Tag: Nasir el-Rufai

  • Godfatherism: Group backs El-Rufai’s comment

    A group has supported Kaduna state Governor, Malam Nasir el-Rufai’s views on godfatherism in Nigerian politics, noting that it is a nationalistic issue that inhibits the development of Nigerian democracy and self-reliance among youths.

    Governor El-Rufai recently lampooned the scourge of godfatherism in Nigeria, but the El-Rufai National Media Support Group in a press conference on Wednesday in Kaduna, told reporters that the issue needed to be viewed with all seriousness, as it inhibits youths development, making the youth dependent on moneybag politicians.

    Addressing the media in Kaduna, National Chairman of El-Rufai National Media Support Group, Hon. Musa Aliyu Kalli said that the Governor’s comment should serve as a tonic to correct the notion of moneybag politicians who capitalized on youth’s vulnerability to use and dump them after election without recourse to their future.

    According to the group, the governor’s statement on godfatherism needed to be seen as a corrective measure to help rejuvenate Nigeria’s democratic governance. They however tasked the youth to seek to be self-reliant and shun moneybags seeking votes to play demigod.

    Read Also: No apologies on how to defeat Lagos godfather — El-Rufai

    Kalli, who urged that el-Rufai’s view be seen as holistic and embraced by all, said that, “Governor el-Rufai is more of a nationalist than a regional politician hence he is speaking from the position of a nationalist, and his points need to be viewed so to put godfathers in politics in the right perspective.

    “People need to ponder on the comments instead of condemning them. Governor el-Rufai’s track record as FCT minister are there to point to the fact that he is a nationalist. He has never acted as a regional leader, all he is after is a better living condition for all, irrespective of tribe, religion or political affiliation, Hon. Kalli added.

    The National Chairman, called on youths to rededicate themselves to the cause of uplifting the democratic setting through a more reformed process and shun godfatherism for a Nigeria that is devoid of acrimony.

    He added that the Governor is more concerned about the wellbeing of the youth of the nation, hence his call to shift ground from godfatherism in politics and play developmental democracy.

     

  • El-Rufai the godfather slayer

    Kaduna State Governor, Nasir El-Rufai, is something of an enigma. To some he is a straight talker given to shooting from the lips. Others would say he shoots first and reflects later – thus pushing him into the category of loose cannons.

    This past week his soundbites made front page news because we are stuck in the political season and there’s still plenty of room for intrigues as the new government at the centre takes shape. That very process has implications not just for good governance in these next four years, but also in the unofficial race to succeed President Muhammadu Buhari come 2023.

    It is against this backdrop that the governor’s comments about ‘godfatherism’ at the Bridge Club in Lagos, can be analysed. First, El-Rufai bragged about retiring four notorious godfathers in his state – making him something of an expert in that sort of political warfare.

    Responding to a question as how to bring those who presently call the shots politically to heel, he proffered the following solution:

    “Here in Lagos, you have over six million registered voters, only about a million voted (in 2019 general elections); five million did not vote. If I want to run for governor of Lagos, I will start now. I will commission a study to know why those five million registered voters did not vote; where do they go on Election Day?

    “Then I will start visiting them for the next four years. I will try and get just two million of them to come and vote for me; I will defeat any godfather. The key is to go to the people. The card reader and the biometric register have given us the tools to connect directly with the people.

    “I assure you if you do that for the next four years, connecting with the people; the tin godfather, you will retire him or her permanently. But it is hard work; it requires three to four years of hard work. So, if you want to run in 2023, you should start now.”

    At the same Bridge Club event, he called on Buhari to deal with ‘desperate’ and ‘over-ambitious’ elements within the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) whose activities, he said, could make the president’s second term difficult from day one.

    The governor’s position implies that these ‘overambitious’ politicians were starting to manoeuvre towards the next electoral contest too early – given that the president hasn’t been inaugurated for his second tenure.

    Given the time and place, many have jumped to the conclusion that El-Rufai was addressing his comments to a particular individual – even when he didn’t mention names. You only had to read between the lines.

    My concern is not so much about the target of his verbal arrows. I am more disappointed that for a man who many would describe as among the brighter minds in the APC, his comments are full of suppositions and contradictions. Stripped of their capacity to ignite controversy, they only make the governor look like a hypocrite speaking from two sides of the mouth.

    First, the claim that he saw off four godfathers in Kaduna is impressive if that achievement was actually down to the governor’s political prowess. Sadly, he didn’t mention those he put out of business.

    While the governor would understandably want to claim credit for winning the governorship polls in Kaduna in 2015 all by himself, another school of thought argues that back then he wasn’t a political giant or giant-killer who could have triumphed on the basis of his popularity.

    Rather, he was one of scores of politicians who were swept into office across the north clinging to the coattails of Buhari. Indeed, such was the force of the bandwagon back then that in many places in the region a dog would have been elected into office simply because of his association with the then APC presidential candidate.

