Tag: el-Rufai

  • Shi’ites sue El-Rufai for ‘harassment, molestation’

    The Islamic Movement in Nigeria (IMN), also known as Shi’ites, has sued Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai at the Federal High Court in Kaduna for ‘incessant harassments, molestation and open violent physical attacks’ on its members.

    The suit was filed by Engr. Yahaya Gilima Karofi, Muktar Abdullahi Muhammed and Aliyu Umar, against the government of Kaduna State; Governor of Kaduna State Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Commissioner of Police; Director, State Security Service; Director-General, Department of State Security Abuja, Inspector-General of Police and Chief of Army Staff.

    It accused the government of using security agents to deprive members of full opportunity of observing their religious obligations/activities.

    The movement sought the court’s declaration that the Kaduna State Gazette No.21 of October 7, 2016, and its contents thereof, which purportedly banned IMN in Nigeria and their religious activities in Kaduna State, constitutes a deliberate attempt at amending section 38(1) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as amended), and Article 8 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights (Ratification and Enforcement) Act LFN 2010 by the first to the third respondents, acting in concert, and same constitutes an infraction and a deliberate effort at limiting the applicants’ Fundamental Right, as entrenched in the within mentioned laws.

    The group also seeks another declaration that the applicants are entitled to equal level of fair treatment and protection like any other citizens of Kaduna State by the respondents jointly and severally under all circumstances pursuant to Section 42(1) – (2) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (As Amended) and Article 2 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights (Ratification and Enforcement) Act LFN 2010.

    In view of the above, the IMN is seeking: “An order on the fourth to eighth respondents to henceforth provide security for the applicants during their major public religious activities and processions in Kaduna State.

    “An order for compensation, in the sum of N100,000, and public apology in favour of the applicants, for the excruciating pains and embarrassment suffered from the unlawful acts of the respondents against them.”

  • El-Rufai, teachers and the state of education

    It is natural to sympathize with Kaduna’s embattled teachers as I see pictures and videos of people taking to the streets to protest ‘the unjust decision’ of the governor of Kaduna State, Malam Nasir El-Rufai but the pain of having been a victim of this systemic rot would not let me throw away the benefits that this cataclysmic reform comes with.

    I share in the pain of the disengaged teachers, the zeal Malam El-Rufai’s decision, and the experience of struggling to undo the effect of this systemic rot.

    As typical of the Nigerians, the Kaduna state government’s decision to let go of under-qualified teachers will rule the media space for a while before Nigerians decide to take home the vital information hidden in this decision. Hence, the vital information will be lost again and as usual, it will all be relegated to politics, pettiness, and propaganda.

    Malam El-Rufai is not someone who will be pressured into bowing to the will of the people affected by this decision as it is in his character to get things done not minding whose ox is gored.

    But in the midst of this, the big picture hangs and shines brighter than the painting and coloration the people may portray of the governor. It also exceeds that of which the general public may make of the over 20,000 teachers affected by this decision. As Nigerians have been known for, kicking legs in the place of the ball is not a new phenomenon as it is a veritable mechanism that has enabled the nation to repeat the tragedies that come with not observing the context of history and learning its lessons. But the bigger picture is beyond El-Rufai; it is a composition of the system created by ineffectual policies that have refused to train workers engaged in a job, and ultimately accepting the crumbs that ineptitude serves as the ultimate balance diet, all to the nourishment of the grave of human development and progress.

    Before El-Rufai were several administrations that saw no need to engage those teachers in constant training to enhance and fortify their competence and to weed out square pegs in round holes or at most redeploy them to other ministries where they fit in. Presently, El-Rufai’s decision being hailed as heroic and a perfect attempt at overhauling a system infested by incompetent teachers is only but a challenge at the symptoms of the problem of free education in Nigeria as the cause will still linger if not taken care of. To know that a primary four test for primary school teachers generated such failure is to imagine what will be the fate of the remaining if a primary six standard test is set for them.

     

    • Caleb Ogbonna,

    Abuja.

