Tag: Ganduje

  • Tinubu’s economic reforms making positive impacts – Ganduje

    Tinubu’s economic reforms making positive impacts – Ganduje

     The National Chairman of All=the Progressives Congress (APC), Dr Abdullahi Ganduje, has extolled the ongoing economic reforms being implemented by President Bola Tinubu, saying that they were already yielding positive results.

    Ganduje made this statement during an empowerment programme’ organised by  the Deputy Senate President, Barau Jibrin, where 1,200 vehicles and motorcycles were distributed to party leaders on Sunday in Kano.

    He lauded the administration’s commitment to restructuring Nigeria’s economy, saying that the reforms have brought about greater stability.

    “Under President Tinubu’s leadership, we have witnessed substantial progress in revitalizing the economy.

    “These efforts are already yielding results, including improved infrastructure, job creation, and growth across various sectors.

    “The recent reduction in food prices, the drop in petrol costs, and the appreciation of the naira are all direct outcomes of these reforms,” he explained.

    According to him, the president holds Kano in high regard, which was why he appointed them to key positions.

    They included the National Chairman of the ruling party, Deputy Senate President, two Ministers, Director-General of the National Productivity Centre and the Chairman of the Federal Mortgage Bank, among others.

    Read Also: Okpebholo a visionary leader, says Ganduje

    Ganduje commended Barau for his efforts in establishing the North-West Development Commission and expressed gratitude to the president as well.

    The national chairman called on the people of the state to support the administration of Tinubu.

    He also said that the distribution of vehicles and motorcycles was aimed at enhancing the socioeconomic well-being of the people, particularly party members.

    The gesture, he said,  was also expected to promote the party’s noble ideas.

    Earlier,  Jibrin said that the initiative was aimed at empowering the members of the APC to achieve the party’s set objectives.

    He stated that the motorcycles would be distributed to all APC ward and local government Chairmen in the 44 LGAs in the state.

    The deputy senate president also said that a special package for youths ,women, teachers, students and other stakeholders would soon commence.

    He said that it was aimed at ensuring the public benefits from the dividends of democracy.

    “We are also planning to empower university graduates who have not secured white-collar jobs.

    “Three graduates will be selected from each local government and will receive a loan of five million Naira to start small businesses,” he added

    Barau stated that Ganduje’s leadership style had significantly strengthened the party, positing that under his guidance, the party had achieved a remarkable progress.

    He also commended the president for his reforms aimed at advancing the country.

    Jibrin burged the party’s members to unite in support of the president’s efforts to move the nation forward.

    (NAN)

  • Ganduje seeks collaboration among aviation agencies

    Ganduje seeks collaboration among aviation agencies

    ….tours facilities at Lagos Airport, lists challenges

    National Chairman of the ruling All Progressive Congress (APC) and Chairman Board of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), Alhaji Abdulahi Ganduje, has canvassed collaboration among agencies in the aviation sector to achieve the lofty Renew Hope Agenda of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu administration.

    Ganduje also cautioned against institutional rivalry among the agencies, which he said detracts from the overall objective of the Tinubu administration in fixing challenges in the aviation sector.

    He disclosed this on Tuesday, during a working visit to FAAN, where he met with the management team.

    Ganduje also embarked on a tour of facilities at the Lagos International Airport, where he identified challenges plaguing the authority.

    He said: “My request here is for collaboration. I hope there is no institutional rivalry. Wherever you have a function to be executed by different institutions, sometimes if care is not taken, there will be rivalry, and at the end of it, whatever you do if the other institution or agency has not done its homework, then you find out that the overall objective is defective.

    Read Also: Reps to investigate Osun crisis, ask IGP to restore order

    “I implore you the managing director of FAAN alongside other MDs of other agencies to work together so that you all can achieve the overall objective of Mr. President.”

    He added: “Organizational structure is also vital, we expect cooperation among directorates, no directorate itself will succeed without the cooperation of other directorates. So there should be a seamless understanding and synergy. I also call for more coordination.”

    The FAAN board chairman charged personnel with the authority to step up their attitude to work, which he identified as a major contributor to the overall goal attainment of the agency.

    Ganduje said: “So, I believe we should improve on our disposition toward achieving the goals of FAAN. The difference between success and failure is motivation. What is your motive for the growth of the organization? Aside from remuneration, motivation by the organization, motivating yourself to improve the whole organization is very important. You must respect the hierarchy of the organization.”

    He urged the FAAN management team led by Mrs Olubunmi Kuku to fix timelines for the implementation of the authority’s budget.

    He said: “Also in the implementation of your budget, you should have a timeline so that you know exactly where and when you want to achieve something because delay means a lot, inflation comes in, deterioration comes in, vandalization comes in, then you will notice nobody is giving attention to anything and people will develop apathy. 

    “We must be conscious of the timeline. If you are giving out a contract you have to make sure this is the time you are expecting it so that we can avoid those intricacies I just mentioned that will come.

    “Regarding challenges, challenges are natural, some are man-made but overall challenges are part of life and any system because of changes of circumstances but what is important is that those challenges should be reduced rather than increased because more challenges will be coming anyway.

    “So you have not taken measures to resolve those challenges, then you are accumulating them because more and more will surely come.

    “Finally I request all directorate and directors to give a summary in writing so that I will be able to understand the functions of each one of them and the expectations from them so that I will be able to provide guidance.”

    On his impression of the tour of Lagos International Airport, Ganduje said: “We have seen some facilities. We have seen some equipment. We have seen some appliances, and we have also seen the environment. We have also taken note of the challenges, as explained by the MD in the morning session.

    “So, my impression is that the agency is blessed with a competent managing director and also the directors, because I have seen signs of motivation, signs of seriousness, and signs of achievement, motive, as far they are concerned.

    “Of course, there are some challenges, and we have started discussing the challenges and how things will be resolved. What matters is that all of us are conversant with International Airport, especially in the developed countries.

