Tag: Badaru

  • More kits coming for military, says Badaru

    More kits coming for military, says Badaru

    Defence Minister Muhammadu Badaru yesterday  reiterated the Federal Government’s commitment to provide more equipment to enhance the operational efficiency of the Nigerian Army.

    Badaru, accompanied by the Minister of State for Defence, Bello Matawalle, spoke during a working visit to the Army Headquarters in Abuja.

    He commended the leadership and personnel of the armed forces for the successes recorded in the theatres of operation to rid the nation of security threats.

    The minister assured that President Bola Tinubu would do everything within his power to intervene in addressing the challenges confronting the military, especially in the area of manpower and accommodation needs.

    He said the president also demonstrated commitment towards providing equipment requirements such as arms, ammunition and the combat enablers needed to succeed the fight against insurgency.

     “The federal government will do the best to provide these needs to make sure the military have an edge to the security governance of our dear nation.”

    “The president has demonstrated that since we come in and he has never turned down our request and he has been very supportive.

    “He promised to continue to support us as long as we continue to show results the way we have shown results today.

    “So, once again, I want to commend the Chief of Army Staff for the successes so far and I believe more successes will come as we continue to supply the necessary equipment to execute the war.”

    On his part, Matawalle commended the Nigerian Army for its commitment and sacrifices towards addressing the nation’s security situation.

    He said he was in better position to speak on the successes of the military in the fight against banditry as a former governor of Zamfara, which is one of the most affected states.

    Matawalle urged the public to continue to appreciate the military for their efforts and support them to succeed, adding that whole-of-society effort was needed to address the prevailing security challenges.

    He also called for enhance synergy and intelligence sharing among the Army and other security agencies as well as enhanced non-kinetic activities.

    Read Also: JUST IN: Senate screens Badaru, Bello, Amb. Tuggar

    Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt.-Gen. Taoreed Lagbaja, thanked the ministers for the visible interventions so far received from the Federal Government, adding that it had positively impacted on their operations on the field.

    Gen. Lagbaja said the army had remained committed towards addressing the security challenges bedeviling the nation.

    He also briefed the minister on the conduct of army operations and some of the challenges confronting the troops on the field in the bid to achieve their constitutional responsibility to bring peace and stability to the country.

    The ministers were accompanied by the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), Gen. Christopher Musa and officials of the ministry.

  • “How Badaru saved Jigawa from abandoned projects”

    Born in 1963, a certified Electrical Engineer, Alhaji Aminu Usman was until his appointment as commissioner of Works and Transport in Jigawa state, the project manager of the multi billion naira Gwarimpa Housing Estate, Abuja. In this interview, the Gumel-born politician said but the for the coming of the current administration under Governor Abubakar Badaru, the state would have been littered with abandoned projects. Dare Odufowokan, Assistant Editor, reports.

    NIGERIANS will like to know what the Abubakar Muhammed Badaru administration has done in the almost four years in charge here in Jigawa?

    So far so good, it is still work in progress. We inherited a lot of projects. And one of the resolutions of the governor at the inception was that all the inherited projects must be completed before starting new ones. So what the governor did was to pass the instruction to all of us to key into that vision. So far o good, a lot have been achieved. We inherited  about 476 kilometers of roads which were awarded from 2012 to 2015 amounting to about N54,5075,222,82. That is for the rural roads.

    On the feeder roads, we had 97.4 kilometers of roads inherited amounting to N1,652,180,700. On township roads, we inherited about  142 kilometers amounting to N32,12,342. Then we had road at the airport  which was about three kilometers of runway in the airport and access road of the airport, we had some scanning machines, fire trucks, field lightings inherited as well amounting to N10,291,711. These are were some of inherited liabilities we met on ground.

    During the transition, a committee was set up by the government to assess all the projects after going through the hand-over notes, we went round all the projects listed in the notes. We went across all parts of the state and analyze the projects, look at the scope of work done, amount paid b the previous administration. We then called all the contractors, ministries responsible for the projects, verified all the projects.

