Tag: politics

  • Politics of exco composition in Benue

    Politics of exco composition in Benue

    Correspondent  UJA EMMANUEL writes on the intense lobby for executive council positions in Benue State by politicians and other stakeholders.

     

    Since Benue State Governor Gabriel Suswam sacked the Secretary to the government and 11 commissioners, there have been intense lobbying for cabinet positions by many politicians. Anxiety has also gripped the remaining five commissioners who were no were not affected by the sack, following feelers that they may be re-assigned to new portfolios.

    It was the first major cabinet shake-up since 2007 when the governor assumed office. Suswam issued a stern warning that nobody should lobby him or his deputy ,Chief Lawani, for appointment. He said the sacked commissioners had served the state and should come to terms with the reality that they cannot be in the cabinet for ever.

    Many believe that the dissolution was long overdue. However, the criteria for the sack and retention of four commissioners was strange to them.

    There is also disquiet in the various political camps over the fate of the affected commissioners because they were very close to the governor. Some influential political leaders are already mounting pressures on Suswan to re-appoint them. Some of the commissioners involved in the intense lobby to bounce back are Hon. John Ngbede( Water resources and Environment), Hon. John Tondo( Lands and survey) and Hon. Benjamin Ashaver(Works and Transport).

    Those mounting pressures on the governor on their behalf are of the opinion that, apart from performance, they are tested and trusted.

    There is also the feeling that Governor Suswam is very unfair to the trio of Ngbede, Ashaver and Tondo, who worked hard to ensure that he was re-elected for a second term and remained loyal when he was defending his mandate at the tribunal and court.

    Besides, the three of them command large followers, especially among the youths who are the strength of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) the state. Others have reasoned that their premature departure from the cabinet may likely affect the chances of the party in the future electoral contests. Some party leaders felt that the former commissioners may team up with the opposition to wreck havoc on the PDP.

    “John Ngbede is forced to reckon with in his Apa/ Agatu area and the entire Zone C,while Bejamin Ashaver is the only man from Sankera in the PDP who could check Professor Daniel Saror, his uncle, who contested the election against Suswam on the ticket of All Nigeria Peoples party (ANPP. John Tondo is the toast of the PDP youths as he has empowered many of them”, said a PDP chieftain in Makurdi.

    A youth leader in Gboko local government, Comrade Terwase Akure, told The Nation that those sacked from cabinet are incidentally the ones supporting Suswam to build the PDP and those retained have not added much value to the party. “The end of the PDP may be near becaue those sacked from the cabinet are popular and they may team up with the APC”, he added. But those retained disagreed with this view, saying that they are loyal to the party and the administration.

    To avoid any political calamity, Akure appealed to Governor Suswam to reappoit Asahver, Ngbede and Tondo in the interest of the party.

    It is not clear whether the governor will yield to these appeals. Lask week, he read a riot act to the PDP chieftains. He said that any political appointee who engages in 2015 campaigns would be sanctioned. They grumbled at this threat.

    For now, the ruling party and other stakeholders are waiting for the new list of commissioners. Many believe that the composition may shape the political calculations ahead of 2015 in the state.

     

  • ACN, group accuse Ladoja of playing dirty politics

    ACN, group accuse Ladoja of playing dirty politics

    The Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) in Oyo State yesterday said the inaction of some former governors gave Oyo the image of the dirtiest state in Nigeria.

    It accused former Governor Rashidi Ladoja of playing “dirty politics” with the urban renewal programme of the Governor Abiola Ajimobi administration.

    Ladoja had accused the government of insensitivity in the demolition of shops, adding that it should have provided alternative markets before the demolition.

    In a statement by its Publicity Secretary, Mr. Dauda Kolawole, ACN condemned Ladoja’s criticism.

    It said: “The example of the Bola Ige administration given by Ladoja was self-serving and inappropriate because the late Cicero relocated an entire market to Gbagi.

    “What the Ajimobi admiinistration is combating is street trading and erection of shops by the roadside, which have had grievous effects on our people. Often times, vehicles veer off and kill them. The shops are often built on drains and canals and these lead to flood.