    “So, whatever we saw there is a product of human beings. It is a product of facilities improvement and development. They are products of motivation or visionary management of the organization. That is what we are expecting here but they have laid a very good foundation, and I have been appealing to them so that we can continue and improve on what they have done so far.”

    In her remarks, the Managing Director, Chief Executive of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), Mrs. Olubunmi Kuku identified safety, security, airport recertification, runway renovation, and rehabilitation of projects as part of the priorities of the agency for 2025.

    Kuku said: “For this year 2025, we started last year with safety and security on the runway in the air side. We have now started to implement that. So, we have an enhanced safety policy that we recently rolled out last year, and we are making sure that in line and close collaboration with the NCAA, we are deploying that very closely. We are also embarking on the Kano and Port Harcourt recertification.

    “We recertified two airports last year. That’s also key for us. We also mentioned a couple of runway renovation projects or rehabilitation projects. Those are also coming on stream, as well as terminal rehabilitation as well; and of course, to help us make sure that from a cost recovery and a passenger experience perspective, we are starting to do that; and of course, you are seeing that in our secondary airports and our primary airports. I am sure the feedback from all of our passengers is starting to look promising, but we do agree that we are not where we need to be yet. Of course, we are starting to see a lot of those changes.”

    On current development efforts regarding international airports, Kuku said: “About two days ago, we have just started the process. I promised you all that we were replacing our security equipment. We have now introduced several explosive detection devices, which would, of course, help make sure that our environment is safe and secure as we move people out. So, that’s a project that is happening across the nation. I also mentioned the fact that a lot of the terminal rehabilitation work that we have started to do, some of those are now coming on board and streaming. So, look out for more in the next coming months, and then the next quarter; really around large infrastructure development projects that we’re looking at as well something exciting coming on board both in Lagos and Abuja airports.

    “I am sure that you have seen a lot of the renovation work that we are doing for our facilities, especially those for passengers with disabilities, and of course, passengers generally, in terms of passenger facilitation and not just the environment, the cleanliness. I am just totally revamping the VIP facilities.”

  • EL-Rufai, Ganduje, Tinubu and 2027

    EL-Rufai, Ganduje, Tinubu and 2027

    When he commented on President Bola Tinubu‘s administration during his presentation at an event in Lagos to commemorate the 21st anniversary of the death of radical lawyer and foremost human rights activist, Chief Gani Fawehinmi, the Emir of Kano, Alhaji Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, did not disagree with the thrust of the government’s ongoing economic reforms that have occasioned much controversy. Rather, he described the removal of the fuel subsidy as well as the merger of the parallel foreign exchange markets as necessary and inevitable policies that he would, however, not publicly rationalize or defend because he was not in a mood to help his friends in government who were not behaving like friends. At least he was characteristically honest and forthright about his personal grudges with the government and did not seize on the widespread hardships engendered by the reforms to react emotionally and stir up sentiments against the administration.

    This was a far cry from the position of a former Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) under President Muhammadu Buhari, Mr Babachir Lawal, a one-time ardent ally of President Tinubu who turned fierce opponent of the latter’s election because of the All Progressives Congress (APC) option to present a Muslim-Muslim ticket for the 2023 election. Despite the religious factor not being a hindrance to the APC victory as the likes of Babachir Lawal had anticipated, his adversarial stance against the President and his administration has hardened even when it is all too obvious that the government is not in any way pursuing an Islamaization agenda. And supporting former Kaduna State governor, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai’s strident criticisms of the administration, Babachir Lawal found it convenient to project the Tinubu administration’s economic policies as essentially anti-North.

    Without resort to logical rigour or clinical policy analysis predicated on sound knowledge, the former SGF, an indigene of Adamawa State best known for a proclivity towards rather extravagant grass-cutting adventures, submits that “The North is seriously mobilizing with a consensus that Bola Tinubu must give way in the 2027 elections… Everybody understands that if we continue with these policies for another four years, northern Nigeria will become one large refugee camp. So, there’s a consensus that for self-preservation alone, we must look for another candidate”. Lawal does not feel compelled to state the premises that led to his rather bizarre conclusion. All that is necessary for him is to assert, not attempt any empirical validation.

    Despite his demonstrated capacity for lucid policy analysis, el-Rufai himself, speaking at a recent two-day dialogue on democracy in Abuja, did not undertake a critique of the administration’s policies but based his opposition to the  Tinubu government on perceived lack of internal democracy and consequent inactive party structures in the ruling APC. In his words, “I no longer recognize the APC. No party organ has met in two years, no caucus, no NEC, nothing. You don’t even know if it is a one-man show; it’s a zero-man show.” Urging opposition parties to unite and form a broad coalition to challenge the ruling party and protect democracy, he said that the APC had abandoned its founding mission of combating corruption, rebuilding the economy and enhancing security.

    In his characteristic scathing manner, el-Rufai submitted that “For those of us who lived half of our lives under military rule, we know what it is. We don’t want military rule, but we also don’t want civilians behaving like the military in their babariga and suits”. But does el-Rufai possess the moral credibility to make some of these assertions? True, he made some impressive achievements in education reform and infrastructure renewal during his two-term tenure as governor of Kaduna State. But the truth is that the mostly Christian population of Southern Kaduna felt they were under a form of military rule under his administration. He dehumanized and showed scant regard for their dignity. He brutalized labour unions who dared to exercise their democratic rights to demonstrate. Under his watch, hundreds of protesting Ibrahim Zakzaky-led Shiite Muslims were allegedly murdered in cold blood and buried in mass graves. He openly threatened that foreign election observers would leave the country in ‘body bags’.