    So for El-Rufai to rashly appropriate the success of the party in his state back then as a function of his political sagacity – without finding a place for the Buhari factor circa 2015 – is a bit rich. I doubt if he would have been elected governor – on his own steam – if he had run on a platform like the Peoples Redemption Party (PRP) – shorn of the president’s pull.

    Another assumption is that the low turnout of voters at the recent general elections – in Lagos especially – was a protest against some supposed godfather. It is as simplistic an explanation as I have heard for a phenomenon that was widely reported across the country.

    If anything, voter apathy was driven by a complex mix of factors: among them disenchantment with the political class – godfathers, godsons and godfather slayers. In many places the outcome of the presidential election was a depressant to those who expected a different result. The upshot was they chose to vote with their feet. Others simply assumed that their votes wouldn’t count during the governorship contest that followed, so didn’t bother to come out.

    Part of El-Rufai’s counsel to aspiring godfather slayers in Lagos was for them to start working now. He said the project would require four years of hard work to succeed.

    Without any sense of contradiction, the godfather elimination expert who wants politicians to start planning for electoral success four years ahead, is the same person calling on Buhari to ‘deal with’ ‘desperate’ and ‘over-ambitious’ individual who are already scheming for the 2023 contest which is still four years away! How do you spell doublespeak!!!

    In other words, it is okay to work ahead if your aspiration is limited to Lagos, but unacceptable to carry that same mind-set to a political project in Abuja. Contradictory, if you ask me.

    As if the president does not have enough troubles on his plate, El-Rufai now wants him to move full tilt into the witch-hunting business – sniffing out ‘desperate’ and ‘overambitious’ politicians. The first hurdle he would run into is providing the means for measuring when ambition is acceptable and when it is excessive.

    You can never achieve anything in politics or any other walk of life without a healthy dose of ambition. I dare say that it was his ambition – the nameless godfathers he allegedly slew would most probably say ‘over ambition’ – that ensured he is the governor of Kaduna today. In fact, some swear that he has his own ‘next level’ 2023 aspirations. So should the president crack down on him also?

    It is sad that people who should be encouraging the liberalisation and the expansion of our democratic freedoms would be encouraging a militaristic mind-set that seeks to circumscribe what the constitution has freely given to citizens.

    All Nigerians who are eligible for public office should be free to aspire as long as they meet the legal requirements. It is not for El-Rufai or any other person to pick and choose for the electorate. Let the people deal with the ‘desperate’ and ‘overambitious’ using their votes – and not some office holder however eminent.

     

  • El-Rufai and his infantile tantrums

    MALLAM Nasir El-Rufai is an awfully awkward person. As Governor of Kaduna State, he has enough problems on his plate. From the daylight banditry and the menacing activities of kidnappers who have taken over the major artery into Kaduna, his state capital, to the farmers-herders conflict and religious discord and insensitivity stoked by his Muslim-Muslim governorship pair, the governor has enough security issues to contend with. Elected for a second term apparently on the back of President Buhari’s popularity and a few weeks to mount the saddle again, El-Rufai is already setting his sight on the 2023 Presidential Election. And perhaps to smoothen his campaigns, he is engaging in self-sponsored lectures and talk shops, aimed at laundering his public image.

    It was in continuation of that, that El-Rufai came to town recently to lecture us on how to defeat godfathers. He spoke at a forum organised by an unknown group called the Bridge Club, led by his protégé and private lawyer, Mr. A. U. Mustapha (SAN). Mustapha betrayed what many already knew about the gathering- an image-laundering project for the governor-when he unwittingly announced that the idea behind the event was for El-Rufai to come and tell the club members about himself as “opposed to the image being given him by the press”.

    El-Rufai said at the forum that godfathers existed only on paper or in the minds of the people and that the key to defeating them was in going directly to the people. In his characteristic immodesty, he boasted he defeated and retired four political godfathers in Kaduna State without naming the godfathers.

    Everything about the gathering was to unravel when in a vainly-disguised and badly-choreographed plan, three-time commissioner in Lagos State, Mr. Muiz Banire (SAN), got up to enquire from the lecturer how godfathers could be dealt with.

    This is how El-Rufai responded: “Godfatherism. This is Lagos. Let me tell you something Sir; you know, Kaduna State used to be like that. There were three or four politicians in Kaduna that you could not become anything unless you had them on your side. Those were the godfathers of Kaduna politics and you had to carry them along and you know, the three words “carry them along” mean paying them regularly.

