Tag: Muazu Babangida Aliyu

  • 2015: Security confiscates Aliyu’s illegal posters

    2015: Security confiscates Aliyu’s illegal posters

    … I’ve no hand in it-Aliyu

    Security agents at the early hours of yesterday stormed a printing press in Kaduna and confiscated illegal posters of the Niger State Governor, Dr. Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu, for 2015 Presidential campaign being printed, a development the Governor distanced.

    Acting on a tip-off, a team of Police and State Security Service (SSS) officers had stormed the press where copies of the A3 size illegal posters were been wrapped and billed to be ferried to and posted at strategic places at the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and major towns in Niger State.

    The printing of the illegal poster, which is believed to have been sponsored by a group, Concerned Citizens for Change & Transparency, has bold picture of the Governor with the logo of the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP) simply reads, “Vote for Change Chief Servant Babangida Aliyu Mu’azu (Talba Minna) for Presidency 2015 insha-Allah).”

    Reacting to the development, Governor Aliyu at a one-day North Central Geopolitical Zone Security Awareness workshop in Minna, yesterday, distanced himself from the fake and illegal poster depicting his Presidential ambition for 2015.

    Aliyu told the gathering, which had top brass of the Police Command and other security agencies, that he has not printed any poster for 2015 Presidential election and appealed that should such poster be found, security operatives should not hesitate to destroy the poster and arrest the sponsors.

    He recalled that he had to order the removal of similar posters of Governors Sule Lamido of Jigawa State and Chibuike Rotimi Amaechei of Rivers State that were placed on strategic places in Minna, Niger State capital recently.

  • 2015: Security confiscates Aliyu’s illegal posters

    ... I’ve no hand in it-Aliyu

    Security agents at the early hours of yesterday stormed a printing press in Kaduna and confiscated illegal posters of the Niger State Governor, Dr. Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu, for 2015 Presidential campaign being printed, a development the Governor distanced.

    Acting on a tip-off, a team of Police and State Security Service (SSS) officers had stormed the press where copies of the A3 size illegal posters were been wrapped and billed to be ferried to and posted at strategic places at the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) and major towns in Niger State.

    The printing of the illegal poster, which is believed to have been sponsored by a group, Concerned Citizens for Change & Transparency, has bold picture of the Governor with the logo of the ruling People’s Democratic Party (PDP) simply reads, “Vote for Change Chief Servant Babangida Aliyu Mu’azu (Talba Minna) for Presidency 2015 insha-Allah).”

    Reacting to the development, Governor Aliyu at a one-day North Central Geopolitical Zone Security Awareness workshop in Minna, yesterday, distanced himself from the fake and illegal poster depicting his Presidential ambition for 2015.

    Aliyu told the gathering, which had top brass of the Police Command and other security agencies, that he has not printed any poster for 2015 Presidential election and appealed that should such poster be found, security operatives should not hesitate to destroy the poster and arrest the sponsors.

    He recalled that he had to order the removal of similar posters of Governors Sule Lamido of Jigawa State and Chibuike Rotimi Amaechei of Rivers State that were placed on strategic places in Minna, Niger State capital recently.

  • Aliyu blames Nasarawa killings on poor intelligence gathering

    Niger State governor Dr. Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu yesterday blamed the intelligence gathering of security agencies, especially that of the police on the sordid ambushing and killing of scores of Police and State Security Service officers in Nassarawa State on Wednesday by members of an occult group.

    Speaking at the opening of the one-day North Central Geopolitical Security Awareness workshop in Minna, the governor said the operation that led to the “unfortunate” killing of the officers would have been avoided if adequate intelligence were gathered.

    According to the governor, “From my understanding and information available to me, what happened in Nassarawa Eggon few days ago was probably due to lack of commitment. What that type of operation required was silent, speed and surprise.

    “I am sure that the people in Nassarawa Eggon got information that the police were coming and what I would have expected or what any intelligent person would expect is in advancing people to the area so that even if there are plans on the ground, they could even abort that

    particular exercise until a more appropriate time for the attack.”