    After all this, we advised the governor to call on all the contractors if they were ready to continue with the job because there were some jobs that were 85% completed, there were some 20%,some 0%. There were certain amount of money that were paid by the previous administration and there were some that the outstanding balance  as shown through the vouchers with the finance ministry, have not been paid. We called the contractors  and appealed to  them to give certain discount on what is being owed  so that  it  could help the government to take off as the treasury was empty when the administration took over government.

    We met only 16 million naira in the government coffers. From the records, it was obvious that there was no money to do  all the basics like payment of salaries, pension, commitments  here  and there like the government contractual obligations.  A lot of them accepted. Some gave 20%, some gave 15%, some gave 10% of what they are having on the outstanding balances owed by the state government.  From this action of the government, out of about N55b, the government was able to save about on roads,  out of N1.6b,  we were able to save about 91m on the feeder roads.

    On the township roads, we were able to save N3b out of  N32b. the outstanding balance that were supposed to be paid  from regional road, we had N32b to pay to the contractor but we eventually paid N22b.  Out of the balance of N491m on feeder roads, we paid N445m. out of almost about 15b, this government paid about 8b to all these contractors. These were some of the breakdown of what was owed and paid. Presently, we have about three  projects remaining from the previous administrations.

    Every other ones from the last government have all been completed. And the contractors have all been paid fully. Then, shortly after, we started awarding new contracts in 2016. We awarded 174 kilometers of township roads at N16b. Presently, the road projects have been completed. N20b has been awarded for the length of 366 kilometer of road, that is about 20 roads. 2017, we didn’t award any projects. April 2018, we award 149 kilometer of road at N23m, that is about 9 roads.  By the end of last year, we awarded another 260 kilometer of road, about 22 roads at N22b.

    Were all the roads awarded last year township roads?

    Governor Badaru decided to award contracts for the construction of 18 roads. These roads project consist of different types that are regional, feeder and township. And the total amount for these contracts was over N22.4 billion. Let me explain that the contracts were awarded to different contractors that bided and complied with the rules of due process. This administration accords special priority to the provision of good roads across the state.

    According to the governor himself, the government embarked on the projects to boost economic growth through transportation of goods and services. These particular roads and many others across the state are also meant to open up the state for agricultural development and enhance easy movement of farm produces to markets. This, we believe, will also make farming attractive to people, particularly our youths.

    You talked about downward review of the amount of the contracts, how does  that affect the quality of projects?

    Where it affect the drainage system is usually where you have the township roads. In the township roads, of course there would be drainage system in the road construction. Any township road awarded by this administration must have drainage system. And talking about the quality of the job, of course, it was not reduced, never. The discount given from the contract notwithstanding, the quality of the projects still remain. The quantity and quality must be the same. Nothing was tampered with and most of the contractors were all mobilized with the 20% to move to sites.

    Are these contractors indigenous of foreign?

    We are doing a lot to encourage our local contractors here in Jigawa state. We are very concerned about quality still. We have lot of indigenous  contractors here in the state doing quality works. We have about 18 slots for contracts, out of this 18, the local contractors got most of them. And those contractors we inherited, they continued because of the quality of job they exhibited.

    What is the commercial viability of the state airport because it appears  the traffic is not  much  compared to other airports in he country?

    That is true. However, I also need to remind you that there is an airport in Ibadan, there is one in Akure. You cannot compare the level of traffic of these two airports with say for instance, Lagos, Enugu, Port -Harcourt or even Abuja airports. These are national assets. In as much as our airport is been built, there is nothing we can do but to maintain it. Yes, it may  not be our priority as a government, but it is still ours nevertheless.

    It has to be maintained. Look at  all the roads we met on ground, they were not our projects, but we ensured that we continued and completed it because ultimately, these projects are for the good people of Jigawa, not the governor or former governors or me, not  it is the people of Jigawa that owns it. So the airport is there, well maintained and functioning. Yes, it might have the kind of traffic flow but it is still functioning.