    So much then for his new found democratic profession. And while he claims that the APC has abandoned its objective of fighting corruption, a probe of his administration undertaken by his successor in Kaduna State, Senator Uba Sani, found his government guilty of alleged financial infractions running into billions of Naira. Some have accused el-Rufai of embracing his anti-Tinubu antipathy because he was not appointed a Minister in the administration as he had desired but the truth is that the tempestuous petrel has never hidden his dislike for the President’s politics if not his person. But even if his unceasing criticisms of the administration is a function of his frustration at not being the beneficiary of a political appointment, that would not necessarily invalidate the validity of his arguments because to question the motive of a contention is not to disprove its internal consistency or verity.

    Shortly after his expressed views at the Abuja summit on democracy in Nigeria, el-Rufai obviously endorsed and posted on his X handle (formerly Twitter) a view expressed by one Dr Uche Diala which suggests that rather than any iterated policy deficiencies or disagreements, his opposition to the Tinubu administration stems from an alleged disrespect and disdain towards the North by unnamed supporters of the President. An excerpt from the said Diala’s post reads, “Less than two years into the tenure, we are witnesses to how the relationship between the North and President Bola Tinubu or rather his administration is quickly deteriorating driven by the words and conduct of unfortunately many from the President’s geopolitical zone and tribe, truth be told. I have read and heard the arrogant posturing and braggadocio by some APC members and fellow supporters of President Bola Tinubu, especially from the Southwest geopolitical zone, I wonder if people have any sense of history and if they truly understand Nigerian politics.”

    Attributing President Goodluck Jonathan’s electoral loss to General Muhammadu Buhari in 2015 less to his administration’s non-performance than to “the disrespect and insult directed towards the North” by Jonathan’s Ijaw ethnic group and the Southsouth political zone as a whole, el-Rufai echoes and amplifies Diala’s view that Tinubu is headed for a similar fate. The post’s threat is thinly veiled when it thunders that “Love or loathe that fact, the North remains the kingmaker in Nigerian politics, at least, as of today. Any politician or political party that plays with that political reality might pay a steep political price for it. People who ignore history are bound to fall victim and to repeat mistakes of the past”. Unfortunately, Dr Diala does not name those from the Southwest who have disrespected or insulted the North or how and el-Rufai failed to fill the gap.

    There are those who have accused President Tinubu of unduly favouring the Southwest and especially Lagos in making critical appointments but such perceptions have not come solely from northerners and the allegation has not been backed by scientific empirical rigour. In any case, the same allegation was levelled against Buhari who was accused again in a rather loose manner of what was described as the ‘Fulanization’ of his administration. President Jonathan faced the criticism that his administration was skewed in favour of his ethnic Ijaw and the Igbo of the Southeast. A rather interesting case was that of President Olusegun Obasanjo whose administration was allegedly dominated by Igbo appointees even though he is of ethnic Yoruba extraction although some claim that he may not be genetically unrelated to the Southeast by some yet unproven accident of historical romantic adventurism. Given the ethno-regional configuration of Nigeria, it is unlikely that any President will in the foreseeable future escape this kind of perception and this cannot be a basis for the assertion that the Tinubu administration is anti-North.

    Of course, some analysts have rightly pointed out the over simplistic fallacy of assuming that the North is politically homogeneous and unidirectional. And in truth, the constitutional requirement for the emergence of Nigeria’s President is such that no geopolitical zone can solely play the role of kingmaker. This is why despite amassing at least 12 million votes from the North in three previous elections, Buhari did not realize his ambition until his political tendency had forged a working alignment with the Southwest. And in the same vein, Tinubu’s victory in the 2023 presidential election could not have been possible without the support he enjoyed from the North even though Alhaji Atiku Abubakar’s strategy of seeking to win the election solely through northern votes proved surprisingly effective but for Tinubu’s wide network and political astuteness.

    Atiku had pointedly urged northerners, mainly Hausa-Fulani not to vote for any non-northern candidate and ignored the clamour of five southern governors of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to facilitate the emergence of a National Chairman of the party from the South following his clinching the presidential ticket contrary to the rotational zoning convention of the PDP. Waziri Adamawa calculated that his sweeping northern votes would win him the presidency. Thus, Atiku won in the core Northern states of Yobe, Gombe, Adamawa, Katsina, Bauchi, Kaduna, Kebbi, Sokoto, and Taraba while winning in only Osun, Akwa Ibom and Bayelsa states in the South. However, Tinubu came second in the northern states won by Atiku while also emerging triumphant in such Northern states as Kwara, Jigawa, Nasarawa, Niger, Benue and Kogi states. The electoral dynamics of the election that produced President Tinubu suggest that the ‘North as kingmaker’ hypothesis is overly simplistic and misleading.

    Read Also: Why we’re still in Togo, Benin varsities despite FG’s ban on their certificates —Nigerian students

    Responding to el-Rufai’s rather magisterial assertion that the North would not back Tinubu for reelection in 2027, the National Chairman of the APC and former of Kano State, Dr Abdullahi Ganduje, urged Northerners interested in contesting for President to wait till 2031. Basing his submission on the zoning convention as a political elite power-sharing compact in the Third Republic, Ganduje argued that “When a leader from the northern part of this country was in office for eight years, we advocated that the next president in our party should come from the South. Luckily enough, we worked very hard with the cooperation of Nigerians. Our President has come from the South and he is going inshallah for the second term in 2027. And then after that, it will turn to the northern part of this country”.

    But Ganduje ‘s position was as controversial as that of el-Rufai as some other Northern voices contended that neither man could claim to have a mandate to speak for the North and that they expressed essentially their personal views. In the opinion of a former Secretary General of the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), Anthony Sani, “There is nothing controversial about the statements of the two. This is because none of the two people you have mentioned speaks for the North in so far as partisan politics is concerned. This is because the North can be united politically on issues of real concern to Northerners but when it comes to partisan politics, the North does not act in unison”. It would appear to me that Ganduje struck a more relevant and poignant note when he spoke on the inevitable imperative of the Tinubu administration’s economic reforms and the fruits they are beginning to yield as the basis for urging support for the President’s reelection for a second term.