    He added: “Here in Lagos, you have over six million registered voters, only about a million voted (in 2019 general election); five million did not vote. If I want to run for governor of Lagos, I will start now. I will commission a study to know why those five million registered voters did not vote, where do they go on Election Day? Then I will start visiting them for the next four years. I will try and get just two million of them to come and vote for me; I will defeat any godfather. The key is to go to the people. The card-reader and the biometric register have given us the tools to connect directly with the people. I assure you if you do that for the next four years, connecting with the people, the tin godfather, you will retire him or her permanently. But it is hard work; it requires three to four years of hard work. So if you want to run in 2023, you should start now”.

    Both El-Rufai and Banire, it would appear, are using the word godfather as an allegory for Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, the APC National Leader. Asiwaju, it must be pointed out, became a godfather who ought to be retired in the thinking of Banire because he failed to get the backing of the APC leader to become governor after being in government effectively for 16 years (four years as Special Adviser from 1999 when Asiwaju came in as governor and commissioner for three terms of 12 years). Asiwaju was no godfather for all those years because Banire got all he wanted. The bubble busted only when he couldn’t get to be governor in 2015.

    El-Rufai excoriates and labels Asiwaju a godfather, yet each time he encountered the same man, he groveled around him, apparently wanting to benefit from the power and influence of the same so-called godfather. You can then imagine how self-serving the questioner and the questioned can be. How altruistic are the duo of El-Rufai and Banire? Perhaps they are out to replace their alleged godfather with themselves as godfathers.

    Now, let us examine El-Rufai’s assumptions and prescriptions. He said, and quite rightly too, that the key to being governor is to go directly to the people, pointing out that a princely sum of N2billion should be set aside over three to four years for the project. But El-Rufai forgot that if money could do it, the political predators like former Presidents Obasanjo and Goodluck Jonathan and the duo of PDP presidential candidate Atiku Abubakar and outgoing Senate President Bukola Saraki would have long captured Lagos. No amount of money was considered too huge in their expedition to capture Lagos. Indeed, Obasanjo pulled all stops, including deploying massive state resources in a bid to stop Asiwaju’s re-election as Lagos Governor in 2003 and the emergence of Mr. Babatunde Raji Fashola as governor in 2007, but the people flatly rejected his overtures.

    In 2015, former President Jonathan moved to Lagos from where he coordinated his and PDP’s plans to take over Lagos. Again, it was all to no avail. If money was all that was required, the duo of Atiku and Saraki would have foisted their PDP candidate Jimmy Agbaje on Lagosians, as opposed to the people’s candidate, APC’s Babajide Sanwo-Olu, all in a bid to spite Tinubu for their disastrous failure in the 2019 elections. If money is all that is required to win elections, Muhammadu Buhari would not have been president today. Mallam Aminu Kano would not have been able to cast his name in iron in the minds of the people of Kano.

    El-Rufai is reputable for his ways. The label on him of a destroyer rather than a builder, his tag as Mr. Bulldozer and the one who has upped the ante of discord and insensitivity in a religiously-volatile state with his Muslim-Muslim governorship pair should trouble him matter of factly.

    El-Rufai has nobody but himself to blame for finding himself in this sorry situation where his image would require serious repair.  From Abuja where he was FCT Minister to Kaduna State, he superintended over an administration hallmarked by the preponderance of cronies in positions of authority, those who see him as their godfather, and one in which demolition of structures he labelled illegal was promoted to a deliberate directive policy.

    El-Rufai is averse to alternative views. Those who hold such views are categorised as enemies who should be hounded and their properties pulled down on flimsy grounds. If in doubt, ask Senator Suleiman Hunkuyi and Alhaji Inuwa Abdulkadir, the APC National Vice Chairman, North-West. El-Rufai brooks no opposition. He is loyal to no one else but himself. Former President Obasanjo, in his book “My Watch” Vol. 2, said “El-Rufai’s penchant for reputation salvaging is almost pathological”.

    The former president was nail on the head when he said El-Rufai lacked the capacity for loyalty and consistency. For the same man moving to ridicule godfathers was once godson to former Vice President Atiku who brought him into Obasanjo’s cabinet and politics. How did he pay him back? He castigated Atiku and stabbed him on the back when he needed him most.

    But I think the people of Lagos know better. They have consistently made their choice along the progressive line. They know the leaders they can trust. The Asiwaju Tinubu that we know believes in the people. He connects very well with the grassroots. Asiwaju’s continued relevance flows from his recognition, appreciation and respect for the people. The people have always been the cornerstone of his politics and it’s from them that he draws his essence. This essence and the high esteem majority of Lagos people hold him is not down to money I think. No amount of money can do this.

    Again, Asiwaju is noted for placing high premium on merit and competence. Some of the people he has supported to assume leadership positions in Lagos and beyond represent some of the best in the land. Leaders who believe in the people, invest in them and accord them the recognition and respect they deserve like Asiwaju will continue to enjoy the people’s support and admiration, as opposed to some others with no redeeming value now masquerading as a true leaders.

