    The News Agency of Nigeria [NAN] reports that the foundation is in memory of versatile historian late Dr Yusuf Bala-Usman of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria.

    He said since the establishment of the foundation, it had supported communities in Musawa and Matazu Local Government Areas of the state through empowerment grants and tools.

    Baro commended the Managing Director, Nigeria Ports Authority, Hadiza Bala-Usman, who is also a Director of the foundation for her immeasurable support.

    Boro assured that the foundation would continue to render invaluable support to people of the area so as to keep the name of Bala Usman alive.

     

  • Court orders arrest of Sokoto senior councillor

    A Sokoto State Sharia Court on Friday issued a bench warrant for the arrest of a Senior Councillor in the Sultanate Council of Sokoto and Magajin Garin Sokoto, Alhaji Hassan Danbaba.

    The News Agency of Nigeria ( NAN) reports that Justice Umar Sifawa, gave the order in a ruling on a motion filed by the National Vice Chairman of All Progressives Congress (APC), North-West, Alhaji Inuwa Abdulkadir.

    Abdulkadir had dragged Danbaba, the grandson of the late Premier of Northern Nigeria, Sir Ahmadu Bello, to court for alleged defamation of character.

    He alleged that Danbaba had in a publication in August, 2016, described his late father as a ” slave bought by one Gwaggo, for two shillings”.

    The complainant had told the court that Danbaba said that he (Abdulkadir) did not take adequate care of his late mother.

    The respondent had filed a notice of appeal on the ground that the court had erred by issuing a summon on March 13 and March 22, giving him only two days to appear before it for his defence.

    The motion on notice filed by Danbaba’s counsel, Prof. Yusuf Dankofa, also said the court breached the appellant’s right to fair hearing and fair trial.

    This, he averred, was in violation of section 36 ( 6) ( B), of the Constitution that states,” every person charged with a criminal offence shall be entitled to be given adequate time and facility for the preparation of the defence”.

    Danbaba had also filed a motion on notice praying for the  stay of the court’s proceedings, pending the determination of his appeal at the State High Court.

    The counsel to the complainant, Mr John Shaka, on Friday urged the court to strike out both the respondent’s motion on notice and notice of appeal.

    Shaka had also prayed the court to order the Inspector-General of Police to arrest and produce the respondent before the court.

    The counsel to the respondent was, however, not in court on Friday.

    In his ruling, Sifawa refused to grant the prayers of the complainant to strike out the respondent’s motion on notice and notice of appeal.

    The Judge said,” it is premature to do so as the accused should be given another chance to present his case, if he wishes to do so”.

    Sifawa, however, granted, in part, the prayer seeking the issuance of an order to the IGP for the arrest and production of Danbaba.

    He said:” This is to the effect that a bench warrant shall be issued immediately for the arrest and production of accused before the court.

    ”But, the order is to the CP of Sokoto State and not the IGP as applied for, to arrest the accused wherever he is found in Nigeria, pending further instructions by the court.”

    The judge adjourned the case till April 6.

  • Ahmadu Bello’s Christmas message

    Ahmadu Bello’s Christmas message

    “The truth has come and falsehood has vamoosed; surely, falsehood is meant to vamoose (in the presence of the truth)”.  Q. 17: 81  

    Here is a season in which recalling certain aspects of Nigerian history if only to put the records straight. History is a living phenomenon that is common to all people around it in time and in space. Whether or not it is interpreted and relayed positively or negatively, the fact remains that history is not anybody’s personal property and cannot be anybody’s monopoly.

    This article contains one of the most memorable aspects of Nigerian history which have consistently left a sour taste in the mouths of some of its actors. But despite the sour taste it can never get stale.

     

    Death of an icon

    One of the foremost political icons in Nigeria’s first republic and a patriarch of the political party called Northern People’s Congress (NPC), was Alhaji (Sir) Ahmadu Bello, the first and only Premier of Northern Nigeria. He became Premier of Northern Nigeria in 1954 through a popular election and was killed as Premier in January 1966 in a tribal/religious military coup plotted mainly by soldiers of Igbo extraction and led by one Major Patrick Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu. The plotters had killed this icon in cold blood before looking for reasons to justify their heinous crime. The three reasons they later gave were corruption, tribalism and religious bigotry. It was a matter of calling a dog a bad name in order to hang it.

     

    The Premiers’ flanks

    Among the four Premiers in Nigeria at that time, only Ahmadu Bello could not in any way be evidently linked to corruption. Unlike others who lived opulently, Ahmadu Bello was an ascetic personality who served his people patriotically without any blemish. He left only a small residential bungalow in his home town of Sokoto at the time of his death. Who else left such a flank? Sir Ahmadu Bello could also not be singularly accused of tribalism because tribalism was the basis of all the existing political parties of the time. No Premier from 1954 to 1966 could be exonerated from tribalism directly or indirectly. They were all guilty of it.

    It can be recalled that certain tribal groups such as Ibiobio State Union (IBU), Ibo Federal Union (IFU) Egbe Omo Oduduwa (EOO) and ‘Jam’iyyar Al-Ummar Nigeriya ta Arewa’ translated as Northern Elements Progressive Association (NEPA) which later transformed into Northern Elements Progressive Union (NEPU) were all socio-cultural organizations that metamorphosed into political parties. All those parties preceded ‘Jam’iyyar Mutane Arewa’ meaning Northern People’s Congress (NPC) to which Ahmadu Bello belonged. Many other ethnic-based political parties later emerged to broaden tribalism in Nigerian politics. If anything, Ahmadu Bello was the least tribally inclined Premier of his time. Why did his killers link him alone to tribalism?