    Why is it that some roads here does not have no streets lights?

    Whichever road you see here that has no street lights are mostly federal roads. On all the federal roads, you can see that there are no street lights. However, we are still working on ensuring that we see what we can do to attend to such roads. Some of these federal roads built more than 16 years ago had street lights in the contracts. From Shuwari to Gumel, the contractors are presently working on the roads.

    The street lights are supposed to be there. But unfortunately, it is this Badaru administration, because of the importance of the light to the roads, to the community and more importantly, for security purposes, that wrote the federal Ministry of Works, Housing and Power  severally, to allow us install the street lights. But they are yet to reply us. Nonetheless, the governor decided to go ahead and install the lights in some of the federal roads in the state.

    But governments in Jigawa always complain of lean purses. How are you able to do so much?

    This question is not meant for me but the governor. He is the manager of this government. Well, I think it all boils down to the governor. He is an accountant by profession. Whatever  we want to do here, he plans ahead for  it. It is not about getting money and then begin to look for where to use the money.  That is why I said he would be in best position to tell you how he is able to sustain the state such that debts are not owed, those owed are paid and still being paid.

    Salaries are paid on the 24th of every month. Similarly, pensions have never been defaulted and more projects are being established. Like I said, it is the governor alone that will be able tell you the how all of these came about in a state with lean resources.  But I can tell you that his background as an accountant and an astute administrator who understand what the people want and how to prioritize, contributed to this success story.

  • APC campaign: nine die in Jigawa auto crash

    NO fewer than nine people died in an auto accident in Jigawa state while returning from APC gubernatorial campaign of the state.

    Reports from the state indicated that the deceased were involved in three different accidents at different spots. The incident claimed seven male and two females.

    Speaking to our reporter in the state via mobile phone, the Jigawa state Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO) SP Abdu Jinjiri confirmed the accidents. He said: “one involved a Golf 3 with registration number MMR 364 AA (Golf 3). The vehicle lost control along Guri-Hadejia road and hit six children”.

    SP Abdu Jinjiri noted that the vehicle was conveying party supporters as the Gov. Badaru of the state flagged off his 2019 reelection bid campaign in Guri LGA.

    The police image maker explained that three of the children Maryam Adamu aged four, Habibu Yusif aged nine and Aminu Abdullahi aged 10 died on the spot.

    The three others who were critically injured were taken to the hospital and are responding to treatment.

    Jinjiri said that the driver of the vehicle was arrested by the police as investigation into the case was ongoing.

    The PPRO also stated that the second accident occurred along Jahun-Kiyawa road when the governor’s campaign team was returning from Gumel LGA.

    According to him “On January 22 at about 20:15hrs, there was a fatal accident along Jahun-Kiyawa road which involved a ford (Focus) vehicle without Reg. No. driven by one Abubakar Ibrahim aged 35 of Birninkudu town.

    “The vehicle, coming from Gumel and heading to Birninkudu, was conveying four female passengers.

    “And on reaching Yar Jigawa village mine, the driver suddenly sighted a camel crossing the highway and lost control of his vehicle while trying to avoid hitting the camel.

    Read Also: Police arrest Jigawa PDP chairman

    “The vehicle somersaulted and swerved by the roadside and sustained serious injuries.

    According to him, one Aisha Tahir aged 40 of Birninkudu town died while receiving treatment at the hospital.

    While six APC supporters died at Dandamo village in Suletankàrkar local government while returning back from the APC campaign rally held in Hadejia for the Northeast senatorial zone.

    The Deputy chairman North of the APC, Hon. Mannir Uba announced the death of their supporters in a road accident and described their demise as a great loss to the entire APC family in Jigawa and Nigeria at large and special prayers was offered for their repose souls.

  • Gov. Badaru appoints permanent secretary

    Gov. Muhammad Badaru of Jigawa has approved the appointment of Garba Ahmed as Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Commerce.