    • Hamisu Suara is a political analyst based in Abuja

     

     

     

  • Youths to El-Rufai: Don’t disgrace yourself

    THE Yoruba Council of Youths Worldwide has warned Kaduna State Governor Nasir el-Rufai to desist from acts that could earn him disgrace from the Yoruba nation

    Addressing reporters in Lagos, the council’s president, Aremo Oladotun Hassan, said the statement credited to el-Rufai saying he would teach Lagosians how to end Godfatherism was “abysmally insulting”.

    Hassan queried why the governor would leave his Kaduna State, which is under intense insecurity and fears.

    He said el-Rufai lacked the credibility to utter such seditious statement in a Yoruba land.

    The youth leader wondered how someone, who ought to focus on how to end insecurity and abject poverty ravaging his state and region,  would “come to the megacity, the Centre of Excellence and the commercial nerve centre of Nigeria and Africa’s emerging economic hub to claim he wants to end Godfatherism”.

    Hassan said: “Even as he claimed that he had ended Godfatherism in Kaduna, we are yet to see the benefits of his political victory in the lives of the people of Kaduna and the development of the state, unlike Lagos where our progressive leader of leaders has great successes to show.

    “Our so-called ‘Godfatherism’ system helped in sustaining the struggle against opposition in Nigeria and led to the building of the strong political party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), that made it possible for the enthronement of President Muhammadu Buhari, which also helped the same el-Rufai become the Kaduna State Governor.

    “Our so-called ‘Godfatherism’ helped sustain Lagos as the commercial hub of Nigeria and the fifth largest economy in Africa.

    Read also: Banditry: Insecurity ‘ll be over soon – El-Rufai

    “Our so-called ‘Godfatherism’ has produced some of the best brains, who are currently an integral part of Nigeria’s political base and socio-economic development today, thriving in all sectors of the economy, with succinct track records of excellence and landmarks achievements in the country.

    “Our so-called ‘Godfatherism’ has put Lagos as the most viable self-sustaining state in Nigeria today.

    “Our so-called ‘Godfatherism’ has made Lagos among states with the best infrastructure in Africa, leaving no stone unturned towards achieving greater heights as one of the world’s leading economies.”

    The youth leader said his members would reject any attempt by any individual, no matter how highly placed, to intrude or disrespect political leaders in the Southwest.

    He added: “Governor el-Rufai is renowned for being too overzealous for power. He is a harbinger of crises. Hence, his previous contemptuous stands on issues of national development, being override with his penchant for ethnic bigotry and indiscriminate devaluation of humanity. We condemned his crocodile tears in its entirety.

    “Nigerians still kept fresh in their memories the hate speech and treasonable felonious statements credited to Governor el-Rufai on threats of mass genocide and killings in body bags he issued to international observers during the last 2019 election, a repetition of what is happening in Southern Kaduna, which almost caused the nation a huge embarrassment and a disaster, if not for our intervention as future heirs of Nigeria.

    “Going back to memory lane, we cannot forget in a hurry the double jeopardy situation, where some traitors in Yoruba land collaborated with some hegemonic structures to betray the late sage of great memory, Chief Obafemi Awolowo, and we will never allow history to repeat itself.”

  • Kajuru: Police arrest suspected killer of traditional ruler

    Operatives of the Nigeria Police Force have arrested the suspected kidnapper and killer of the traditional ruler of Adara chiefdom in Kaduna state, Maiwada Galadima.

    The monarch was killed in October last year while he was on his way to his palace after he accompanied Governor Nasir el-Rufai to Kasuwan Magani where he went to commiserate with the community members following the violence that claimed many lives.

    The police said the suspect, Abubakar Ibrahim alias Dan Habu, 37 years and a native of Kabam in Igabi local Government Area of Kaduna state confessed to kidnapping and killing the traditional ruler.

    A statement in Abuja by the Force Spokesman, DCP Frank Mba also stated that the operatives arrested 17 other suspected notorious kidnappers who belong to various gangs and recovered from them, 22 AK 47 riffles, five locally fabricated pistols and a cache of live ammunition.

    Mba attributed the success made to the arrest of the “Spiritual Father” of kidnappers and armed bandits operating in the northern part of the country, Mallam Salisu Abubakar.

    He said Police detectives attached to Operation Puff Adder, through a series of detailed, intensive and sustained investigative operations, successfully arrested 18 more notorious kidnappers and armed robbers at different times and places across the country.

    On how the arrest was made, he said: “The combined team of crack detectives from IRT, TIU and other Operatives, using actionable intelligence obtained from the spiritual god father of the kidnappers and other multiple sources, tactically “smoked out” the kidnappers and armed bandits from their hide-outs in Birnin Gwari, Rijana, Katari, Mai Daro and Buruku forests in Kaduna State before they were eventually arrested at different locations and times in Kaduna, Katsina, Niger and Kogi states respectively.”

    He said investigations carried out have positively linked the arrested suspects to some of the most heinous crimes committed in kaduna States and its environs in recent times.