  • El-Rufai, commissioners shed tears over death of cabinet member

    El-Rufai, commissioners shed tears over death of cabinet member

    Kaduna State Governor,   Mallam Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai, yesterday broke down and wept, while speaking about his over 40 years of friendship with Professor Andrew Jonathan Nok, the late Commissioner of Education,  Science and Technology.

    The governor shed tears at the Kaduna Government House during a valedictory executive session held in honour of Professor Nok.

    His colleagues, the commissioners and other top government functionaries, also shed tears as they eulogised him.

    The governor announced on the occasion his readiness to adopt the three children of the late professor.

    He said the state government would sponsor the education of the three children up to the PhD level.

    He said a campus of the Kaduna State Polytechnic would be sited in Nok, the hometown of the late commissioner.

    The governor said one of the state’s secondary schools and an health institution would be named after the professor who served meritoriously as the state Commissioner for Health and Human Services and later Commissioner for Education, Science and Technology.

    Born on February 11, 1962 in Ungwar Rimi, Kaduna, Professor Nok was appointed Commissioner for Health and Human Services in August 2015. In that office, he pushed the programme to equip 255 primary health centres with tools to save infants and pregnant women.

    Following a cabinet reshuffle, he moved to the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology in 2016, where has championed the renovation and rehabilitation of schools, the training of teachers and the provision of better learning aids.

    The late commissioner was a Professor of Biochemistry at the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria. Acknowledged in the science community for his contributions, Professor Nok won the Alexander Humboldt prize in 2013 for his research into finding a cure for trypanosomiasis.

    In 2009, he won the NLNG prize for identifying the gene responsible for the enzyme which causes sleeping sickness (trypanosomiasis).

  • El-Rufai adopts children of late Education Commissioner

    El-Rufai adopts children of late Education Commissioner

    …to rename school, hospital after him, cite poly campus in Nok town

     

    Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai has announced his resolve to adopt the three children, of the late Commissioner of Education, Science and Technology, Professor Jonathan Andrew Nok.

    This was also as he said the state government will sponsor education of the three children of the late Commissioner up to Phd level.

    Governor El-Rufai made the disclosure at Kaduna Government House on Friday during the valedictory executive session held in honour of the late Professor Nok.

    The Governor also said, that one of the state’s secondary schools and an health institution would be named after the Professor who served meritoriously as the state Commissioner for Health and Human Services and later Commissioner for Education.

    Governor El-Rufai who broke down while speaking about his over 40 years of friendship with the late Professor and the indelible marks he left behind as a Commissioner, said a campus of the Kaduna State Polytechnic will be sited in Nok, the home town of the late Professor Andrew Jonathan Nok.

    His colleagues, the Commissioners and other top government functionaries shed tears as they eulogised the late Professor.

    Born on February 11, 1962 in Ungwar Rimi, Kaduna, Professor Nok was appointed Commissioner for Health and Human Services in August 2015. In that office, he pushed the programme to equip 255 primary health centres with tools to save infants and pregnant women.

    Following a cabinet reshuffle, he moved to the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology in 2016, where has championed the renovation and rehabilitation of schools, the training of teachers and the provision of better learning aids.

    The late commissioner was a professor of Biochemistry at the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria. Acknowledged in the science community for his contributions, Professor Nok won the Alexander Humboldt prize in 2013 for his research into finding a cure for trypanosomiasis.

    In 2009, he won the NLNG prize for identifying the gene responsible for the enzyme which causes sleeping sickness (trypanosomiasis). The Federal Government of Nigeria also honoured him with the Nigerian National Order of Merit (NNOM).

  • NLC to Buhari, APC: call El-Rufai to order

    NLC to Buhari, APC: call El-Rufai to order

    The Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) has urged President Muhammadu Buhari and the All Progressives Congress (APC) to call Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai to order, warning of consequences of the mass sack in the state.