    According to him, “There is no doubt that many things went wrong over a long period of time and it requires surgery before we can get it right. We are happy that we have started seeing the outcome of the reforms, especially on the economic front, and we believe this will continue to yield positive results so that the legacy and the Renewed Hope Agenda will be achieved”. As I said earlier, the motives for el-Rufai’s criticism of what he regards as the organizational dormancy and institutional inactivity of the APC may not necessarily vitiate the cogency of his analysis. The PDP relied more on its control of the power and resources of the presidency during its 16 years in power from 1999 to 2015 rather than its structural vibrancy and organic linkage with the people. el-Rufai is right that there is a lesson the APC has to learn from the rise and decline of the erstwhile ruling party even though it is obvious that he desires the failure of a party in which he now perceives himself as marginalized.

    Much more than pronouncing with a seeming arrogance that is unhelpful to President Tinubu that there is no vacancy in 2027, Ganduje would be of greater help to the President’s reelection bid if he decides to run by ensuring that he has an efficiently, effectively run and organizationally vibrant ruling party that can add value to the policy process, enhance qualitative governance and astutely manage intra-party tendencies and conflicts. That cannot be said to be the case now at all levels of the party and nothing best illustrates this better than the clumsy impeachment process of the erstwhile Speaker of the Lagos State House of Assembly, Hon. Mudashiru Obasa, as if the legislators are independent members of the House not elected on the platform of a political party.

    Apart from the victories of the party in the Ondo and Edo State governorship elections, Ganduje’s most productive accomplishment as National Chairman of the APC so far is the launching of the newly established Think Tank and Resource Center of the party, The Progressive Institute (TPI) to undertake research and advice the Party on the performance and policies and programmes of all APC governments. In addition to such thoughtful initiatives, he should ensure that party structures and organs function so that its machinery is vibrant and alert to campaign and win elections with minimal reliance on monetization of the electoral process. But is there any rhyme or reason to Babachir Lawal’s rather unhinged assertion that President Tinubu’s policies are turning the North into a vast refugee camp? We will interrogate this claim shortly.

  • 2027: Ganduje fires back at El-Rufai for attacking Tinubu

    2027: Ganduje fires back at El-Rufai for attacking Tinubu

    • APC chairman urges North to wait till 2031

    National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Dr. Abdullahi Ganduje, yesterday fired salvos at former Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai for attacking President Bola Ahmed Tinubu over the 2027 election.

    He urged Northerners interested in contesting for president to wait till 2031.

    President Tinubu will serve his two terms, he added.

    The former Kano State governor said it is daydreaming to think that the Presidency would shift to the North in two years because of the extant North-South zoning agreement.

    “When a leader from the northern part of this country was in office for eight years, we advocated that the next president in our party should come from the South.

    “Luckily enough, we worked very hard with the cooperation of Nigerians.

    “Our president has come from the South and he is going, inshallah, for the second term in 2027. And then after that, it will turn to the northern part of this country,” he told members of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu Media Centre (PBAT Media Centre) and Tinubu Northern Youth Forum (TNYF) during their visit to him at APC National Secretariat in Abuja.

    Ganduje spoke on a day El-Rufai, a founding member of the APC, in a post on his verified X handle, threatened that the North would reject President Tinubu in 2027 the same way President Goodluck Jonathan was rejected by the region in 2015.

    He wrote: “It is actually premature to be talking about 2027 elections less than two years into our first tenure, but what is happening in the political arena is forcing me to speak to it, for as they say, ‘a stitch in time saves nine’.

    “As an APC member, I naturally would want my party to win re-election in 2027.

    “However, as a realist, I have my concerns.

    “I recall that during the 2019 party primaries when I saw the way our party was handling the primaries, I wrote that if the party wasn’t careful, it could go the way of the PDP which lost power after 16 years.

    “I predicted then that if we didn’t return to our promised progressive path and ideology and instead stayed obsessed with just winning elections at any and all cost, just like the PDP, we could lose power at the federal level by 2031.

    Read Also: Anambra 2025: APC’s Ganduje declares game over for Soludo, APGA

    “When I wrote that, we were not faced with the current situation we are faced with.

    “Indeed, I never imagined that we would be in the current situation any time soon, surely not under President Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu.

    “Note: I am not talking about the present economic situation and the likes.

    “I am talking about the current and increasing ‘ghaghagha’ in our party and among APC members and supporters of the PBAT administration.

    “Incidentally, many Nigerians have a short memory. Permit me to juggle the memories of some short memoried and uninitiated political neophytes.

    “Many will recall that, as we approached the 2023 presidential election, with the conduct of some individuals, I desperately cautioned that we should be careful and not play with the North.

    “Somehow, common sense prevailed, and we succeeded, unarguably and undeniably with the unquantifiable help of the North (the records of the election results prove so).

    “Less than two years into the tenure, we are witnesses to how the relationship between the North and President Bola Tinubu or rather his administration is quickly deteriorating, driven by the words and conduct of unfortunately, many from the President’s geopolitical zone and tribe. Truth be told.

    “I have read and heard the arrogant posturing and braggadacio by some people who I refer to as political rabble rousers, but I get more worried each day as it keeps looking more and more like a movie we had seen before.

    “May I remind some persons that, more than the performance or lack thereof of the President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan administration, it was his attitude, and that of people around him, towards the North that ultimately brought him down and by extension the PDP that had boasted that it would rule Nigeria for 60 years.

    “In the lead up to the 2015 Presidential election, in spite of the popularity of General Muhammadu Buhari Rtd and the gathering of political heavyweights under the umbrella of the then newly formed APC, one key factor that led to former President Jonathan and the PDP losing that election was underestimating the North and the disrespect and insult directed towards the North, notably led by the then first lady and accentuated by elements from the Southsouth geopolitical zone and particularly his Ijaw kinsmen, many of them with little or no political weight and many of whom were living full time in NICON and Sheraton hotels Abuja then (with newly found free money).