    Read Also: Banditry: Police arrests more criminals in Katsina

    “Specifically for example, Abubakar Ibrahim alias Dan Habu, aged 37 years and a native of Kabam in Igabi local Government Area of Kaduna state, who was arrested on the 15th April 2019 at Rigachikun in Igabi Local Government Area of Kaduna State, confessed to the Kidnapping and gruesome murder of HRH King Agom Adara of Kajuru LGA and many other kidnappings and murders.

    “Similarly, the arrested gang members were also indicted by investigations for the kidnap and murder of Mallam Yakubu Usman, 40 years old male of Jere LGA, Kaduna State and many other crimes.”

    Mba said the 18 male suspects are currently in Police custody and assisting in the on-going investigations. The suspects are; Johnson Okafor 44 years, native of Anambra State and resident of Suleja Local Government Area of Niger State; Shaibu Iliyasu Alias Smally, 20 years native of Rijiana Kaduna Road Abuja; Ishaik Dabo Alias Keke 38 years native of Maraban Jos Igabi LGA of Kaduna State; Mohammed Nasiru 25 year native of Manunfashi LGA of Katsina State; Aminu Haruna 25 years native of Galadimawa Village in Giwa LGA of Kaduna State; Shafiu Alhaji Gudau 25 years native of Sabuwa LGA of Katsina State; Auwalu  Hamisu 24 years native of Tashan Fulani village in Manunfashi LGA of Katsina State and  Ado Ya’u, 35 years native of Rigoji Village in Kafur LGA of Katsina State.

    Others are; Ibrahim Yusuf, 30yrs native of Kujama Village Kaduna State; Ibrahim Audu, 22yrs native of Kujama Village Kaduna State; Salisu Ajah, 50yrs native of Galadimawa Village Giwa LGA Kaduna State; Nasiru Umaru, 25yrs native of Manumfashi LGA Katsina State; Magaji Abubakar, 27yrs native of Kujama Village Kaduna State; Salisu Ali, 18yrs native of Kujama Village Kaduna State; Lawal Shadari, 22yrs native of Rijiana Village Kaduna State; Junaidu Lawal, 18yrs native of Rijiana Village Kaduna State and Usman Musa, 43yrs native of Rijiana Village Kaduna State.

    He noted that the suspects who belong to different gangs are fairly independent but vicious criminal gangs, adding that their operations are centrally coordinated by their spiritual god father Mallam Salisu Abubakar.

    The police noted that efforts are currently being intensified to arrest other gang members still at large, and recover all weapons in the gangs’ armory.

    The Inspector General of Police, Ag. IGP Mohammed Adamu while commending his men for the feat, reassured the nation that Force working in concert with other security agencies will not rest on its oars until kidnappings and other violent crimes are subdued, and sanity restored to the land.

  • UPDATED: 3 killed as Kaduna imposes 24-hour curfew on Kajuru

    Following the fresh crises that erupted in Kasuwan Magani area of Kajuru council on Thursday that claimed three persons with a house razed, the Kaduna State government has imposed a 24-hour-curfew on the area.

    Announcing the 24-hour- curfew on Kajuru, Samuel Aruwan, Governor Nasir El-Rufai’s Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, said the curfew took immediate effect.

    It was gathered that trouble started when the body of a Hausa boy was found in a well.

    In reprisal, some Hausa boys allegedly attacked Adara boys in the area.

    The two Adara boys, according to a source, were coming from the market when they were attacked and beaten by some Hausa boys.

    One of them was rushed to the St. Gerard Catholic Hospital where he died on Friday morning.

    The source said:” Two of our boys were coming from a local market in the evening on Thursday and decided to follow the bypass.

    “They were attacked and thoroughly beaten by some Hausa boys. One of them was taken to St. Gerald Hospital where he later died as a result of the beating.”

    The incident sparked apprehension, forcing the deployment of security operatives in the troubled community.

    Commissioner of Police, CP Ahmad Abdulrahman told reporters more personnel have been deployed to the area to enforce the curfew and maintain peace in the area.

    Confirming the incident, the Chairman of Kajuru Local Government, Cafra Caino, said the situation had been brought under control.

    He said the curfew imposed on the area by the state government was to avert further violence.

    “Yesterday there was tension and security personnel were deployed and the whole area was cordoned,” the chairman added

  • We’re in talks with El-Rufai on release of Adara leaders – Commission

    The Chairman of Kaduna State Peace Commission, Reverend Josiah Idowu-Fearon has said the commission is in talks with state governor, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai on the release of Adara Community leaders in detention.

    Rev. Idowu-Fearon made this known during a press briefing in Kaduna, saying that he and the vice chairperson of the commission had an audience with the governor El-Rufai, where he was briefed on the request made by the community, particularly on the release of their leaders in detention.