    Reacting to the sack of over 4,000 council workers, at a time that of teachers remained unresolved, NLC President, Comrade Abubakar Wabba said the congress would use every legal means to contest El-Rufai’s actions, which he said were against the spirit and letters of the country’s laws and democratic practices.

    According to Wabba, many states have carried out reforms in education and local government without sacking workers, saying that when the government planned teachers’ sack, the congress warned that it would leadto workers’ sack.

    Wabba said: “The Nigeria Labour Congress condemns the mass sacking of about 5,000 local government workers by the Kaduna State government. The purported sack violates the provisions of all known labour laws and industrial relations practice and processes.

    “The reasons adduced by the government are spurious and unfounded. Aside from this, the process is patently faulty and unlawful. For instance, redundancy cannot be carried out without following the provisions of the Labour Act.

    “When the Kaduna State government announced its plan to lay off about 25,000 teachers for failing a primary four competency test, we expressed our misgivings and said the so-called competency test was a subterfuge and part of a premeditated plan to cut down the workforce in furtherance of dangerous neoliberal policies.

    “The latest illegal mass sack of workers lends credence to our assertions. We warn of the consequences of the reckless actions of the state government, and call for caution and restraint.

    “This is most unfortunate and a direct fulfilment of the exact opposite of his campaign promise and APC’s manifesto to create jobs. He often says as governor, he has the right, power, means and will to do as he likes, but this is undemocratic and anti-workers.

    “We are worried by these emotional outbursts, and their infectious effects on his peers and the polity as a whole. We expected more maturity and flexibility.

    “We advise the government to rescind its decision on the mass sack. We call on the President and his party, the APC, to call him to order.

    “We also remind the governor that Mr President’s support for a reform in the education sector is not synonymous with mindless retrenchment. Some states have carried out far-reaching reforms in the education sector, with impressive results, without causing this level of social violence.

    “In the event the government is obdurate enough not to heed this counsel given in good faith, let it consider this statement as a notice that the NLC will use all lawful means available to contest this action.”

  • Why we disengaged 4,042 council workers, by El-Rufai

    Why we disengaged 4,042 council workers, by El-Rufai

    Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai has explained the sack of 4,042 local government workers, saying they were laid off as part of efforts to make the 23 councils self-sustaining.

    The government, on Monday, retired 3,189 workers with over 10 years in service, and terminated 883 others yet to reach retirement age.

    The governor said only Birnin Gwari council is financially healthy; six on life support.

    The remaining can barely pay workers from the federal allocation and 10 per cent Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) given to them by the state.

    El-Rufai, who spoke through his media aide, Samuel Aruwan, said the move became imperative to reduce the workforce to enable councils carry out capital projects and provide basic services for their people.

    He said: “There are many workers in our councils who don’t have any work; they only report to the councils to receive their salary. The government wants a situation where only the required work at the councils, not redundant people.

    “Most of the councils, after receiving their monthly allocation, are barely able to pay salaries; the state has to augment the shortfall. Six local governments are on life support as they cannot even pay salary; others can pay but cannot execute development projects after deducting salary.

    “This is part of our campaign promises to restructure the work force and ensure workers are not redundant. There are two to three million youths within Kaduna metropolis, comprising Kaduna North, Kaduna South, Igabi and Chikun councils, who need employment. The bloated work force in the local governments made it difficult to achieve positive change in the state.”

    Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Ja’afaru Sani said the affected workers had been served letters, adding that their directors were directed to pay them three months salary and pension in lieu of notice to those retired, and one month salary and gratuity to those, whose appointments were terminated. They will all receive November salary.

    “We have identified eight councils that have shortage of personnel in critical areas, we would soon advertise to fill the vacant positions.

    “There are 145 NCE holders in the councils, who are on grade level three or four, which is below grade level seven which they should be. They would be transferred and absorbed into SUBEB after undergoing a mandatory competence test.

    “There are 6,732 workers left across the 23 councils after the 4,042 were laid off,” he said.