     

    His 1959 Christmas message

    Of the four Premiers in Nigeria’s first republic, only Ahmadu Bello was bold and sincere enough to allay the fear of the minority groups in Northern Nigeria by making a public policy statement about his government’s stand concerning tribalism and religious bigotry. Here is an excerpt of what he said while sending a Christmas message to northern Christians in 1959:

    “…We are people of many different races, tribes and religions, who are knit together by common history, common interests and common ideals. Our diversity may be great but the things that unite us are stronger than the things that divide us. On an occasion like this, I always remind people about our firmly rooted policy on religious tolerance. Families of all creeds and colour can rely on these assurances. We have no intention of favouring one religion at the expense of another. Subject to overriding need to preserve law and order, it is our determination that everyone should have absolute liberty to practice his belief. It is befitting on this momentous day, on behalf of my ministers and myself, to send a special word of gratitude to all Christian missions”.

    “Let me conclude this with a personal message. I extend my greetings to all our people who are Christians on this great feast day. Let us forget the difference in our religion and remember the common brotherhood before God, by dedicating ourselves afresh to the great tasks which lie before us….”

     

    The fabricated version

    Years after Ahmadu Bello’s unjustifiable assassination, some evil elements in the media, in active conspiracy with certain political demagogues went to fabricate another statement and credited it to the late Premier as a justification for killing him. The concocted statement was culled from an unknown newspaper called ‘The Parrot’. Here is the fabricated statement:

    “The new nation called Nigeria should be an estate of our great grandfather Othman Dan Fodio. We must ruthlessly prevent a change of power. We use the minorities in the north as willing tools and the south as a conquered territory and never allow them to rule over us and never allow them to have control over their future.” The statement was said to have been made on October 12, 1960. The question is this: how can a Christmas message in Nigeria be sent in October? But liars never think of the implications of their lies.

     

    Truth and falsehood

    Now, looking at both statements very carefully, any sensible person should be able to see clearly, a distinction between truth and falsehood. The Premier’s Christmas message quoted above was made on Thursday, December 24, 1959 through a radio broadcast and it was published by all newspapers in the country including the vociferous ‘West African Pilot’ owned by Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe, the boisterous ‘Tribune’ owned by Chief Obafemi Awolowo, the clamorous ‘Daily Times’ jointly owned privately by certain prominent individuals at that time. It was equally published by many other smaller newspapers in Nigeria. All those newspapers are identifiable in Nigeria’s media history even though most of them are now defunct. On the other hand, the place and occasion of the fabricated statement credited to Ahmadu Bello was not indicated and cannot be traced in Nigeria’s newspaper history.

     

    Evidence of fabrication

    The first time any genuinely existing newspaper ever made reference to that fabricated statement was on November 13, 2002 (42 years after it was purportedly made. And ‘The Tribune’ newspaper that published it only claimed to have culled it from an online column published on October 24 2002 by a purported Yoruba Journalist (name withheld) who entitled it ‘the northern Agenda’. It can therefore be deduced that the statement was actually fabricated not in the 1960s but in October 2002, by the so-called columnist who credited it to a newspaper that never existed. The objective was to give it an undeserving credibility. What a country! What a people! What a shame! This is a typical case of an obvious mischief by heartless mischief makers just to fetch ephemeral fame and illegal income.

    The belief was that once such a fabricated article appears on the internet and is ignorantly quoted by some inconsequential writers, it would automatically become a document of facts. That is Nigeria for you.

     

    The Coup episode

    January 15, 1966 was a Saturday like no other one in the history of Nigeria. It was on that day that the bitter seed which germinated and grew into the thorny tree that now feeds Nigerians with unpalatable political fruits was planted. The evil planting marked the beginning of an agonizing voyage of destiny on which Nigerians embarked without a compass. Coming up in the sacred month of Ramadan, the day actually came to confirm the axiomatic thought of an Arab poet who once asserted in a couplet that: “Nights are heavily pregnant; they give birth to wonders in the days….”

     

    The preceding Friday

    The preceding Friday (January 14, 1966) had been quite eventful for the then Premier of Northern Nigeria, Alhaji Sir Ahmadu Bello who was extraordinarily busy from morning to night. He had planned to travel to Sokoto with the then Ghana High Commissioner, Mr. Yakubu Tally, who had come to spend the weekend with him in appreciation of his role in ensuring the formation of the Organization of African Unity (OAU) through the merger of the Monrovia and Casablanca groups that had been mutually antagonistic on certain ideological grounds.

    On that Friday, Sir Ahmadu Bello, as usual, observed the Jum’at Prayer in company of a retinue of his Ministers and government officials. He hosted the Premier of Western Nigeria, Chief Samuael Ladoke Akintola, (his political ally) in the newly formed Nigerian National Alliance (NNA). The latter had come to alert his colleague of a premonition hovering over Nigeria through an impending bloody coup d’etat that could clear the existing political stable wheat and chaff. His alert was not however strange to Sir Ahmadu Bello who had earlier got the same security hint.

    The duo jointly reviewed the then volatile political situation in the country but failed to reach a conclusion on how to forestall the impending calamity.