    According to the peace commission chairman, “the governor decided that it’s the police that detained them, so that they can go and do fact finding, but when they are properly arraigned he can… we are hoping that he will play his own part.

    “I want to cease this opportunity to tell our brothers and sisters in the community that at least we have spoken with his Excellency. We believe that the police will quickly present the case, so that his Excellency will intervene.”

    In his address, Rev. Fearon also assured that the crises in the local government will soon be curtailed.

    The Peace commission chairman, who described the recurring violent confrontations in the Kajuru council as worrisome, said he chaired a stakeholder meeting at the Council’s Secretariat on Tuesday of April 15th and he was pleased with the show of commitment to peace among residents of the area.

    Read Also: Atiku needs help – El-Rufai

    He said the local government and communities had already constituted a peace and reconciliation committee to address the drivers of the conflicts.

    He reiterated that, “the Kaduna State Peace Commission has assured the communities of its commitment to support them in the process, until lasting peace is attained.”

    According to Rev Fearon, “the challenges of insecurity in many parts of the state are quite worrisome. This is most prevalent in Birnin Gwari council as well as many parts of Chikun, Giwa, Igabi, Kachia, Kajuru, Kagarko and Kauru councils.

    “We appeal to the people of the state, as well as the security agencies to join hands to address this unfortunate situation of armed robbery, raiding of villages, kidnapping, rustling of cattle and other forms of rural crimes.”

  • El-Rufai sacks political appointees

    KADUNA State Governor Nasir El-Rufai has directed all political appointees to submit letters of resignation by April 30.

    The move to enable the governor to exercise his constitutional prerogative to decide on re-appointments while also giving the Ministry of Finance adequate time to compute severance payments and reconcile any liabilities.

    According to the directive, each notice of resignation must be submitted along with a handover note, signed by the political appointee on behalf of the ministry, department agency (MDA) or office to which he or she had been appointed.

    “All resignation letters should be properly addressed to the Principal Private Secretary,” the statement said.

    A statement issued by the governor’s spokesman, Samuel Aruwan, stated that El-Rufai thanked all political appointees for their contributions and service to the state during his first-term.

    The statement reads: “As he constitutes the team that will assist him in his second-term, the governor said he expects the process to be enriched by the handover notes from the political appointees, and the report of the Transition Committee headed by the Deputy Governor-elect, Dr. Hadiza Sabuwa Balarabe.

    Read also: El-Rufai and challenges of consolidation

    ”The following appointees are expected to comply with the directive: All Commissioners in the State Executive Council, All Permanent Secretaries, Special Advisers, Directors-General, Executive Secretaries, Managing Directors, General Managers and other Heads of Agencies, Senior Special Assistants, Special Assistants and Technical Assistants to the Governor, other than the Kashim Ibrahim Fellows.

    “Excluded from compliance with this directive are full-time commissioners of certain State Executive bodies, who retain their tenured appointments in the following agencies: i. Fiscal Responsibility Commission, Civil Service Commission, Judicial Service Commission, Assembly Service Commission, the State Independent Electoral Commission (SIECOM), the Peace Commission, Public Procurement Authority and Water Regulatory Authority.”

  • El-Rufai sacks all political appointees

    As he commences selecting the team for his second-term in office, Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai has directed all political appointees to submit letters of resignation by 30th April 2019.

    The governor will exercise his constitutional prerogative to decide on re-appointments while giving the Kaduna State Ministry of Finance adequate time to compute severance payments and reconcile any liabilities.

    According to the directive, each notice of resignation must be submitted along with a handover note, signed by the political appointee on behalf of the MDA or office to which he or she had been appointed. All resignation letters should be properly addressed to the Principal Private Secretary.

    A statement by the Governor’s spokesman, Samuel Aruwan, stated that Malam Nasir El-Rufai has thanked all political appointees for their contributions and service to the state during his first-term.

    He said: “As he constitutes the team that will assist him in his second-term, the governor said he expects the process to be enriched by the handover notes from the political appointees, and the report of the Transition Committee headed by the Deputy Governor-elect, Dr. Hadiza Sabuwa Balarabe.

    Read Also: El-Rufai praised for health initiatives

    “The following appointees are expected to comply with the directive: All Commissioners in the State Executive Council, All Permanent Secretaries, Special Advisers, Directors-General, Executive Secretaries, Managing Directors, General Managers and other Heads of Agencies, Senior Special Assistants, Special Assistants and Technical Assistants to the Governor, other than the Kashim Ibrahim Fellows.