    Recalling how a fundamentalist Islamic group, Darul Salam, was dislodged from Mokwa, Niger State few years ago, Aliyu attributed the success of the operation to perfect security intelligence exhibited by the police and other security agencies, because according to him, “those who embarked on the exercise were from outside the state and did not know of their mission until they got to Mokwa, the scene of the incidence in order to avoid leakage of information to those affected.”

    X-raying the challenges facing security agencies in the country, Aliyu suggested total overhauling of the recruitment procedure into the services in order to overcome the present security challenges confronting the nation with emphasis on intelligence gathering.

  • Northern Governors’ Forum condemns killings in Nasarawa, Benue states

    Northern Governors’ Forum condemns killings in Nasarawa, Benue states

    The Northern States Governors’ Forum has expressed shock and sadness over the killing of policemen and other security agents by a militia, known as Ombatse, at Assakio village in Nasarawa State.

    The forum’s Chairman and Governor of Niger, Dr Babangida Aliyu, said in a statement that “no grievance can justify such a dastardly act against law enforcement agents.’’

    The statement signed by the Governor’s Chief Press Secretary, Danladi Ndayebo, condemned the killing of many farmers and destruction of property by Fulani herdsmen in Agatu Local Government Area of Benue.

    Aliyu called on security agencies to ensure that the perpetrators are caught and brought to justice, to prevent a recurrence.

    He said it was unacceptable that security agents should become easy target for criminal elements.

    He called on the authorities to commence the prosecution of 10 of  those, who allegedly perpetrated the Agatu mayhem.