    Akintola’s effort

    Chief S. L. Akintola, pleaded with his host to persuade the then Prime Minister, Alhaji Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, to act promptly to curb the impending disaster that was swinging restlessly like a pendulum over Nigeria before it could devour them all. But Sir Ahmadu Bello was reluctant. He believed that only the will of Allah could prevail in any given circumstance. His fear was that in the sacred month of Ramadan, it would be better to be martyred than to be an assassin. To him, any attempt to foil such a virtually mature coup would be so bloody that even the country would have nothing left to bleed with. By that belief, hardly did Sir Ahmadu Bello realise the implications of paving the way for a ruinous destiny to take its course.

    The whole scenario was like a valedictory drama of fate in which the actors were blind to the denouement which the viewers had vividly perceived. And when it was time for the two Premiers to part, it became apparent that they were meeting perhaps for the last time alive. In a sober but sorrowful tone, the host bided his guest “bye for now,” and the guest, whose feet were already on the staircase of his aircraft on his way back to Ibadan replied: “if we ever get to see again”.

    Thus, both spoke in coded language in the presence of their entourages who could not decode their language. By the time when cities started to return to life, in the wee hours of the following morning, the die had been cast as the picture had become clear that the night had tragically discharged the contents of its cargo to the amazement of the entire world. A bloody coup in Nigeria had swept the country’s democracy away with the rulers as casualties. It confirmed the maxim of the above quoted poem and the rest has since become history.

     

    The major casualties

    The heartless rascals in Nigerian military who struck in the January 1966 coup to terminate a democratically elected government must have foreclosed the consequences of their criminal action. They killed virtually all the major key players in the then Nigerian politics except those of Igbo extraction and of course, some non-Igbo people who were then in prisons. The Prime Minister, Alhaji Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa and the Minister of Finance, Chief Festus Okotie-Eboh were killed in Lagos. The Premier of Northern Nigeria, Sir Ahmadu Bello, was killed with his wife and some other people in Kaduna, the then Headquarters of Northern Nigeria. The Premier of Western Nigeria, Chief Samuel Akintola was killed in Ibadan, the then Headquarters of the South Western Nigeria while some military top brass of non-Igbo extraction were killed in different military barracks across the country.

    Except for Lt. Col. Arthur Unegbe who was killed for being too close to Maimalari and could not be trusted, no other Igbo man of note, politician or military, was killed in that coup. As a matter of fact, if there was any feeling of the coup in the Eastern Nigeria at all, it was that of victory and heroism. The top military officers who were killed in the senseless coup included: Brig. S. A. Ademulegun (South West); Brig. Zakari Maimalari (North East); Col. Kur Mohammed (North West); Lt. Col. J. Y. Pam (North Central); Col. S. A. Shodeinde (South West); Lt. Col. Largema (North Central); Lt. Col. A. G. Unegbe (South East); S/Lt. James Odu (Mid West) and a host of others.

    The false allegations

    After the dust had settled, it became evident that virtually all the planners of that coup as well as its executors were of Igbo extraction. Thus, the other ethnic groups who were severely affected saw the coup as a tribal one. But much more than that, the Muslims in the country saw it as a religious coup that could not be sensibly justified or defended, the killing of Chiefs Akintola and Okotie-Eboh notwithstanding. This was because the then Governor of Eastern Nigeria, Sir Francis Akanu Ibiam was as deeply involved in religious matters as Sir Ahmadu Bello. The one was a Vice-President of the World Council of Churches. The other was the Vice-President of the Muslim World League. If religion was therefore the reason for the coup, the two of them ought to have been killed for bigotry. But history entails a variety of interpretations especially in a society where conscience hardly plays a role.

     

    Coup planners and executors

    That overwhelming majority of the planners of that coup as well as its executors were of Igbo extraction could not have been a mere coincidence. It is particularly notable that the chief beneficiary of the coup (Major-General Johnson Aguiyi Ironsi) was also of Igbo extraction. Almost all the military appointments after the coup were for men of Igbo extraction and none of these, except Hassan Katsina and Muhammadu Shuwa was a Muslim. How else could a coup be tribal and religious in? After all, as far back as 1953, a frontline Igbo politician had set such agenda for his tribe’s men when he quoted as saying that “Ibos’ domination of Nigeria is a matter of time”.

     

    Nigeria’s founding fathers

    Despite all said above, the great fathers of Nigeria’s independence left a legacy that can be called a footprint on the sands of time. By whatever standard they are measured today, the late Sardauna of Sokoto, Alhaji Ahmadu Bello; Nigeria’s first and only Prime Minister, Alhaji Abubakar Tafawa Balewa; the first Premier of Western Region, Chief Obafemi Awolowo,  Nigeria’s first President, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe as well as Mallam Aminu Kano, Chief SL Akintola and Chief Denis Osadebey were all exemplary in their styles of life given the circumstances of their governance, their personal weaknesses notwithstanding.

    No matter what those weaknesses might be, their legacy was a fortune which amazingly turned into misfortune in the hands of their successors. Thus, the great hope which those fathers had embedded into our destiny as a people became colonized and turned into personal property by their political heirs. Were those great fathers to wake up from their graves today and see what has become of their sweat, they would just shake their heads in sorrow and return quietly into their graves without comments. Yet, the situation remains unchanged today as tribalism and religion take the front burner of Nigerian politics. Where can we go from here?