    “Excluded from compliance with this directive are full-time Commissioners of certain State Executive bodies who retain their tenured appointments in the following agencies: i. Fiscal Responsibility Commission

    1. Civil Service Commission

    iii. Judicial Service Commission

    iiii. Assembly Service Commission

    1. The State Independent Electoral Commission (SIECOM)
    2. The Peace Commission

    vii. Public Procurement Authority

    viii. Water Regulatory Authority

    “Due to recent adjustments in roles within the government, the occupants of and recent appointees into the following offices are also exempted from the directive to resign: a. Commissioner of Finance

    1. Principal Private Secretary
    2. Accountant-General
    3. Special Adviser, Intergovernmental Relations
    4. Managing Director, Kaduna Markets Development Company
    5. Managing Director, Kaduna Investment and Finance Company, and
    6. Any other political appointee sworn-in or appointed to their current role within the last six months.”
  • El-Rufai and challenges of consolidation

    What will Kaduna State Governor Mallam Nasir El-Rufai do differently in his second term? Correspondent ABDULGAFAR ALABELEWE examines the challenges that will confront his administration.

    THE challenges before Governor Nasir El-Rufai of Kaduna State are as enormous. The challenges are unique, more daunting and they require a lot of deliberate policy actions to tackle them.

    Aside the burden of delivering the dividends of democracy, like roads, hospitals, potable water, housing and education, El-Rufai has a peculiar burden of security challenges ranging from banditry, kidnapping, ethno-religious crisis and farmer/herder clashes to contend with.

    But, as daunting as the challenges seems, they are not as tasking as the division that exists among the people of Kaduna State along ethno-religious lines. This is one big challenge that often ignite crisis in the state.

    Security

    The government of El-Rufai since inception in 2015 inherited killings in the southern part of the state, occasioned by clashes between farmers and herdsmen. The challenge has since then been a difficult one to address. What stands farmer/herder clashes out in the south, unlike the northern axis is the difference in religion of the actors.

    The challenge of farmer/herder clash is an age-long one, which had its resolution rested on the shoulders of the community leaders. However, in Southern Kaduna, the crisis assumed a level of monumental destruction of lives and property, because the community leaders could no longer apply the traditional dispute resolution instruments.

    What makes the dispute resolution between farmers and herders difficult in Jema’a, Kachia, Kajuru and Sanga local government areas, unlike in Zaria, Igabi and Kudan, is because the predominant farmers are the indigenous Christians of southern Kaduna, while herders are predominantly Fulani.

    Therefore, every clash that claims lives of farmers is seen as an attempt to exterminate the southern Kaduna Christians. It is usually interpreted as a continuation of the Usman Danfodio Jihad of 1804.

    One factor that may have worsened the situation is the 2011 post-election violence. The crisis, caught some trans-border Fulani herdsmen who were on transit to other African countries in southern Kaduna, where many of them were killed. This led to reprisal attacks several months after. The situation continued until the coming of the current governor in 2015.

    El-Rufai has though made several efforts to address the situation, ranging from attracting the presence of more security agencies. For instance, a Nigerian Army operations based and a Mobile Police Squadron unit are now located around Kafanchan and Kachia. But, efforts of the governor were interpreted as taking sides with the herdsmen, because El-Rufai himself is incidentally of Fulani extraction.

    However, while the security approach has worked to a large extent, pockets of such clashes reoccur intermittently during harvest periods. Therefore, the governor has the task of complimenting the security approach with a standing farmer/herder conflict resolution committee under his founded Kaduna Peace Commission.

    Another disturbing security threat that Governor El-Rufai has to address during his second term in office is the armed banditry and cattle rustling in Birnin-Gwari Local Government. The situation has equally claimed many lives, but unlike, the farmer/herder clashes in southern Kaduna, the Birnin-Gwari situation seems to have defied security approach. In fact, 11 soldiers were killed during a single attack in 2018.

    The Kamuku Forest of Birnin-Gwari, which connects Niger, Kano, Katsina and Zamfara State has for years comfortably housed the criminals who terrorise all the neighbouring states.

    At inception, Governor El-Rufai and his colleagues from other states foresaw the danger posed by the forest, a situation which made the Kaduna State governor to raise alarm that it may become another Sambisa, if they fail to pull resources together to root out the criminals. The governors responded and got the Federal Government to deploy the military to the area. But the military effort has apparently not yielded the desired results, as depicted by the recent killings in Zamfara and the unabated cases of kidnapping, killings, robbery and cattle rustling in Birnin-Gwari Local Government of Kaduna State.

    Governor El-Rufai therefore needs to go back to the drawing board with the security agencies, to device a new means of tackling the menace. There is also the need to fix the the Birnin-Gwari/Kaduna road. The governor needs to do a serious follow up on his recent disclosure that the Federal Government and the Dangote Group have signed a pact to fix the road. Commercial motorists say the present bad condition of the road allows the bandits to have a field-day, by picking travellers for ransom on the road.

    Just like the Kaduna/Birnin Gwari road, Kaduna/Abuja road has also in the past few years become notorious for kidnapping. Initially, passengers use to dread travelling on the road in the morning hours and in the evening between 6 and 7pm. The situation has worsened, as kidnappers now operate anytime of the day, despite security presence at every U-turn.