    A statement issued in Dutse on Tuesday by Alhaji Isma’il Ibrahim, Public Relations Officer, Office of Head of the State Civil Service, indicated that the appointment takes immediate effect.

    “Until his appointment, Ahmed was the Director-General, Directorate of Protocol, Government House”.

    “The appointment of the new permanent secretary to serve the state government in this capacity is purely on merit, competency and personal integrity,” the statement added.

  • Badaru: oil ‘ll soon become history

    JIGAWA State Governor Muhammad Badaru has posited that with the development of renewable energy, oil will soon become history.

    He, however, said the only alternative that could lead to the sustainable prosperity of Nigeria was agriculture.

    Speaking yesterday in Kaduna at the “Validation workshop on capacity gaps for implementing holistic empowerment for livelihood programme (HELP), Badaru said his administration has created a lot of jobs on rice value chains and doing same in tomatoes and groundnut value chains.

    He said: “Jigawa State can’t be industrialised because all the industries are in Kano. We cannot be centre of commerce because Kano is already a centre of commerce.

    “But we are not relying on oil revenue because oil well will soon be history, if it runs dry, and for us to survive as a state, we have to work on competiveness.

    “We have to develop our people, our business, develop our agriculture, and this will enable us to keep the state abreast, if the oil well dries up. So, agriculture is our life line.

    “Oil will soon become history with the development of renewable energy. So, we have no alternative to agriculture. Prosperity of our state and country depends on agriculture.

    Convener of Arewa Research and Development Project (ARDP) Dr. Usman Bugaje lamented that Nigeria has the most fertile land in Africa, but still imports food.

    He said the country’s population is estimated to be 300 million in the next 12 years.

  • Ajimobi, Badaru: APC ‘ll hold peaceful convention

    On June 23, the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) will hold its national convention in Abuja, the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). Group Political Editor EMMANUEL OLADESU examines the factors that will guarantee a free and fair exercise.

    For the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), this is a moment of sober reflection. The chieftains are warming up for a national convention. Ahead of the exercise, the house does not appear to be in one accord. The political family is battling with predictable contraints and self-inflicted wounds, which have made the preparations for its first post-2015 national convention very hectic.

    On June 23, delegates from 36 states and Abuja, the Federal Capital territory (FCT), will converge on the Eagle Square for the strategic national congress. It may not be a competitive convention as only an aspirant, former Edo State Governor Adams Oshiomhole, is likely to be the consensus candidate for the national chairman, which will be reluctantly vacated by Chief John Odigie-Oyegun.

    If the tenure elongation plot had succeeded, the Third Republic governor of Edo State would have been a major beneficiary. The controversy over the illegal tenure extension is still raging in the party.

    The convention will be the climax of the intra-party leadership election at the ward, local government and state levels. The exercise was successful in some states. In other states, they were inconclusive. Yet, in others, the exercise polarised the party, thereby compounding the challenge of harmonisation and reconciliation. At the weekend, there were reports of cancellation of some state congresses. In other states, the party’s national leadership issued directives on harmonisation of parallel executive committees.

    However, the historic convention, to many stalwarts, is a welcome relief. It may provide an opportunity for self-assessment, reconciliation and renewal of faith and loyalty to the core values that motivated its birth by four defunct platforms-the Action Congress of Nigeria (CAN), the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP), the Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) and a faction of the All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA)-before new-Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) elements teamed up with the party in 2015.

    According to observers, the ruling party has been beset in the last four years with leadership failure. This may have been due to inaction, aloofness and lip service to the party. Many founding fathers cried out over the style of the national chairman, who they perceive as a divisive factor. Multiple crises have nearly crippled the party, despite its status as the ruling party. Many members and followers were taken aback when the party could not hold its mid-term convention two years ago. To analysts, post-2015 APC may not be as popular as it was before the last general elections. The saving grace, in their view, is that there is no credible and formidable alternative.