  • Independence: PDP South Africa tasks leaders on selfless service

    Independence: PDP South Africa tasks leaders on selfless service

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) South Africa Chapter has tasked Nigerian leaders to remember and emulate the selfless sacrifice of founding fathers and heroes past as that remain a major recipe for Nigeria’s growth and development.
    The Chairman, People Democratic Party South Africa Chapter, Hon. Ekos Akpokabayen said this in its 56th Independent message to Nigerians made available yesterday in Lagos.
    In the statement, the Chairman said that the history of Nigeria from independence in concert with the show of heroic, rare personal sacrifice made by the likes of Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe, Dr. Michael Okpara, Alhaji Ahmadu Bello, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, Saduana Sokoto, Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa are quite commendable and should be emulated by all Nigerians.
    He said that the self sacrifices of our heroes will hunt this new generation of leaders if they don’t retrace their steps by toiling the path that would take Nigeria out of deliberate oppression, excruciating pain of hunger and unmerited suffering.
    He said “despite the current economic uncertainties, it is important to always hang our hopes on the fact that there will always be trying times in the life of every nation, but times like this are meant for sober reflections which will culminate into that will drive us into that future of our dreams.
    Akpokabayan also seize this opportunity to call on the present government in Nigeria to go back to history lane and take the part of wisdom, togetherness of our founding fathers that gave birth to what we are celebrating today. They should see this day as a day of history to reconnect with that founding spirit of unity so as to usher in the much desired prosperity for all.
    He said “our leaders must cultivate the spirit of truth and do away with falsehood and propaganda that have undermined prove-able development in the past 55 years of our existence as a sovereign entity, Nigeria is a country dangerously blessed by God with the endowment of rare natural resources and wealth of man power”.
    He further said that we should use this day to celebrate Nigerian women and the role they played in fostering the unity of the country, we need to recognize the contributions and supports of our women and give them an ample branch to perch on in our political sphere and governance as this will enhance and accelerate good governance and economic transformation.
    He noted that the federal government must realize that now is the time to bring back education to our children, bring conventional exposures to our youths, feed our people, carter for our aged, priorities industrialization, create massive employment for our youths return a fair, favorable and all inclusive governance, purposeful leadership, come up with people oriented and investors friendly policies, ones based on sincerity that will lead to building a solid and unshakable foundation which will see every Nigerian walk tall anywhere in the world with boastful pride.
    He thanked Nigerians for no more being conservative with the truth, urging them to continue to speak out and also be prepared to prove a point with their votes in 2019 when that opportunity will call again for them to show that they also belong to this 21st century like their contemporaries in other parts of the world.

  • Ahmadu Bello’s Christmas message

    Preamble

    This article was scheduled for Friday, January 15, 2016 to coincide with the 50th year remembrance of Alhaji Sir Ahmadu Bello’s assassination in Nigeria’s first military coup d’etat. However, since man only proposes while Allah disposes, the plan to publish it that day had to change due to an exigency that required an urgent attention. Nevertheless, despite the two weeks delay, it is hoped that the respected regular readers of this column will still find it as fresh as it would have been a fortnight ago. This is one of the memorable stories of life that often leave a sour taste in the mouth but never get stale in history. We are still in January and the story of Nigeria’s first coup remains inexhaustible.

     

    Death of an icon

    One of the foremost political icons in Nigeria’s first republic and the patriarch of the political party called Northern People’s Congress (NPC), was Alhaji Sir Ahmadu Bello, the first and only Premier of Northern Nigeria. He became Premier of Northern Nigeria in 1954 through a popular election and was killed as Premier in January 1966 in a tribal/religious military coup plotted mainly by soldiers of Igbo extraction and led by one Major Patrick Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu. The plotters had killed this icon in cold blood before looking for reasons to justify their heinous crime. The three reasons they later gave were corruption, tribalism and religious bigotry. It was a matter of calling a dog a bad name in order to hang it.

    Among the four Premiers in Nigeria at that time, only Ahmadu Bello could not in any way be evidently linked to corruption. Unlike others who lived opulently, Ahmadu Bello was an ascetic personality who served his people as patriotically. He left only a small residential bungalow in Sokoto at the time of his death. He could also not be singularly accused of tribalism because tribalism was the basis of all the existing political parties of the time. No Premier from 1954 to 1966 could be exonerated from tribalism. They were all guilty of it.

    It can be recalled that such organisations as Ibiobio State Union, Ibo Federal Union, Egbe Omo Oduduwa and ‘Jam’iyyar Al-Ummar Nigeriya ta Arewa’ which translated to Northern Elements Progressive Association which later transformed into Northern Elements Progressive Union (NEPU) were all socio-cultural organisations that metamorphosed into political parties. All those parties preceded ‘jamiyyar Mutane Arewa’ meaning Northern People’s Congress (NPC) to which Ahmadu Bello belonged. Many other ethnic-based political parties later emerged to broaden tribalism in Nigerian politics.

     

    His 1959 Christmas Message

    Of the four Premiers in Nigeria’s first republic, only Ahmadu Bello was bold and sincere enough to allay the fear of the minority groups in Northern Nigeria by making a public policy statement about his government’s stand concerning tribalism and religious bigotry. Here is what he said:

    “We are people of many different races, tribes and religions, who are knit together by common history, common interests and common ideals. Our diversity may be great but the things that unite us are stronger than the things that divide us. On an occasion like this, I always remind people about our firmly rooted policy on religious tolerance. Families of all creeds and colour can rely on these assurances. We have no intention of favouring one religion at the expense of another. Subject to overriding need to preserve law and order, it is our determination that everyone should have absolute liberty to practice his belief. It is befitting on this momentous day, on behalf of my ministers and myself, to send a special word of gratitude to all Christian missions.