    “Funny enough, many of these individuals contributed little or nothing to Jonathan’s victory in 2011.

    “Indeed, many of them forgot that it was the agitation by groups like the Save Nigeria Group (SNG), spearheaded by the likes of Pastor Tunde Bakare, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, Mr Yinka Odumakin (RIP) and co that eventually led to then VP Goodluck Jonathan becoming the acting President in the first place following the incapacitation of former President Shehu Musa Yaradua (God rest his soul).”

    He continued: “Driven by ego and the  arrogance of power, these Southsouth and PDP elements increasingly and I dare add naively went against the North, where the PDP still had considerable influence and support then, in the most condescending manner and in so doing gradually lost the support of the North to the advantage of Buhari and the APC coalition. The rest, as they say, is history.

    “Today, as I Iook at the rambunctiousness of some APC members and fellow supporters of President Bola Tinubu, especially from the Southwest geopolitical zone, I wonder if people have any sense of history and if they truly understand Nigerian politics.

    “I read some people say that President Tinubu is not former President Jonathan, Jagaban is a political juggernaut and master strategist, etc.

    “All that I totally agree with. No question whatsoever. However, politics is not a one-champion show.

    “While PGEJ lacked equivalent political gravitas and sophistication (with all due respect to him) as PBAT, he had the then formidable PDP behemoth which could have actually seen him through but for the grievous ‘political mistake’ of messing with the North.

    “Love or loathe that fact, the North remains the kingmaker in Nigerian politics, at least, as of today. Any politician or political party that plays with that reality might pay a steep political price for it.

    “People who ignore history are bound to fall victim and to repeat mistakes of the past.

    “I just want to prod our political senses, in case some of us are forgetting, in the euphoria of tribal and geopolitical politics.

    “I hope better sense will prevail and soon too. It is whom you love that you chastise.

    “In all, I continue to wish PBAT and my party, the APC, well.

    “With almost exactly two years to the month to the 2027 general elections, let’s focus and continue to deliver the promised dividends of democracy to Nigerians.”

    ‘Reforms yielding positive results’

    Ganduje disagreed with the former governor, saying that the dream of power shift to the North in 2027 would be a mirage.

    He said the party would religiously follow its zoning policy of “the North-South sharing formula,” which it had strictly adhered to since 2015.

    Ganduje, who reflected on the threat by El-Rufai, insisted that the next president could only come from the North after Tinubu’s two terms.

    The party chairman, who acknowledged the challenges confronting the country, attributed them to long-standing issues that require bold corrective measures.

    He said: “There is no doubt that many things went wrong over a long period of time, and it requires surgery before we can get it right.”

    Gabduje then expressed confidence in President Tinubu’s policies, pointing out that the country is already witnessing positive results, particularly in the area of economic revitalisation.

    He stressed: “We are happy that we have started seeing the outcome of the reforms, especially on the economic front, and we believe this will continue to yield positive results so that the legacy and the Renewed Hope Agenda will be achieved.”

    The leader of the PBAT Media Centre, Dada Olusegun, said members of the centre would correct the wrong information been peddled against the administration.

    He said the centre would give adequate publicity to the 2027 campaign of the administration.

    The national coordinator of the Tinubu Northern Youth Forum, Mallam Auwal Ibrahim, said his group would deliver five million votes to the President in 2027.

    The group acknowledged that the policies and programmes introduced by the administration have started to yield positive results in the region.

    El-Rufai, others as critics

    Since his ministerial bid collapsed in 2023, El-Rufai has been attacking the administration instead of routing his complaints and misgivings through the channels provided by the party.

    Last week, he joined other politicians and critics, including former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, at the two-day Democracy Conference in Abuja to denounce the Tinubu government and the APC, thereby portraying himself as the face of internal opposition in the party.

    El-Rufai said at the Abuja conference: “I no longer recognise the APC. No party organ has met in two years – no caucus, no NEC, nothing. You don’t even know if it is a one-man show; it’s a zero-man show.

    “The problems that led to the creation of the APC remain unresolved, but I no longer believe the APC is interested in addressing them. The distance between me and the party is widening.”

    Atiku criticised Tinubu, saying that his government had derailed.

    Two days ago, the former vice president visited former President Olusegun Obasanjo in Abeokuta, capital of Ogun State, along with some associates, in a move that was believed to be connected with 2027 elections. He denied it.

    Also last week, former Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi flayed the party leadership for not allowing the organs to function.

    He said the party’s National Executive Committee (NEC) and National Caucus meetings were not held.

    He also took a swipe at the Tinubu government, saying its good intentions are not enough.

    Another APC leader, former Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi, has continuously derided the Federal Government.

  • Anambra 2025: APC’s Ganduje declares game over for Soludo, APGA

    Anambra 2025: APC’s Ganduje declares game over for Soludo, APGA

    The National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Dr Abdullahi Ganduje, alongside members of the party’s National Working Committee (NWC), declared on Saturday in Awka, Anambra State, that the political reign of Governor Chukwuma Soludo and the All Progressives Grand Alliance (APGA) in the state is over.

    Ganduje and the NWC members were in Anambra ahead of the party’s primaries and the November 8 governorship election. The visit coincided with the commissioning of the newly secured APC state secretariat, facilitated by Sir Paul Chukwuma and equipped by Prof. Obiora Okonkwo.

    Chukwuma and Okonkwo are among the aspirants vying for the APC governorship ticket, alongside Prince Nicholas Ukachukwu and two others. The commissioning of the office by Ganduje and his team took on the atmosphere of a political rally, with speaker after speaker declaring that the dominance of APGA in Anambra must come to an end.

    Read Also:APC chairman Ganduje visits Anambra to commission state secretariat

    Addressing party faithful, Ganduje praised President Bola Tinubu for his economic reforms and urged APC aspirants to unite in their mission to wrest power from APGA.