  • Servant-leadership and team spirit in Niger

    Servant-leadership and team spirit in Niger

    The Sunday edition of The Nation newspaper of July 22 featured a short take on Niger State in the “Political Ripples” column (Page 21). The writer subjectively titled his political commentary as “Between Aliyu and Yahaya”. This is not only misleading and presumptuous but also disrespectful to the person and office of the Executive Governor of Niger State, Chief Servant (Dr.) Muazu Babangida Aliyu. There is no way the appointing authority, which in this case is Chief Servant MB Aliyu, can be placed on the same pedestal as his appointee, which in this case is the Chief of Staff, Prof. Muhammed Kuta Yahaya. We shall soon return to this.
    In the commentary in question, the writer stated, inter alia, that “within the political and government circles in Niger State today, the fear of Professor Mohammed Yahaya is said to be the beginning of wisdom for many politicians and civil servants”.
    Pray, which Niger State is the writer referring to? Certainly not the one we all know, live in, and work for. This is a state where peace and tranquillity reign supreme; where the Chief Servant conducts governance in an open and transparent manner with love and humility. The people are not treated just as the object of governance but as participants and partners whose views, inputs and contributions are indispensable to the successes recorded so far in every strata of life by the administration.
    The political class in Niger State is one of the most mature, sophisticated, and public-spirited in the entire country; not for us is any of the sectarian strife, political violence, bickering and polarization that we have witnessed in other parts of the country. Niger State has the distinction of being home to two former Heads of State; rather than this fact tearing the state apart or heating up the polity, the state has been able to convert this uniqueness to great advantage with the leadership qualities of the Chief Servant.
    There is no disquiet amongst the political class in Niger State; neither are there rumblings in the state’s civil service as a result of a so-called super appointee whom the article in question chose to rate even far and above the appointing authority. If we may ask again: Where on earth does such an anomaly exist? The wheel of the Niger State civil service grinds efficiently without rancour and power struggle, thanks to the immense wealth of experience that the Chief Servant brought from the Federal civil service and which he deployed to make our state civil service one of the best and most professional in the country today. We are proud of the civil service that we have today; it is a worthy legacy which Dr. Aliyu shall bequeath to Niger State after a meritorious eight-year service.
    The author was right when he stated that Prof. Yahaya was Secretary to the State Government in the first dispensation of Dr. Aliyu as Chief Servant; but again he got it all wrong when he proceeded from that premise to state that the said Prof. Yahaya “is regarded by many as the most powerful man, who allegedly determines who gets what, when, and how in the North Central state”.
    What a fallacious statement! Those faceless “many”, whom the writer attributed that unsubstantiated statement to, must be jaundiced indeed! It shatters the boundaries of reason and logic to say that the clay is superior to the potter; don’t you think so? If a single official, who was appointed, were to become the de facto and de jure as the writer laboured to establish, though unsuccessfully, what becomes of the established and time-honoured machinery of government in the state? Where is the role of the state executive council? What becomes of the executives of the ruling party in the state? This is not to talk of the Chief Servant himself on whose desk the buck stops; or has that stopped being the defining character of the presidential system of government that we now operate in this country?
     It is just not true that a single person wields the enormous power as outlined in the write-up; even the Chief Servant, who by law is empowered as the Chief Executive Officer of the state, delegates a lot of his duties, functions, and powers to a plethora of officers of whom Prof. Yahaya is just one. In the Presidential system that we operate, there are other arms as well as tiers of government which serve as checks and balances on the executive arm of government. The state House of Assembly and the judiciary are independent of the executive. In Niger State, this is truly so. There are also the local governments, which form the third tier of government, which also run their own show according to rules and regulations stipulated by the country’s constitution. In all of this, there is no magic that anyone would conjure that would make him or her man ride rough-shod over everyone else, more so when we have exited military dictatorship.
    The writer of the article in question exposed his under-hand in the last paragraph of his piece that dripped with malice and which can be seen as obvious political propaganda when he said “Yahaya’s closeness to the governor may have fuelled speculations in the state that he is being prepared for the governorship seat in 2015, a development which may pitch the governor against some powerful retired generals in the state who have a different game plan for the 2015 race”.  2015: That magical date again! So this really is not about Prof. Yahaya but about some people’s   designs towards 2015! Prof. Yahaya is a mere pawn on the political chessboard of those who have started the 2015 race in 2012! Focusing on Prof. Yahaya is the peg they need, as it were, to prosecute their political agenda.
    Otherwise, how can ordinarily reasonable people accuse a Chief of Staff to a governor of being “close” to the governor? Do they want him to be very far away or to be estranged from the governor?  Do they understand the duties of a Chief of Staff? Is there a way he can creditably perform the functions by being far removed from the governor? At any rate, the Chief of Staff is not the only appointee of the governor who is close to the governor; there are so many other appointees and civil servants who, by virtue of the responsibilities bestowed upon them, must be close to the governor. This is as it should be, not only in Niger State but also all over the country.
    Prof. Yahaya was at the nation’s premier university, University of Ibadan, before Dr. Aliyu appointed him Secretary to the State Government during the first dispensation; he is therefore not the obtrusive politician that some people would have us believe. The professor rightly saw his appointment as a call to duty despite his unparalleled love for his vocation as an academic. The confidence reposed in him by the Chief Servant humbled him and made him to give his all to the assignment – and that is what he has done since he joined the government of Niger State.
    Prof. Yahaya is not about to be deterred in his single-minded determination to continue to give his all to the service of his home state. He is grateful for the opportunity that he has had to work at close quarters with the Chief Servant; to say that he has learnt a lot will be an understatement. His commitment is to the success of the government of Dr. Muazu Babangida Aliyu; his goal is none other than the goal of the Chief servant. To those who have goals that are at variance with the best interest of our dear Niger State, we advice them to please find somewhere else to ply their disruptive trade. The government is focused on, and committed to, delivering the dividends of democracy to the good people of Niger State and shall not be diverted from this singleness of purpose. There is no schism or polarisation in the state civil service; there is no animosity amongst the Chief Servant’s team; and there is no tension state-wide amongst the political class
    • Bamidele, Journalist and public affairs analyst writes from Abuja.