    Let me conclude this with a personal message. I extend my greetings to all our people who are Christians on this great feast day. Let us forget the difference in our religion and remember the common brotherhood before God, by dedicating ourselves afresh to the great tasks which lie before us.”

    Thus, to accuse such a person of tribalism and religious bigotry is like searching for a new crescent in a deep well.

     

     His Fabricated ‘Speech’

    However, years after Ahmadu Bello’s unjustifiable assassination, some evil elements in the media, in collaboration with certain political demagogues went to fabricate another statement attributed to the Premier as a justification for his killing. The concocted statement was credited to a publication in an unknown newspaper called ‘The Parrot’. Here is the fabricated statement:

    “The new nation called Nigeria should be an estate of our great grandfather Othman Dan Fodio. We must ruthlessly prevent a change of power. We use the minorities in the north as willing tools and the south as a conquered territory and never allow them to rule over us and never allow them to have control over their future.” The statement was said to have been made on October 12, 1960.

     

    Truth and Falsehood

    Now, looking at both statements very carefully, any sensible person should be able to see clearly, a distinction between truth and falsehood. The Premier’s Christmas message quoted above was made on Thursday, December 24, 1959 through a radio broadcast which was published by all newspapers in the country including the vociferous ‘West African Pilot’ owned by Dr Nnamdi Azikiwe, the boisterous ‘Tribune’ owned by Chief Obafemi Awolowo, the clamorous ‘Daily Times’ jointly owned privately by certain prominent individuals at that time as well as many other smaller newspapers in Nigeria. All those newspapers are identifiable in the Nigeria’s media history even though most of them are now defunct. On the other hand, the place and occasion of the second statement attributed to Ahmadu Bello was neither indicated nor can be traced in Nigeria’s newspaper history.

    The first time any genuinely existing newspaper ever made reference to that second statement was on November 13, 2002 (42 years after it was purportedly made. And the reference by ‘The Tribune’ newspaper that published it was to an article published online a few weeks earlier (October 24, 2002) by a Yoruba journalist and columnist (name withheld) and entitled ‘the northern Agenda’. It can therefore be deduced that the statement was actually fabricated not in the 1960s but in October 2002, by the columnist who credited it to a newspaper that never existed, to give it undeserving credibility. What a country! What a people! This is a typical case of an obvious mischief by heartless mischief makers just to fetch ephemeral fame and illegal income.

    The belief was that once such a fabricated article appears on the internet and is   ignorantly quoted by some inconsequential writers, it would automatically become a document of facts. That is Nigeria for you.

     

    The Coup Episode

    January 15, 1966 was a Saturday like no other one in the history of Nigeria. That day laid the bitter seed which germinated and grew into the thorny tree that now feeds Nigerians with unpalatable political fruits of today. It marked the beginning of an agonising voyage of destiny on which Nigerians embarked without a compass. Coming up in the sacred month of Ramadan, the day actually came to confirm the axiomatic thought of an Arab poet who once asserted in a couplet that: “Nights are heavily pregnant; they give birth to wonders in the days….”

     

    The preceding Friday

    The preceding Friday (January 14, 1966) had been quite eventful for the then Premier of Northern Nigeria, Alhaji Sir Ahmadu Bello who was extraordinarily busy from morning to night. He had planned to travel to Sokoto with the then Ghana High Commissioner, Mr. Yakubu Tally, who had come to spend the weekend with him in appreciation of his role in ensuring the formation of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) through the merger of the Monrovia and Casablanca groups that had been mutually antagonistic on certain ideological grounds.

    On that Friday, Sir Ahmadu Bello, as usual, observed the Jum’at Prayer in company of a retinue of his Ministers and government officials. He hosted the Premier of Western Nigeria, Chief Samuael Ladoke Akintola, (his political ally) in the newly formed Nigerian National Alliance (NNA). The latter had come to alert his colleague of a premonition hovering over Nigeria through an impending bloody coup d’etat that could clear the existing political stable wheat and chaff. His alert was not however strange to Sir Ahmadu Bello who had earlier got the same security report.

    The duo jointly reviewed the then volatile political situation in the country but failed to reach a conclusion on how to forestall the impending calamity.

     

    Akintola’s Effort

    Chief S. L. Akintola, pleaded with his host to persuade the then Prime Minister, Alhaji Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa, to act promptly to curb the impending disaster that was swinging restlessly like a pendulum over Nigeria before it could devour them all. But Sir Ahmadu Bello was reluctant. He believed that only the will of Allah could prevail in any given circumstance. His fear was that in the sacred month of Ramadan, it would be better to be martyred than to be an assassin. To him, any attempt to foil such a virtually mature coup would be so bloody that even the country would have nothing left to bleed with. By that belief, hardly did Sir Ahmadu Bello realise the implications of paving the way for a ruinous destiny to take its course.