  • Why we disengaged 4,042 council workers – El-Rufai

    Why we disengaged 4,042 council workers – El-Rufai

    Kaduna State Governor, Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai, said on Tuesday that the recently disengaged 4,042 local government workers were laid off as part of efforts to make the 23 local government areas in the state self-sustaining.

    The state government on Monday served 3,189 local government workers, who had spent over 10 years in service with letters of retirement, while 883 others, who are yet to reach pensionable years, were sacked.

    The governor said of the 23 LGAs in the state, only Birnin Gwari is financially healthy, adding that six local councils are on life support.

    He said the remaining 14 local LGAs can barely pay their workers salary from the federal allocation and 10 per cent IGR given to them by the state government.

    El-Rufai, who spoke through his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Samuel Aruwan, said it became imperative to reduce the overbloated work force to enable the 23 councils carry out necessary capital projects and provide basic services to the people.

    He said: “There are many workers in our local governments who don’t have any work, they only report to the local government councils to receive their salaries. Government wants a situation where only required staff work at the council and not people who are redundant.

    “Most of the 23 local government councils after receiving monthly allocation are barely able to pay salaries. The state government has to augment the shortfall. Six local government councils are existing on life support as they cannot even pay salaries, others can pay salaries but cannot execute developmental projects after deducting salaries. The local government councils need one intervention or the other.”

  • Buhari to governors: Pay workers’ salaries before Xmas

    Buhari to governors: Pay workers’ salaries before Xmas

    Approves payment of 50% Paris Club refund to states

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Monday asked state governors to clear workers’ outstanding salaries before the Christmas celebration.

    He also approved payment of 50% Paris Club refund.

    Imo State Governor, Rochas Okorocha and his Kaduna State counterpart, Nasir el-Rufai, briefed State House correspondents at the end of governors meeting with President Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Okorocha said: “It was a brief meeting between the governors and the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. It is the end of the year and the President has expressed the need to make ensure that every Nigerian especially the workers have a beautiful Christmas and the issue of outstanding Paris Club was discussed. That was taken care of, to ensure that workers in various states and everywhere in the country get to celebrate the Christmas.

    READ ALSO:   Probe Govs’ spending of Paris club refund

    “We also used the opportunity to review our working relationship with the President from the states and we found out that we are in harmony. There is no difference between us and the President. Everybody seems to be happy working together. But particularly, we commended the President for getting Nigeria out of recession within such a short time. We commended Mr. President and everybody left quite happy.

    “We are looking at getting the balance of Paris Club refund thrashed out once and for all. We also made a request for Mr. President’s approval that the balance should form part of our 2018 budget, because we can’t include it until we are sure that the money is coming. That was also sorted out.

    “So, as it is now, the issue of workers took the centre stage and Mr. President was concerned about those who depend on their salaries to feed their families and pay their house rent and he had the assurance from the governors that we will meet up those obligations.

    “It was emphasised that states and Federal Governments must work together to get Nigeria out of its present economic predicament to make Nigeria a better society for all of us.”

    Asked if all salary arrears will be cleared by each state before Christmas, the governor said “Yes, with the Paris Club refund coming, every worker should enjoy his or her Christmas. I made it clear.

    El-Rufai said what the President approved for payment to pay workers’ salaries before Christmas is the balance of the first 50 per cent Paris Club refund.

    According to him, the governors are also still asking for payment of the second 50 per cent balance so that state governments can capture it in their 2018 Budget.

    He said: “Let me explain. The Paris club figures need to be reconciled. While the reconciliation process was going on, the President approved that 50 per cent of the original amount be paid to the states. The payment started from last year. We still have the balance of the first 50 per cent. This is what the President said should be paid to state governments to meet their obligations before Christmas because he is concerned that many families depend solely on their salaries for the festive period.

    “That had been decided. The balance of the first 50 per cent is what we are expecting now before Christmas. The President has approved that and said it must be paid.”

     

  • APC won’t miss Atiku, says El-Rufai

    APC won’t miss Atiku, says El-Rufai

    Kaduna State Governor, Mallam Nasir El-Rufa’i, yesterday reacted to the decision of Alhaji Atiku Abubakar’s decision to quit the All Progressives Congress (APC), saying that the party would not miss the former Vice President.