    “We assure you that our President, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, as the most articulate and committed leader, sees tomorrow and knows what to do at any given time,” Ganduje said. “Anambra must connect to the national grid. APC must change the narrative in Anambra, but we must remain focused and vigilant.”

  • Nigeria-Ethiopia ties have been mutually beneficial, says Ganduje

    Nigeria-Ethiopia ties have been mutually beneficial, says Ganduje

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) has emphasized the shared vision of progress, unity and development between Nigeria, Ethiopia and the governing political parties of the two countries. 

    APC national chairman, Dr. Abdullahi Umar Ganduje reaffirmed this at the just concluded Second Congress of Ethiopia’s ruling Prosperity Party (PP) in Addis Ababa

    Prosperity Party is an amalgam of nine political parties founded in 2019.

    Represented by the Deputy National Chairman (North), Hon. Ali Bukar Dalori, the APC Chairman highlighted the historic and enduring relationship between the rwo countries, which he said is rooted in mutual respect, shared values, and common aspirations. 

    He noted that the bond between the two nations has been strengthened through decades of cooperation in diplomacy, trade and cultural exchange.  

    “This gathering is more than a mere political congress; it is a celebration of our shared commitment to progress, unity, and development. It reflects the profound friendship that exists between two great African nations—Nigeria and Ethiopia.”  

    The APC leader underscored the alignment of goals between the APC and the Prosperity Party, both of which are dedicated to uplifting their citizens, fostering economic growth, promoting inclusive governance, and building prosperous futures for their respective countries.  

    “As you gather here to reflect on the achievements since your first Congress and chart a course for the future, I wish you productive and successful deliberations,” he said. 

    Ganduje added: “The challenges we face as nations may differ, but the solutions lie in solidarity, innovation, and a shared commitment to progress.”  

    Dalori then conveyed the goodwill message from President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, reaffirming Nigeria’s commitment to strengthening diplomatic and trade ties with Ethiopia. 

    Read Also: Ganduje receives decampees in Katsina

    He also extended warm greetings to the Nigerian community in Ethiopia, expressing a shared desire for peace and prosperity across the continent.  

    “On behalf of all Nigerians—both those residing at home and the vibrant Nigerian community here in Ethiopia—I extend a heartfelt message of friendship and peace,” he said. “May our nations continue to grow together, united by a shared vision of a prosperous and peaceful Africa.”  

    The event, attended by high-ranking officials of the Prosperity Party, including President Dr. Abiy Ahmed, Deputy Presidents Mr. Temesgen Tiruneh and Mr. Adem Farah, and members of various committees, as well as delegates from local and international political parties, marked a significant moment in the deepening relationship between Nigeria and Ethiopia.  

    Ganduje then called for continued collaboration between the APC and the Prosperity Party, as well as a prayer for divine blessings on both nations.  

    The Second Congress of the Prosperity Party served as a platform to reflect on past achievements and strategize for future challenges, with Nigeria’s APC standing as a steadfast partner in the pursuit of a united and prosperous Africa.

  • Ganduje and constitution of new boards

    Ganduje and constitution of new boards

    Government periodic appointments into boards of parastatals and other federal organisations to manage the affairs of over 500 small governments needed to implement its policies is critical to the survival of the democratization process.  Unfortunately this process has in recent years become a veritable source political party patronage often secured through intense politicking and lobbying by party members.

    When Buhari’s list – with 209 board chairmen and 1,258 board members – came in December 2019 after over two years of haggling and indecision, he admitted not knowing over half of those on the list including a number of names of individuals long declared dead.

    Last week, following almost two years of delay as a result of bargaining and horse trading by politicians, President Tinubu, according to Bayo Onanuga, the Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, last Monday approved the appointment of board chairpersons for 42 federal organisations out of over 500 small governments the president needs to faithfully implement his party manifesto. We were also told the president directed the board chairpersons not to interfere with the management of the organisations, emphasising that their positions are non-executive.

    Much as we have no reason to doubt the capacity and the integrity of most of those currently appointed by President Tinubu, what the nation has often experienced after government’s four year periodic ritual especially since 1999, has been an assemblage of deadwood and failed politicians who just wanted to continue to be relevant by continuous’ sucking of government and its resources.

    The president appeared determined to change the narrative this time around. Without prejudice to his party’s periodic ritual of politicking and lobbying, he seemed to have deliberately gone out of his way for those he believes could add value to his administration.

    For instance Professor Bolaji Akinyemi is our nation’s ‘Sun’. A resourceful intellectual, an outstanding diplomat who played a key role as our external affairs minister to end Chad, Libyan and Mali, Burkina Faso wars, Professor Akinyemi was the brain behind the highly successful Technical Aids Corps Scheme, the concept of the Concert of Medium Powers to mediate within the international system. He was a member of the Uwais panel and deputy chairman of Jonathan’s constitutional conference. He was on the side of Nigeria during the NADECO confrontation with Sani Abacha when the likes of Tom Ikimi and Babagana Kingibe sold their conscience by trading Nigeria for a pot of porridge. To bring him on board, the president had to present Akinyemi as Lagos State candidate as against his Osun State where warring politicians like Rauf  Aregbesola and Gboyega Oyetola  had destroyed the APC over their ego battle for its soul before trading it for PDP, a fact confirmed by Governor Adeleke. 

    Of course, the president’s deliberate efforts did not preclude the emergence on the list of some other self-proclaiming patriots including the likes of Abdullahi Ganduje.  In fact it will not be out place to assume that Ganduje, a man with history of endless political wars, mischiefs and intrigues and for whom there is never a dull moment, nominated himself as chairman of the Governing Board of Federal Aviation Authority of Nigeria (FAAN). This becomes a force majeure when it reached the president’s table. In any case, when it comes to party patronage, the buck stops at the desk of the national Chairman of APC.