    The whole scenario was like a valedictory drama of fate in which the actors were blind to the denouement which the viewers had vividly perceived. And when it was time for the two Premiers to part, it became apparent that they were meeting perhaps for the last time alive. In a sobre but sorrowful tone, the host bided his guest “buy for now,” and the guest, whose feet were already on the staircase of his aircraft on his way back to Ibadan replied: “if we ever get to see again”.

    Thus, both spoke in coded language in the presence of their entourages who could not decode their language. By the time when cities started to return to life, in the wee hours of the following morning, the die had been cast as the picture had become clear that the night had tragically discharged the contents of its cargo to the amazement of the entire world. A bloody coup in Nigeria had swept the country’s democracy away with the rulers as casualties. It confirmed the maxim of the above quoted poem and the rest has since become history.

     

    The major Casualties

    The heartless rascals in Nigerian military who struck in the January 1966 coup to terminate a democratically elected government must have foreclosed the consequences of their criminal action. They had killed virtually all the major key players in the then Nigerian politics except those of Igbo extraction and of course, some non-Igbo people who were then in prisons. The Prime Minister, Alhaji Sir Abubakar Tafawa Balewa and the Minister of Finance, Chief Festus Okotie-Eboh were killed in Lagos. The Premier of Northern Nigeria, Sir Ahmadu Bello, was killed with his wife and some other people in Kaduna, the then Headquarters of Northern Nigeria. The Premier of Western Nigeria, Chief Samuel Akintola was killed in Ibadan, the then Headquarters of the South Western Nigeria while some military top brass of non-Igbo extraction were killed in different military barracks across the country.

    Except for Lt. Col. Arthur Unegbe who was killed for being too close to Maimalari and could not be trusted, no other Igbo man of note, politician or military, was killed in that coup. As a matter of fact, if there was any feeling of the coup in the Eastern Nigeria at all, it was that of victory and heroism. The top military officers who were killed included: Brig. S. A. Ademulegun (South West); Brig. Zakari Maimalari (North); Col. Kur Mohammed (North); Lt. Col. J. Y. Pam (North); Col. S. A. Shodeinde (South West); Lt. Col. Largema (North); Lt. Col. A. G. Unegbe (North); S/Ltd. James Odu (South West) and a host of others.

     

    The Allegations

    It became evident that virtually all the leaders of that coup as well as its executioners were of Igbo extraction. Thus, the other ethnic groups who were severely affected saw the coup as a tribal one. But much more than that, the Muslims in the country saw it as a religious coup that could not be justified in any way, the killing of Chiefs Akintola and Okotie-Eboh notwithstanding. This was because the then Governor of Eastern Nigeria, Sir Francis Akanu Ibiam was as deeply religious as Sir Ahmadu Bello. The one was a Vice-President of the World Council of Churches. The other was the Vice-President of the Muslim World League. If religion was therefore the reason for the coup, the two of them ought to have been killed. But history entails a variety of interpretations.

    Overwhelming majority of the ring leaders of that coup as well as the executioners were of Igbo extraction. The chief beneficiary of the coup (Major-General Johnson Aguiyi Ironsi) was of Igbo extraction. Almost all the military appointments after the coup were for men of Igbo extraction and none of these, except Hassan Katsina and Muhammadu Shuwa was a Muslim. How else could a coup be tribal and religious in nature?

     

    Nigeria’s Founding Fathers

    In semblance of the above, the great fathers of Nigeria’s independence left a legacy that can be called a footprint on the sands of time. By whatever standard they are measured today, the late Sardauna of Sokoto, Alhaji Ahmadu Bello; Nigeria’s first and only Prime Minister, Alhaji Abubakar Tafawa Balewa; the first Premier of Western Region, Chief Obafemi Awolowo and his counterpart of the Eastern Region, Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe as well as Mallam Aminu Kano and Chief SL Akintola and Chief Denis Osadebay were all exemplary in their styles of life given the circumstances of their governance, their personal weaknesses notwithstanding.

    Their legacy is a fortune which amazingly turned into misfortune in the hands of their successors. Thus, the great hope which those fathers had embedded into our destiny became colonised and turned into personal property by their political heirs. Were those great fathers to wake up from their graves today and see what has become of their sweat, they would just shake their heads in sorrow and return quietly into their graves without comments.

     

    Qualities of Leaders

    Looking at the phenomena of human life critically, one may conclude that human world is depreciating geometrically. The men of primordial years were greater by far than those of the contemporary time. Their lives were more qualitative. Their thoughts were richer. Their intentions were purer. Their gazes were more visionary. Their dispositions were more human. It is upon the foundation of their thoughts and deeds that today’s technological pyramid is firmly built. Yet, they did not allow their reasoning to be driven by the material life of their time.

     

    Exemplary Hadith

    Fearing for their hereafter, some companions of Prophet Muhammad (SAW) once asked him a probing question about the quality of their lifestyle saying in a quivering voice thus:

    “Dear Prophet! The wealthy ones amongst us seem to have gone to the world beyond with all the existing rewards. They worshiped Allah as we are worshiping Him. They fasted as we are fasting today. Yet they were giving in charity, huge amounts of resources to the poor and the needy according to the sizes of their wealth. What is then left for us, if the paradise will be determined by the amount of our rewards…….?” The similitude of the lesson in that Hadith is the situation of Nigeria yesterday and today in terms of leadership quality. Will any lesson be learnt?