    After winning presidential power, no concrete attempts were made to really form the party through reforms. The  division and gulf among the legacy groups were not closed. The party is big; so are its challenges. Not only did the APC failed the two critical tests of party supremacy and party discipline after becoming a ruling party, it also failed to lay example for smaller parties in crisis resolution. The legislative/executive feud, the governor/senators face-off in some states and governor/ministers tango in other have further conveyed an impression of cleavages. Although the APC has the majority in the National Assembly, passage of budgets have always been herculean task.

    However, many believe that APC still has a brighter future, if it puts is house in order. The chairman of the National Convention Media and Publicity Sub-Committee, Oyo State Governor Abiola Ajimobi, said the party will wax stronger. He said the convention will unite the party and set the stage for future electoral fortunes. “We are confident that we will have a very successful national convention, which, at the end of the day, will unify our party; make us stronger and put us in a better position to further fulfil our electoral promises,” he stressed.

    Ahead of the exercise, President Muhammadu Buhari, has thrown his weight behind Oshiomhole. But, Ajimobi told reporters in Abuja that the door is not closed to other contenders. We would also want Nigerians, who gave us overwhelming support in 2015, to know that in line with our tradition of excellence and transparency, the convention will be open to all aspirants who are deemed qualified in line with the convention guidelines, to vie for positions they are interested in. This is in keeping with our vision of entrenching true democratic ideals, not only in our party but also in our national politics. The business of the convention shall be conducted strictly in line with the most sacred democratic principles and the process will be free, fair and credible,” he said.

    The governor said other national officers will be chosen through zoning. He said the party has resolved  to maintain the “current zoning arrangement”. In his view, purpose of zoning is to ensure equitable representation for the entire country. “To this effect, we have also introduced measures to ensure adequate representation for special interest groups such as women, youths and people with disabilities. In fact, we made history by appointing leaders for people with disabilities both in the national leadership of our great party and at zonal and state levels.

    “Members of these special interest groups are especially encouraged to aspire to leadership positions within the party. That is why concessions have been granted to women and people with disabilities. Aspirants who fall in either category will only be required to pay 50 per cent of the cost of the application form for the positions they wish to run for. We are hopeful that this will result in enhanced representation for different groups within the party,” Ajimobi added.

    Ajimobi reflected on the controversy over the ward, state and local government congresses, saying the party has risen up to the challenge of conflict resolution. “Our Party the APC has put in place a comprehensive mechanism to deal with all of these issues in line with the party’s constitution and we are confident that at the end of the day, we will overcome and emerge stronger as one big happy family,” he added.

    A member of the committee, Jigawa State Governor Abubakar Badaru, said the party will ensure a peaceful convention that will serve as a reference point. “We are committed a free and fair exercise that will command the applause of all our party members,” he said.

    Also, a member, Mrs. Abike Dabiri, Presidential Senior Special Assistant on Diaspora, said that the convention will not fail, adding that it will lead to the emergence of a leadership that will take the party to 2019. “Our party is still the envy of other smaller parties. It is a dynamic party. It is growing from strength to strength. Many members look forward to the convention with hope and enthusiasm. The exercise will be successful. Ewe are prepared,” she said.

     

  • Badaru and the  old order in Jigawa

    Badaru and the old order in Jigawa

    I write to comment or disagree with Governor Abubukar Badaru’s  plan to emulate some techniques or agendas of the former governor of Jigawa State, Senator Ibrahim Saminu Turaki, to transform Jigawa by paying polling booth fund (Kudin Akwati) to few politicians neglecting or abandoning the roles or responsibilities of councilors, local government chairmen and perhaps commissioners and other M.Ds and E.Ss and making them redundant and inactive.

    The governor, for his past and present experience as a governor,  needs  no extraordinary research to know the problems of the poor masses because as we all know, the demands of Talaka (citizen/poor), right from the 60’s has always been the same. Such demands are qualitative and free education, good health care, portable water, electricity, good roads, shelter, agricultural production, job opportunities, security, poverty alleviation, industrialization, and desertification control, most especially in the Northern parts of Nigeria.