    The only charitable conclusion is that Ganduje outwitted the president.

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    After all, Ganduje from 1984-1994 occupied various positions within the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Abuja. In 1994 he was Kano State Commissioner for Works. From there he in 2007 moved on to become the Executive Secretary of the Lake Chad Basin Commission in Ndjamena. Although a full time job, workaholic Ganduje could not resist combining the job with that of the chairmanship of the Governing Council of Federal Polytechnic Ado Ekiti. A workhorse, he was so dedicated that for his board meetings in Ado-Ekiti, he would first fly from Ndjamena to Kano and from Kano to Abuja from where the vehicle sent from Ado-Ekiti would ferry him down to Ado Ekiti for a board meeting which may not take off until 7pm.

    At close to 77, Ganduje, the national chairman of APC and the recently appointed chairman of the Governing Council of FAAN, has pledged to continue his selfless service to the nation.

    I wish to align myself with Ganduje. With his past record of service to the nation, I have no reason to doubt his competence and ability to do more than one thing at a time. And contrary to his envious detractors from his native Kano, I cannot see any contradiction between presiding over the affairs of the FAAN and meeting the demands of his office as chairman of APC which involve strategies for recruitment of party membership, retaining those so recruitment  and periodic fundraising and internal party governance. For even his political foes, the outstanding performance of his party in Edo and Ondo in recent times was evidence enough Ganduje was on top of his games.

    But for those who hate Ganduje with a passion, I think it is the case of a prophet without honour in his own country. His detractors seem to come more from his own Kano State, where he and his good friend Rabiu Kwankwaso have been consumed by politics of ‘deposition and imposition’ of Emirs, demolition and reallocation of supporters’ physical properties in Kano in the last eight years. Since the duo did not tell us the source of their bitterness and endless war, outsiders think it must have been over the control over Kano resources, a common weakness among our greedy and selfish political elite. Many also consider Ganduje and his warring rivals’ political failures for their inability to exploit their past relationship in the age of innocence before their exposure to great wealth to liberate the people of Kano from pangs of sorrow and pains of hunger

    There was recently a trending picture of Ganduje and Kwankwaso moving around on a Vespa motorcycle on the streets on Kano in the early seventies; many thought that was a relationship both could have exploited to change the fortune of Kano.

    Lagos State Security Trust Fund which changed the face and character of Lagos was first launched in 2007.  Many outside Kano believe that if beyond primitive accumulation, the duo came together to exploit their past friendship to launch Kano Almajiri fund, such could have in three years cleaned up Kano.

    Meanwhile, all hail Abdullahi Ganduje, the nemesis of political foes, un-fearing Emirs and political benefactors who, at close to 77 has continued to ride against the tide.

  • Ganduje receives decampees in Katsina

    Ganduje receives decampees in Katsina

    The National Chairman, All Progressives Congress (APC), Dr Abdullahi Ganduje, has received no fewer than 40,000 decampees from various political parties in Katsina State.

    Ganduje received the defectors at Ingawa Local Government Area (LGA) yesterday, during the inauguration of  the APC campaign for the council elections scheduled for February 15.

     According to the APC national chairman, the new entrants included thousands of the members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and New Nigerian People’s Party (NNPP).

     He added that one of the decampees was Alhaji Rabiu Gambo, a former PDP state chairman, who was also its Deputy Governorship candidate in the 2023 General Elections.

     According to Ganduje, the return of the other political parties’ members to the APC is an indication that the party is the only honest,  with a transparent leadership in the country.

    He told the decampees that they were equal members of the party, promising that they would be treated like the old members in terms of party activities and leadership.

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     Ganduje assured them to feel at home as they were bonafide members of the party, vowing,”any opportunity given to the old members, they are also entitled to it.”

    He called on the members of the party and the people of the state to come out en masse during the election to vote for APC candidates across the 34 LGAs of the state.

     Governor Dikko Radda, while appreciating the decampees, assured them of the cooperation towards moving the state forward.

     Radda said it was a great success by the party to receive such a large number of the members of the other political parties into the APC, saying that the party was not afraid of election at any time.

     He expressed confidence that in the forthcoming local government election, the party would win all the positions, assuring President Bola Tinubu that Katsina was an APC state, and it would continue to be so.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the highlight of the event was the presentation of the APC flags to all the chairmanship candidates of the party in the 24 LGAs of the state.

  • Ganduje, Abe, Afikuyomi, others get board chairmanships

    Ganduje, Abe, Afikuyomi, others get board chairmanships

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu has approved the appointment of board chairpersons for 42 federal organizations and a secretary for the Civil Defence, Immigration, and Prisons Services Board.

    The President also named a new Managing-Director for the Nigerian Railway Corporation and a Director-General for the National Board for Technology Incubation (NBTI).

    In a statement released on Thursday by Special Adviser to the President on Information and Strategy, Bayo Onanuga, the appointments were described as part of the administration’s efforts to strengthen governance and institutional performance.

    President Tinubu directed the appointed board chairpersons to respect their non-executive roles and refrain from interfering in the day-to-day management of their respective organizations.

    The appointments take immediate effect.

    Among the key appointees are Hon. Hillard Eta (Cross-River) as Chairman of the National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) and Prof. Bolaji Akinyemi (Lagos) as Chairman of the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs.

    Former Kano State Governor, who is the National Chairman of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Abdullahi U. Ganduje, has been named Chairman of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN), while Secretary of the party, Sen. Surajudeen Bashiru Ajibola, takes on the role of Chairman of the National Sugar Development Council.

    H.E. Sulaiman Argungu has been appointed Chairman of the Nigeria Bulk Electricity Trading Company, and Sen. Magnus Abe will serve as Chairman of the National Agency for Great Green Wall.

    Barr. Festus Fuanter will chair the National Teachers Institute, while Raji Kazeem Kolawole has been named Director-General of the National Board for Technology Incubation (NBTI).