  • North still lamenting 50 years after Ahmadu Bello

    North still lamenting 50 years after Ahmadu Bello

    Fifty years after the death of Sir Ahmadu Bello, the first and only premier of the defunct Northern Region, it is still a period of lamentation by the region and its leaders. Even those that benefited from the legacies he left behind have done practically nothing to ensure that those coming behind them also reap from these legacies. Instead, they have practically bastardized those legacies, majority of which are non-existent today. Apart from the good name and virtue he left behind, there is almost nothing that he established, lived and died for that is still standing today.

    Yearly, since he died during the first military coup in 1966, northern leaders have always gathered to sing the praises of the man, Ahmadu Bello, while allowing the region he left behind more polarized and disunited. Did leaders of the north ever learn anything from these praises they tend to shower on the man annually? How have they applied the lesions they have learnt, if any, in building a united and developed north? These were questions begging for answers at the commemoration of the 50th Anniversary of his death at the Conference Hall of Arewa House in Kaduna.

    Incidentally not many of the present day leaders of the north admit that they have not done well with the potentials left by the legend, Ahmadu Bello. Ironically, aside the New Nigeria Development Company that is still standing, but struggling to survive, practically all companies and institutions established by him have either gone under or have been taken over by the federal government. The Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria and the Kaduna Polytechnic established by him have been taken over by the federal government while Bank of the North, Kaduna Textiles Limited, Gaskiya Corporation and the New Nigeria newspaper have gone under. Many have argued that the two institutions are still standing because of the takeover by the federal government.

    But the Sultan of Sokoto believes that northern leaders and northerners should stop hiding under the shadow of the late Sardauna and take up the challenge of building the north of their dream. The Sultan said 50 years was a long time to lament and hide under the shadow of the late Premier. He said: “I want to challenge all of us here to stop hiding under the shadows of Sarduana. If we want to see the north of our dreams, all of us here, the leaders and the led must all behave like Sardauna because if we have good leaders with a bad followership, we will still have problem and if you have bad leaders and good followership, you will still have problems. My quarrel is with the leaders of the north. You have a lot of problems in your hands. You came at a time when we don’t have enough resources. We have so many citizens who are jobless and want to live their lives. You have to provide for everybody. I challenge you to take up the mantle of leadership and face the challenge very well. So, I appeal to our governors to take up this very serious challenge and keep our children off the street and let them be useful to the society.

    Borno State governor, Kashim Shettima, was concerned by the attitude of northern leaders to the unity of the north and the welfare of its people. Shettima questioned what he called “so called northern unity”, stressing that leaders of the region left his state to its fate when the Boko Haram insurgents was killing and maiming people of the state. He alleged that northern leaders saw the insurgency as “a Borno problem”, pointing out that Sir Ahmadu Bello would have behaved differently. The governor said: “the unity and solidarity and the concept of being your brother’s keeper that left behind by Sardauna has become a situation of mutual suspicion and an intolerable attitude of nonchalance and unhealthy spirit of total disregard to the course of our people. We in Borno are practically sad since that attitude eloquently manifested especially during early period of the Boko Haram insurgency, when the entire nation and majority of the northern states regarded the insurgency as merely a Borno affair.”

    The governor who spoke through his Secretary to the State Government, Usman Jida Shua, asked: “how many of us, for God sake who have gathered here today, whether individually or collectively found it expedient to visit Borno State to commiserate with the victims and show sympathy to the government and people of the state? His Royal Highness sitting beside me was attacked one faithful Friday by Boko Haram insurgents and he narrowly escaped death. Late General Mamman Shuwa was killed by Boko Haram, and many of them like that, Emir of Gwoza and others, yet you didn’t find it expedient to visit Borno State, at least to sympathise with the people of Borno State. If we want to keep the interest of the North and people of the North together, we have to respect each-other’s problem, plight, appreciate and recognise them.”

    Minister of Youth and Sport, Solomon Dalung, was more direct in attacking northern leaders for living a life of lamentation instead of harnessing the potentials left behind by the late Premier for the betterment of the north. He said: “Sardauna was an individual; he led Northern Nigeria, which is now 19 States. But today, we have 19 governors, yet they cannot govern the North. If Sardauna was going round to oversee 19 northern states and now, we have governors with smaller portions, yet they are nowhere to be found, it is unfortunate.”

    While challenging the northern elites? to close ranks, forget their differences in order to fight a common cause that will be in the interest of the north, he said that the north should stop lamentation and forge a united front for the overall development of the north.

    Former Benue State Governor, Gabriel Suswam, admitted that northern leaders, especially northern governors, have not lived up to expectation in terms of developing and uniting the north. He agreed that northern leaders failed to carry on with his legacies. In the same vein, former Niger State Governor, Muazu Babangida Aliyu, stressed that if northern leader who came after the Sardauna behaved like him, “we will not be talking about corruption and fighting corruption by today”. Aliyu who led northern governors for eight years as Chairman of the Northern States Governors Forum and watched some of the companies established by the late legend, like the New Nigeria Newspaper and Kaduna Textiles among others go under said “there is nobody that loved northern Nigeria like Sir Ahmadu Bello. By right, after the election, Sir Ahmadu Bello would have been Prime Minister, but because of the love for his people and for the north, he opted to be Premier and agreed that his deputy will be Prime Minister of Nigeria. Many people will be wondering why we always talk about him. We talk about people who have done wonderfully well for their people, sacrificed their time and served selflessly. He has done so to our benefit,” he said.