    To be candid, if Governor Badaru is truly serious with his agenda of transforming Jigawa  and he means well for the people of the state, he should not ignore the reality of knowing, planning  and attending to the suffering of the masses not until he gives or awards unconstitutional money to each polling unit across the state as a free gift to politicians because 2019 elections are fast approaching and we can term this agenda as a bribe to electorates instead employing hundreds of thousands of youths roaming the streets in Jigawa, supplying drugs to hospitals, providing fertilizer to the rural farmers at an affordable price, construction of boreholes, prompt payment of scholarship to Jigawa indigenes, giving of loans to the small and medium scale traders,  etc.

    Looking back to posterity, one could easily relegate the period 1999-2007 in the annals of Jigawa State history as being one of the worst in the state since its creation. The attempted resurrection some of those policies or agenda could be described as a denouement of monumental proportion politically and in the development of Jigawa State.  The previous regime of former Governor Turaki, who couldn’t show a single project in the entire state in the eight years because of money being allocated to few politicians as polling unit fund (Kudin Akwati) which hindered the provision or execution of any meaningful developmental project in the state, like construction of roads, attending to educational and health sectors, provision of potable drinking water, agricultural production, etc so, is such maladministration governor Badaru will emulate?

    So, Governor Badaru still believes that the good and honest people of Jigawa State will succumb to these archaic and unproductive idea that halted Jigawa’s progress and stagnation under that nasty and fruitless agenda of Kudin-Akwati? One can even ask what kind of alliance these two individuals want to make?  After Jigawa have been liberated and transformed with all the needful things of human existence by Sule Lamido administration, when Jigawa turned to be like a small London or Paris and to think that someone will come and claim any credit for misruling Jigawa State beats anybody’s imagination. But come to think of it; the people of Jigawa State are blessed and have realised their potentials and are determined to keep it that way. As the Hausa put it “Kan Mage ya Waye”, and if anyone is in doubt, the present experience should be the warning signs.

    Lastly, the state assembly members should as well think twice on this planned or borrowed idea; checkmate the affairs of the governor and know their responsibilities as lawmakers. They should not try to be bench-warmers and toothless bulldogs. For Governor Badaru, you need to pattern your belt very well and very tight to rule with speed and forget this idea of Kudin-Akwati because time is going and it waits for nobody. We wish you God’s guidance and we pray to God to save you from this predicament. Your Excellency, what people care and mind is honesty, transparency, accountability, equity and commitment for Jigawa to reach a greater height. May God come to our aid, protect and bless Jigawa and Nigeria as a whole.

    • Adamu writes from Kafin-Hausa, Jigawa state (amu3333@yahoo.com)
  • Ex Jigawa Senator dumps PDP

    Ex Jigawa Senator dumps PDP

    Alhaji Danladi Sankara, former Senator representing Jigawa Northwest, has dumped the Peoples Democratic Party ( PDP ) and joined the All Progressives Congress ( APC ).

    Sankara was received by the Jigawa Governor, Alhaji Muhammad Badaru at the Malam Aminu Kano triangle Square on Sunday in Dutse.

    Badaru said that the defection of the former senator was a welcome development to the party in the state.

    The governor said that the APC had caught a big fish, for the entrance of Sankara to APC in view of his pedigree in his former party.

    Badaru recalled that Sankara was one time National Vice chairman, PDP Northwest geo-political zone and Sole Administrator of the party in Sokoto state.

    “With his defection to APC, PDP is completely dead in Jigawa because Sankara is one of the founders of PDP in the country and the person that brought it to jigawa,’’ he said.

    The governor, however, said that the immediate past administration left a contract liability of N92 billion to him but with the help of God and the good people of the state, he overcame the situation.

    He lamented the myriad of problems left by the previous administration of PDP at both state and federal levels which resulted in President Muhammadu Buhari giving out bail outs to states.