    Chief Victor Tombari Giadom is now the Chairman of the Nigerian Institute of Educational Planning and Administration, and Comrade Mustapha Salihu takes on the role at the Teachers Registration Council of Nigeria.

    Read Also: Niger tanker explosion: A heartbreaking tragedy – Ganduje

    Hon. Hamma Adama Ali Kumo will chair the Industrial Training Fund, and Donatus Enyinnah Nwankpa has been appointed Chairman of the Nigerian Institute of Science Laboratory Technology.

    Sen. Abubakar Maikafi has been named Chairman of the Sheda Science and Technology Complex, and H.E. Nasiru Gawuna will chair the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria.

    Sen. Tokunbo Afikuyomi has been appointed Chairman of the National Office for Technology Acquisition and Promotion, while Chief D.J. Kekemeke will serve as Chairman of the Nigerian Postal Service.

    Other notable appointments include Hon. Musa Sarkin Adar as Chairman of the National Inland Waterways Authority; Prof. Abdulkarim Kana Abubakar as Chairman of the National Steel Council; and Hon. Garba Datti Muhammad as Chairman of the National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency.

    Mu’azu Bawa Rijau has been appointed Chairman of the National Biosafety Management Agency, and Hon. Durosimi Meseko will chair the Nigerian Building and Road Research Institute.

    In the health sector, Hajia Zainab A. Ibrahim has been named Chairman of the Federal Teaching Hospital, Gombe, while Aare Durotolu Oyebode Bankole will chair the Federal Teaching Hospital, Ido-Ekiti.

    Mr. Abdullahi Dayo Israel has been appointed chairman of the Federal Medical Centre, Abeokuta, and Dr.  Mary Alile Idele will chair the Federal Medical Centre, Asaba.

    Additional appointments include Nze Chidi Duru (Federal Medical Centre, Lokoja); Hon. Emma Eneukwu (Federal Medical Centre, Owerri); and Mr. Uguru Mathew Ofoke (Federal Medical Centre, Umuahia).

    Barr. Felix Chukwumenoye Morka will chair the Federal Medical Centre, Yenagoa, while Alh. Bashir Usman Gumel has been named Chairman of the Federal Medical Centre, Yola.

    Dr. Ijeoma Arodiogbu will chair the David Umahi Federal University Teaching Hospital in Ebonyi State; and Chief Edward Omo-Erewa has been appointed Chairman of the National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency.

    Yusuf Hamisu Abubakar will lead the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), and Hon. Ali Bukar Dalori has been named Chairman of the Nnamdi Azikiwe University Teaching Hospital, Nnewi.

    Hon. Lawal M. Liman will chair the Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital in Zaria, and Dr. Abubakar Isa Maiha will oversee the Federal Medical Centre, Katsina.

    Isa Sadiq Achida has been named chairman of the Raw Materials Research and Development Council (RMRDC), while Dr. Mohammed Gusau Hassan will chair the Federal Medical Centre, Birnin Kudu; and Amb. Abubakar Shehu Wurno will chair the Sokoto-Rima River Basin Development Authority.

    Augustine Chukwu Umahi will lead the Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital, while Engr. Babatunde Fakoyede will chair the Federal Scholarship Board.

    Finally, Hon. Shola Olofin has been named chairman of the Nigerian Social Insurance Trust Fund. Dr. Kayode Isiak Opeifa has been appointed managing director of the Nigerian Railway Corporation; and Major Gen. Jubril Abdulmalik (Rtd) will serve as Secretary of the Civil Defence, Immigration, and Prisons Services Board.

  • Flush out bandits from forests, Ganduje tells Military

    Flush out bandits from forests, Ganduje tells Military

    The national chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Dr. Abdullahi Umar Ganduje has emphasized the need for more proactive and decisive measures, particularly targeting the criminal elements hiding in forests, to effectively address banditry in the country.

    He said the solution to the menace of armed banditry is to conquer the forest where the criminal elements are now hiding.

    Ganduje made the suggestion when he led the National Working Committee (NWC) of the party on a sympathy visit to the Niger State Governor, Mohammed Umar Bago over last week’s tanker explosion in Dikko, Gurara Local Government area of the state.

    Advocating an offensive security operations strategy, Ganduje praised the efforts of Governor Bago in maintaining peace within the state despite its vast landmass and numerous forests.

    In a statement issued by chief press secretary, Edwin Olofu, Ganduje, expressed concern about the reactive approach often adopted in addressing the festering banditry attacks in different states of the country.

    Recalling how he was able to tame the bandits in Falgore forest in Kano State during his tenure as governor, Ganduje advocated for military intervention in forests by turning it into a military training ground, eliminating criminal activities in the areas.

    “We are here to pray to our friend, our brother and the good people of Niger State, we sincerely condole with the government and the good people of Niger, the families of the deceased and the injured ones.

    “We appreciate how you keep Niger State safe because Niger State has the largest land mass and with the highest numbers of forest in the country which is a herculean task to keep the peace within its environs”.

    Read Also: Kwankwaso, Ganduje must reconcile in Kano’s interest-Kofa

    “Your Excellency, the solution to this menace is to conquer the forest. The bandits are in the forest, why have we been on the defensive instead of being on the offensive? When I was the governor of Kano State I requested through the federal government that the military take over Falgore Forest and the military built a military training ground there that was how bandits were chased away from that forest and Kano is at peace“

    Ganduje also conveyed condolences to the people of Niger State over the recent tanker explosion that claimed numerous lives, offering prayers and support to the families of the victims.

    In response, Governor Bago appreciated the solidarity of the APC leadership and urged the Federal Government to address critical infrastructure, such as the Suleja-Minna road, to reduce accidents and improve safety in the state.

    “I’m standing before you on behalf of Nigerlites, we appreciate this visit. We are doing a lot to create awareness among our people about the dangers of scooping fuel whenever such an accident occurs.”