    He also criticised Atiku for dumping the party, describing the action as his greatest mistake.

    El-Rufai, who spoke with State House journalists after observing the Friday Juma’at prayers at the Presidential Villa, Abuja described Atiku as an inconsequential candidate who could not wrestle power from President Muhammadu Buhari, who he said the entire North would rally round in 2019.

    El Rufai said the ex-Vice President was simply re-enacting his usual practice of cross carpeting aimlessly.

    According to him, Atiku would not be missed in any way because he lacked the political clout to pull any of the APC governors into his fold.

    He said: “Well, I won’t even say we were in the APC together. Some of us formed the APC, some of them joined because they thought that the APC was a platform from which they would contest election. But when they didn’t get the opportunity, they started looking around.

    “I have heard about what the former Vice President said about leaving the APC. We knew he was going to leave in December but he has left in November, which is good, because the earlier he leaves for where he belongs the better.

    “He has changed political parties a few times; there is nothing surprising. Before the 2019 elections, if situation changes and he thinks he can get the ticket in 2019, he will come back. That is what he has done a few times.”

    On claims that Atiku was driven out of the party, he said: “No one has driven him out of the party. The APC is an equal opportunity platform for everyone.

    “He has in his statement of leaving the party made reference to the memo I wrote to Mr. President in September 2016, where I was calling on the President to reach out to party leaders that feel aggrieved, and I mentioned him, the Asiwaju and many others.

    “The others are still in the APC because they believe in the direction of the party. They believe we have come to save the country from a very bad situation. But the former Vice President is always looking for an opportunity to contest. He is a serial contestant and we wish him luck.”

    On possibility of some APC members leaving with Atiku, he said: “I don’t know about the loyalists in the APC that will go with him. But I want to assure you that there is no one governor in APC that is going to go with former Vice President Atiku Abubakar.

    “The only governor that he would think will go with him, the governor of Adamawa State, has already endorsed President Buhari for the 2019 elections. And there are many governors. I will not mention the number, but majority of the APC governors have already taken the position that the president should run for a second term in office.

    “And we are grateful to the Almighty God that the question marks about his health have been put to rest. He is getting better every day, and we are confident that the way to preserve our party and preserve and advance the interest of Nigeria is for Mr. President to run for a second term.

    “I’m curious to see which APC governor will go with Atiku.

    “As for party loyalists, it depends on what you defend as loyalists. We will wait and see how that evolves.

    “But as a governor, I want to assure you that not one governor is going to leave the party to go with the former Vice President. That I am sure of. I can speak authoritatively about it because I’m in touch with my colleagues.”

    He said Atiku would never be a threat to Buhari if they ran for the Presidency in 2019.

    “He has never been and will never be a threat to President Buhari.

    “Let me say this very clearly, and I have said this to the former Vice President in 2014 in Dubai when we met, because before joining the APC, he sent for me. He told me of his intentions and I welcomed it because politics is a game of addition, not subtraction. So the more you have the merrier.

    “However, I told him not to run for the presidency because I believe very strongly this is Buhari’s era. As long as President Muhammadu Buhari is in politics, I do not see any Nigerian from the northern part of the country that will be able to match him in popularity.

    “The people of the 19 northern states and Nigeria have decided because of the President’s past history of integrity and good governance, they are committed to him. Anyone standing up to challenge him is wasting his time.

    “God has decreed that this is Buhari’s time, and we are waiting for the PDP to give Atiku Abubakar the ticket and we will face in on the field.”