    Chief John Oyegun, National chairman of APC who was represented at the ceremony by the chairman of the party in the Northwest, Alhaji Shuaibu Lawal, assured that Sen. Sankara would be treated fairly like other members of the party.

    Earlier, while formally declaring for the party, Sankara said that he was joining the party with 8,905 of his supporters.

    Sankara pledged to work for the unity and progress of the party, to win all elections in the state and at the federal level.

    NAN

  • Badaru: APC has lived up to masses’ expectations

    Badaru: APC has lived up to masses’ expectations

    Jigawa State Governor Abubakar Muhammad Badaru, in this interview with Adetutu Audu, explains that Nigeria’s greatness lies in its leadership which must be based on merit and politics devoid of tribal and religious sentiments. Excerpts

    Has the Federal Government controlled by APC lived up to the masses expectations in the last two years?

    I would emphatically say yes, and I am glad you mentioned the masses, because for some elites, their only expectation is that the government of the day should fail and nothing short of that will satisfy them. President Buhari’s campaign promises can be summarised into three: provision of security, economic diversification and a zero tolerance for corruption. Since assuming power, the nation’s biggest security challenge has been tackled; the siege situation in three states has been lifted and 17 local governments areas have effectively been liberated, 12,000 hostages, including 107 of the Chibok girls have been rescued, and you no longer have to endure a 10 hour journey encountering 11 military checkpoints to travel from Kano to Abuja; there are several flights a day into Maiduguri and Yola airports and we have had several Christmas and Sallah celebrations without a single terrorist incident; the dignity of our armed forces has been restored as they are no longer scampering to neighboring countries to take refuge. I shudder to think where this country would have been if the insurgents had maintained their rampage at the pace they were progressing under the previous administration.

    Apart from the decimation of the capacity of the Boko Haram insurgents, are there other visible achievements of the federal government in more than two years?

    Well I hope you realise that President Buhari inherited a comatose economy, characterised by a depleted treasury and oil prices that had crashed 70% in 8 months. As I talk to you, our foreign reserves stand at about $32 billion, a buildup of $7 Billion in 24 months of a recessed economy and unprecedented speculative pressure on the Naira. You can extrapolate and imagine where we would be if the same sense of prudence and fiscal responsibility had been applied in a $140 a barrel oil price regime. $500 million has been paid into the Sovereign Wealth Fund, the first inflow since it was set up in 2012; over N5 trillion has been captured by TSA with a saving of N4.7 B in MDA bank charges monthly. Critical infrastructure projects, some of which have been at a standstill for 8 years due to lack of funding, have been remobilised, over N1 trillion was released for capital projects in the 2016 budget, the highest ever in the history of this country, dead construction companies have been brought back to life, thousands of jobs created and the trickledown effect has affected the economy and helped end a recession.

    The SIP initiative is another campaign promise fulfilled with over 1 million beneficiaries spread out across the various programs, N-power, School feeding, GEEP and the conditional cash transfer program. Agriculture has seen the largest and most focused national attention in the nation’s history with billions of naira in various programs, ANCHOR, CACS, NIRSAL and others being availed to farmers with dramatic results. Our rice import has fallen from about 600,000 MT per annum to just 58,000 MT by end of 2016 and a presidential committee on fertilizer, which I chair, has eliminated N260 Billion in fertilizer subsidy and foreign exchange. We have brought back to life over 12 dead fertilizer blending plants and plan to revive another 8 by end of 2017 and created over 60,000 jobs in the process, all the while providing excellent quality fertilizer at N5, 500 a bag with zero subsidy, instead of almost N10, 000. Fuel importation has been liberalised and subsidies withdrawn and the government is supporting the establishment of the largest single train refinery in the world, freeing up about $8 Billion in forex by the time it becomes operational in 2019.