  • Ahmadu Bello: Passionate leader

    Ahmadu Bello: Passionate leader

    The first and the only Premier of the defunct Northern Region, Sir Ahmadu Bello was a victim of the January, 1966 coup. LEKE SALAUDEEN writes on the legacies of the famous politician.

    Sir Ahmadu Bello, the Sardauna of Sokoto, was the first and only premier of the Northern  region from 1954-1966. He died on January 15, 1966, in a bloody coup spearheaded by Major Chukwuma Kaduna Nzeogwu. Ahmadu Belle was one of the founding-fathers of the modern Nigerian nation state, which came into being on October 1, 1960 when his party Northern People’s Congress (NPC) forged an alliance with Dr.Nnamdi Azikiwe’s  National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons (NCNC). As leader of the NPC, he dominated Nigerian politics throughout the early Nigerian Federation and the First Republic.

    Despite his popularity and political support, Bello chose to remain in the North, instead of accepting the post of national Prime Minister, which would have required living in the South.

    In the 1940s, he established the Jamiyya Mutanen Arewa which later transformed into NPC in 1951. In 1948, he got a government scholarship to study Local Government Administration in England which broadened his understanding and knowledge of governance.

    After returning from Britain, he was nominated to represent the Province of Sokoto in the Northern House of Assembly. In the Assembly, he was a notable voice for northern interest and embraced a style of consultation and consensus with the major representatives of the northern emirates: Kano, Bornu and Sokoto.

    As the movement for independence from the British Empire gathered momentum, Bello emerged as a strong advocate of federalism as the system of government; his view was most suitable for Nigeria. This was especially attractive to northerners, who had a history of sharing power. He may also have wanted to protect the North from what he perceived as the possibility of Southern domination. He was a member of the national constitutional drafting commission.

    In the first election held in the North in 1952, Sir Ahmadu Bello won a seat in the House of Assembly, and became a member of the regional Executive Council as Minister of Works. Bello was successively minister of Works, of Local Government, and of Community Development. In 1953 and  1957, he led the Northern delegation to the independence talks in London.

    In 1954, Bello became the first Premier of Northern Nigeria. In the 1959 independence elections, Bello led the NPC to win a plurality of the parliamentary seats. Bello’s NPC forged an alliance with Dr. Nnamdi Azikiwe’s NCNC (National Council of Nigeria and the Cameroons) to form Nigeria’s first indigenous federal government which led to independence from Britain. In forming the 1960 independence federal government of the Nigeria, Bello as president of the NPC, chose to remain Premier of Northern Nigeria and devolved the position of Prime Minister of the Federation to his deputy Abubakar Tafawa Balewa. He apparently did not want to live in Lagos and preferred the political climate of the North from that of the South. His refusal to head the national government also suggests that he was not interested in power for the sake of power; but in serving the people whose votes had elected him to office.

    Bello’s many political accomplishments include establishing the Northern Regional Development Corporation (NRDC) which later changed to the Northern Nigeria Development Corporation (NNDC), the Bank of the North, the Broadcasting Company of Northern Nigeria (BCNN) the Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) and the Nigeria Citizens Newspapers; now New Nigeria Newspapers.

    Bello’s eldest surving daughter, Hajiya A’ishat Marafa Danbaba, said of him: “I had a very close relationship with my father. He showered us with great love and we will continue to cherish those moments. My dad was a simple man despite being an aristocrat. He was temperamental but easily forgets after sometime.

    “He doesn’t bear any grudge against those who offended him and forgives those who wronged him. My father was kind and just to people and never discriminated against anybody based on his ethnic group or religion.

    “He was a man of the people. He always sat on the floor in his house, to eat food with his bare hands, from the same bowl with his drivers and relatives. He maintained an open house, and anybody who wanted to see him got audience. He listened to people’s problems and helped both the high and the lowly.

    “My father was generous and loved to give out gifts to people. He never had material accumulation instincts, did not accumulate wealth and gave out whatever came into his possession. He was scrupulous and prudent with public finance but generous with his own money.

    “His happiest moments were always when he was in the company of people. He constantly toured the length and breadth of the Northern Region, always on the move persuading, cajoling, mobilizing, urging, inspiring people to be disciplined and law abiding, to work hard for common goals, to measure up to their potentials. My father had the desire of transforming the North so that the country can attain its true potentials.”

  • AFCON: No kid treatment for Chad – Akpeyi

    AFCON: No kid treatment for Chad – Akpeyi

    Super Eagles goalkeeper, Daniel Akpeyi, has said the Chadian national team will not get any kid treatment from the former African champions.

    Eagles will meet against Chad in one of the 2017 African Nations Cup qualifiers at the Ahmadu Bello Stadium, Kaduna, on Saturday.

    Akpeyi told SuperSport that the Super Eagles has trained well for the crucial encounter.

    “We are looking forward to winning the three points at stake against Chad in Kaduna on Saturday.

    “We expect a good game as every win is important in the qualification campaign.

    “Not at all, Chad will never be treated as underdogs, football has gone beyond the level you treat your opponents as pushovers,” he told SuperSport.

    “We are well prepared for the Chadians as the three points in the clash cannot be negotiated.

    “We do not have adequate information about their strengths but it’s quite possible they have full dossier and knowledge of us.

    “We learned Chad is coming with 100 per cent foreign-based players and not even one domestic player is in their midst.”