  • El-Rufai’s activism and Kaduna teachers

    El-Rufai’s activism and Kaduna teachers

    FOR the first time in over two years, Kaduna State governor, Nasir el-Rufai, has finally happened upon a popular cause befitting his populism. After compelling primary school teachers to take a proficiency test designed for Primary Four pupils, and seeing more than two-thirds of them fail, he has given the order to recruit about 25,000 teachers to replace some 21,780 of them who flunked the test. Unable to bring himself to describe the failed teachers as sacked, he has hovered precariously and undecidedly between using the word ‘replacement’ to qualify what he intends to do with them, and merely suggesting that they would be removed from the payroll. Except to him, few, especially the teachers themselves and their activist unions, were left puzzled by what their fate would be in a matter of weeks.

    The support for Mallam el-Rufai’s measure to sanitise the teaching profession at the elementary level has been both uproarious and intoxicating. Even the normally even-tempered and quick-witted Shehu Sani (Senate–Kaduna Central) has been wrong-footed by the populist and often unreflective governor. Sen Sani had argued that by deciding to sack the about 22,00 teachers, the governor was cruelly using politics to settle scores and anticipate and scheme for the next elections. The senator is himself an activist. It is not surprising that he threw in his lot with the labour unions and teachers, for he often reads far deeper insights into policies and measures than the ordinary man on the street, and in most instances, even far more than the governor himself. But on this matter, the public is unforgiving. In their opinion, the governor is courageously tackling a sordid malady that predated him, one his predecessors had treated with kid gloves.

    The premise of the governor’s populist fury is simple and engaging. Teachers who could not pass Primary Four tests have no business teaching anyone. With education in Kaduna floundering, and with the state’s students performing woefully in national examinations, there would be no room for any sentiment in applying drastic remedies to what has seemed to be a cancerous problem. Even the suspicion and argument that the governor got his analysis wrong by failing to see the state’s education problem as systemic rather than isolated, has seemed distant. It did not help that many analysts have lathered the problem with the sentimental rhetoric that suggests that no parent would like his children to be taught by the near illiterates who for many years passed themselves off as teachers in the grandest and avuncular sense.

    It is hard to see the labour unions winning either the argument or the fight. They are fighting a lost cause. Nor is there a cat in hell’s chance that Sen Sani will have the upper hand in the fight to retain the about 22,000 teachers. They are a bad case, and can hardly be retained under any guise or argument. Indeed, the labour unions, particularly the teachers’ union, have no reason to stick to their guns. The 25,000 teachers that will be recruited, the so-called replacement specialists, will not only inexorably become union members, they will swell the ranks of the powerful club of teaching activists with their superior education and skills, and with their winsome credentials and swag. It’s a win-win for the unions, government and education sector, not to say the poor, bedraggled parents who had long resigned themselves to fate and pondered whether any of their children attending those misfit schools could ever successfully run the gauntlet of bad teachers, cruel and merciless national examinations and increasingly competitive socio-economic systems.

    Mallam el-Rufai can be forced to step down on some issues. It is hard to see him climbing down on this. Sen Sani should have picked his fight well. On this matter of the impending sack of teachers, the governor cannot lose, and the senator cannot win. The unions will be worsted, and the senator will have egg on his face. If they think they can ambush the governor in the coming polls, they and all their 22,000-strong sacked teachers, they will meet the 25,000 newly recruited teachers who give their loyalty first and foremost, as the senator feared, to Mallam el-Rufai. Ex-United States president George H. Bush might have won Gulf War I in 1991 and lost the following year’s presidential election; there is no way Mallam el-Rufai can be harmed by the sacked teachers case. His enemies should pick different causes and implements to bludgeon the governor, for he is not beyond being beaten.

    When barely two months after he assumed office in 2015 Mallam el-Rufai banned street begging, which he described as humiliating, he had run full tilt into a political storm that robbed him of his carefully cultivated image as an empathetic, pro-people politician. Street begging was not a profession, he had argued with unfeeling, superior airs and undisguised sarcasm. But his opponents tell him it is a socio-economic, if not even cultural, reality that can neither be wished away nor legislated into oblivion. It is the same brusqueness that backfired in the case of the beggars that Mallam el-Rufai is applying, perhaps tactlessly, to the case of the unqualified teachers. Begging was a systemic problem in Kaduna when the governor confronted it, just as the failed teachers phenomenon is systemic. Both require not just boldness and courage, which virtues the governor has in abundance, but holistic and overarching approaches and solutions. The governor’s style, as exemplified by the malaises undermining economic and political developments in Kaduna, suggests he is finding it difficult to adequately and analytically appreciate the import of the problems, let alone conceive the right remedies.