    Corruption was a major campaign issue, with President Buhari/APC saying they would fight it to the finish. However, the government is being bogged down by the same virus-the suspended Secretary to the Government of the Federation, the National Intelligence Agency (NIA) money laundering scandal, the Dubai property scandal involving the Chief of Army Staff; is it a case of the hunter becoming the hunted now?

    Hardly the case, corruption was institutionalised and ingrained into our national psyche to a point where a public servant that refuses to partake is regarded as a fool by the very citizens he’s supposed to be stealing from. You can’t erase it overnight; there is no magic wand, especially under a democratic dispensation with a judicial system that presupposes innocence until proven otherwise. The first and most important step is leadership by example and a strict adherence to the rule of law. Even Gen Buhari’s worst critic can never accuse him of being a “do as I say and not as I do” leader. He exemplifies integrity and incorruptibility, but the man can only do as much as the system allows within the ambit of the law. When you hear of conviction statistics being reeled out by the EFCC, get the number of cases under investigation and those in the judicial system and work out the conviction ratio, some cases have been at pre-trial level for 10 years. There are attempts to speed up the process through judicial reform and international treaties, but bear in mind that corruption fights back and it doesn’t fight fair. As I am sure you are aware, amount recovered from one case can fund the budget of the judiciary for two electoral terms.

    Different separatist groups are clamouring for independence of their own republics, Would you say these agitations are legitimate?

    Anything done outside the ambit of or in contravention of the law is illegitimate, so the question I believe is whether there is any justification in these agitations. My counter question is why now? Where were the agitators before the advent of this administration? Was the previous government so repressive and brutal that they couldn’t voice out their aspirations? Some of them were active players in the politics of yore, some contested elections and lost; I have seen some that were advocates of tenure elongation at some point in time; my take is that it’s all a case of sour grapes and bad sportsmanship. Instead of heating up the polity, let them get their act together and participate in the political dispensation, and then they can articulate their position within the ambit of the law and the constitution.

    The PDP appears to be getting its bearing right, opening the space for a more formidable opposition. With many unfulfilled campaign promises, its appears APC may find it tough returning to power in 2019?

    I just listed out our three strong campaign agenda and what we have been able to achieve under an extremely difficult economic and political environment, which is unarguably the result of PDP’s misrule. As for getting their bearing right, I think the real test is yet to come; there are a few political surprises still in the offing, I am sure you’re already aware that their 2019 zoning arrangement has been thrown to the dogs.

    What do you think Nigeria can do to be great again?

    We should focus on what we have in common rather than our differences. We should sanitise the political space and do away with politics of ethnicity and religion and focus on issues not sentiment.

    We must evolve a system that ensures quality leadership is appreciated and respected so that meritocracy takes root and we can begin to celebrate leaders with national outlook and exemplary vision and capacity. Today, no matter how good you are, political and ethnic considerations will be used to denigrate you and pull you down. You can imagine a situation where a leader’s illness is being celebrated in the name of politics. This is sad.

  • Badaru cuts Govt House feeding allowance

    Badaru cuts Govt House feeding allowance

    Jigawa State Governor Badaru Abubakar has cut the Government House’ feeding allowance to N500 million as against N1.6 billion by the former administration of Sule Lamido.

    Abubakar, who attributed the success of his administration to the pruning down of government’s expenditure, spoke at the weekend at the launch of the Birnin Kudu/Buji House of Representatives Constituency Office and scholarship to indigent students.

    The governor said his administration spends N500 million on food for the Government House while only N200 million is expended on security in the state.

    He said the protocol department spends N30 million as against N370 million Lamido administration spent, adding that “this prudence is the secret behind our success in sustaining salary and other activities.”

    Governor Abubakar assured the people his administration would complete abandoned projects initiated by the previous administration, saying over a 100 kilometre span of roads were completed within two years.

    According to him, his government inherited N14 billion owed contractors, which he has started paying.

    House of Representatives member Magaji Da’u Aliyu has begun the disbursement of scholarships to indigent students, who secured admissions into tertiary institutions, and distributed tricycles to disabled persons.