    Report has it that the kidnappers operated everyday in the afternoon last week, until Governor El-Rufai’s convoy ran into them during an operation on Wednesday.

    As wielding the big stick has not really yielded the desired results on Kaduna/Abuja road, the need to adopt the new tactics suggested by one-time Commandant of the Nigerian Defense Academy (NDA), General Paul Tarfa, is becoming inevitable. Tarfa had recently suggested that the best way to root out the kidnappers from Kaduna/Abuja highway is by taking the fight to the criminals in the bush.

    He said: “Since it has been identified that the criminals attack and go into the forest to hibernate, the best thing to do to root them out is take the fight to them in the forest. The forest must be combed; otherwise they will keep on coming back to the road.”

    Unity

    Unity is, without doubt, the biggest challenge before El-Rufai. This, just like the security challenge, predated the emergence of his government, but the problem has become worse even in the face of effort to address it.

    The people of Kaduna State are divided, with the River Kaduna separating the state into two main camps: the Christians’ south and the Muslim’s north. The predominant Christian people of southern Kaduna have no iota of trust in their Hausa Fulani brothers in the northern and central part; the former even accuse the latter of domination.

    Analysts say the division and mutual suspicion among the people of different faiths became apparent in Kaduna, shortly after the return of civilian rule in 1999. The situation worsened after the shari’a crisis of year 2000 and the Miss World crisis of 2002, when Christians living in the northern part of Kaduna metropolis started relocating to the south and vice versa.

    Though, El-Rufai has plans to address the wrong settlement pattern of the state capital, the governor needs to do more than that to enjoy the confidence of all, especially now that he and his Deputy-Governor elect, Dr. Hadiza Balarabe, are Muslims.

    Those who know El-Rufai very well say he cares less about ethno-religious background in his appointments. Rather, he pays more attention to the appointee’s capacity to deliver on the assigned duty. He confirmed this when justifying the choice of Dr. Balarabe prior to the election. He said: “Government House is neither a church nor mosque. So, we are not coming here to preach, but to work for the people of Kaduna State.”

    He went further to explain that Dr. Hadiza Balarabe’s rich credentials stood her out among 32 candidates earlier penciled down for the job.

    The governor’s argument on the choice of Dr. Balarabe has however not changed anything, as far as the people of southern Kaduna are concerned. Though the deputy governor-elect is from Sanga Local Government, which is part of southern Kaduna, but because she is a Muslim they do not see her as one of them.

    The governor needs to walk his talk by being fair to all, irrespective of their political, religious and ethnic background and ensure equitable distribution of developmental projects and state resources. This is most likely to change the perception of those who openly accuse him of religious bigotry and hatred for the Southern Kaduna Christians.

    Education

    No doubt, the administration of Governor El-Rufai has initiated and implemented a lot of reforms in the education sector. It has identified and dealt with the rot in the primary education which, he said, was the faulty foundation responsible for the inherited failure of students at WAEC level. This reform led to the sack of over 21,000 unqualified teachers and the recruitment of about 25,000 qualified ones.

    Also in the area of school infrastructures, 413 schools have so far been renovated. A set of two-storey primary school buildings, the first of its kind in the state, have been completed at various locations where there was huge population of pupils beyond the existing schools’ carrying capacity.

    These strides and other reforms notwithstanding, the burden before Governor El-Rufai is the need to get hundreds of thousands almajiri children off the streets and return them to the classroom.

    The government at its inception in 2015 came up with the idea of banning streets begging, but the ban was not properly enforced. Now is the time to enforce the ban, especially on school-age children. If the almajiri children are taken back to the classrooms, it will prevent them from being ready tools in the hands of criminals.

    Health

    For the health sector, there is a big challenge for the administration in its second term. The challenge is however not insurmountable, especially now that there is high hope that the government will be able to secure the $350million loan it was granted by the World Bank last year. The loan could not be accessed by the state because the three senators from Kaduna State opposed it on the floor of the Senate. But now, El-Rufai’s men have defeated two of the senators in the last election and have reiterated their commitment to securing the loan for the state.

    The problem with the health sector in Kaduna State is lack of adequate functional Primary Healthcare Centres (PHCs). This challenge has for years affected the health of vulnerable groups, such as women of child-bearing age and children under the age of five.

    El-Rufai himself while presenting the 2016 budgets in December 2015 expressed concern that the state records over 103,000 maternal deaths annually and also loses 95 babies out of every 1000 births. He attributed the situation to lack of ante-natal care, medical facilities and inadequate medical personnel.

    The governor also warned that if drastic interventions are not put in place to save the lives of pregnant women and children, the maternal and infant mortality rate will go higher. It was in an effort to reverse the trend that his government and General Electric (GE) signed a pact to equip 278 health care facilities in the state.