    Begging and failed teachers are undoubtedly a problem, among many other problems, for Kaduna. But the question Mallam el-Rufai does not ask himself is what kind of problems they are, and whether his solutions suit and soothe the crises he seems perfectly placed idiosyncratically to worsen by his natural inflexibility, insensitivity and sometimes arrogance. Mallam el-Rufai is of course not always right even when he is populist and superficial, as his approach to the herdsmen attacks and regulation of religions in the state show. Indeed, he may have an instinctive grasp of the problems that confront the state, even if the complex composition of their cores escape him; but he often weakens his cause by his insufferable style and sweeping, superficial generalisations. Quite characteristically, his problem is that his activism nearly always gets the better of him.

    Mallam el-Rufai will win the failed teachers argument, and it will show him as a firm, courageous and quick-witted governor. But it will not show him as a manager of men, as an inspiration, as a methodical leader and politician, and as a caring and visionary leader more intent on changing the circumstances of the people than on winning arguments and wrong-footing opponents. The governor’s idiosyncrasies are cast in granite. He is too old and has repeatedly profited from his constant resort to disingenuousness and opportunism to be amenable to change. He will continue to use the morass that envelopes Kaduna as a pretext for harsh and sometimes cruel measures. He will refuse to be persuaded to recognise that the Kaduna teachers’ conundrum can be resolved more systemically, far more rewardingly, and with far less costs than he has abrasively and emotionally embraced and sold.

    The Kaduna teachers’ issue is in fact a rather simple problem that could have been resolved without the melodrama with which Mallam el-Rufai has encased it. The publicity rankled, including the public display of teachers’ spectacular test failures, as much as the governor’s loud asseverations of his unassailable position and polemical superiority. He could of course bring to public knowledge the problems the state was confronting in the education sector, and seek the people’s understanding. Next he could seek the accommodation and understanding of the unions, reassuring them that the government would not undermine their cohesion. Then he could begin quietly weeding out, in phases, the undesirable elements in the teaching profession. The controversy was never about whether those who couldn’t teach should be replaced. They must be. The controversy was how the governor hoped, perhaps with minimum pain, to deliver the change that would benefit the education sector, transfer the soon-to-be-unemployed into other productive jobs, and comprehensively reform the entire state administrative structure, not just in education, that promotes mediocrity and stultifies development.

    In his response to Ekiti State governor, Ayo Fayose, who mocked the governor for planning to retrench about 22,000 teachers, Mallam el-Rufai talked disingenuously of replacement in place of sack. It was obvious the immensely emotional Kaduna governor had not spared time to ponder the anomaly and consequences of sacking so many people regardless of their lack of qualification and wrongful recruitment into the public service. Whether he likes it or not, and despite his vindication and massive public support, he will have to re-examine his methods and plans all over again. Even if the exercise would not cost him votes, he must still take a second look at the issue, for it is certain to affect his legacy in ways he has probably not anticipated. The controversy goes beyond the teachers conundrum; it touches on his style of governance, a style that affects everything, both present and future, a style that has made him to be execrated even by those who mentored him but now speak of him in very unflattering terms.

    Mallam el-Rufai is immensely gifted, intellectual and bold, and he has a knack for seeking out for attention the grave issues that convulse the society, whether nationally or his beloved Kaduna. But seeing how cocksure of everything he has become over the years, and how infallible he places himself in the scheme of things, it must apparently be a conspiracy engineered by the heavens to attenuate his gifts by imbuing him with a fondness for romanticization, melodrama and offensive display of brusqueness unparalleled even in those on whose agile but unyielding backs he climbed unworthily into prominence.