    “If Ladoja is comfortable with our people trading under the Molete Bridge with its attendant dangers to their lives, we are not. Ajimobi moved them to the Scout Camp where about 2,000 decent markets are available for them. Those trading by the roadside in Challenge, Oke Ado, Bode and Idi Arere also benefited from the Scout Camp market.

    “Ajimobo has provided an auto mart at NITEL in Molete for those selling cars indiscriminately at Oke Ado. For those displaced at Gate, Loyola, Sawmill, Onipepeye and Iwo Road, he provided a market on the NITEL/Old Ife road. He provided the Plank Market at Ajoda for those relocated from the Saw Mill area.

    “For those formerly at Sango/UI, Oremeji, Poly Road, the Trade Fair Complex was provided to take care of them. For those at Agbeni/Ogunpa, Labaowo and Akilapa, the government has provided the Olorunsogo (SAWIA) alternative.

    “We challenge Ladoja to name the market he built during his inglorious term. What alternative did he provide for the church and construction company he demolished on Ring Road?

    “What alternative did he provide when he demolished shops at Orita Aperin-Adesola, Orita Aperin-Elekuro, Orita Aperin-Adekile and Academy Under-Bridge?

    “Oyo State has gone beyond the dirty politics that threw up Ladoja and his cohorts. Our people remember his administration as laid-back with zero initiative.”

    Also yesterday, a group, the Asiwaju Grassroots Foundation (AGF), condemned Ladoja’s “statement” that the Ajimobi administration should not attempt to rig the forthcoming council election.

    AGF Coordinator Alhaji Bello Folawiyo said the statement should not have come from a man whose party (Accord) enjoys “largesse” from the Ajimobi administration.

    He wondered why somebody the governor holds in high esteem would utter such “a reckless statement”, which he said is capable of disturbing the peace in the state.

    Folawiyo urged Ladoja to desist from “cheap blackmail” and face the numerous challenges facing him and his party.

     

  • Don’t mix religion with politics – Atiku

    Don’t mix religion with politics – Atiku

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar has urged religious leaders to help the country by separating religion from  politics.

     The former Vice President said, had this been the case few years ago, the nation would have been spared the needless controversies and dissipation of energies that trailed the introduction of Sharia in some parts of the North.

     In a statement issued by his media office in Abuja on Tuesday, the former Vice President said though Muslims are free to practice Sharia in line with Islamic injunction, it was important for religious  rulers to ensure that they do not give politicians the leverage to “smuggle religion into our politics.”

     “The interests of our country will be better served if our religious rulers ensure that religion is taken away from politics and by our politicians not dragging politics into religion,” the Turaki Adamawa said.

     Atiku has dismissed allegations that he wants one of his sons to become the Governor of Adamawa State.

     According to the former Vice President, all his children are content to pursue professional lives in their various callings and that he had no business imposing his choices on them.

     He said such allegation could only have come from idle minds and busybodies looking for cheap publicity or finding someone to blame for their political problems.

     

  • Polity, Politics  and Politicians

    Polity, Politics and Politicians

    THE turf is, no doubt, tough. For more than four years now, I have used this platform to comment on the political environment, the politicians who parade themselves as leaders and the nature of politics in the country. Of central concern to me is how the activities of those who seized or happened on power underdevelop Nigeria. I have raised issues with the Visionless Vision 20:2020.

    Questions have been asked here about the principles that inform actions of those in power and reasons for the loud silence from the general public. Commentaries, reports and investigations on critical national issues have formed the fulcrum of my activities in the past 25 years. And, I believe it is time to look back, serve the menu in a different dish and see if the soul of the country can be stirred thereby.

    This is the main reason for the compilation of my articles and the launching coming up on Tuesday. Throughout my period of reporting politics, dating back to The Nigerian Economist days, the same questions have been repeatedly asked and they are still relevant today. What is the political turf made of? Who are the major and fringe players? What is the mode of recruitment? What are the motives for actions taken by the rulers?

    Elections present special challenges to reporters and politicians. When you are striking a balance, you please nobody. When, based on objective analysis, you come to the conclusion that the pendulum would swing in a particular direction, the other camp raises the alarm. You could only have been bought over. With the loser, you could never win.

    During the period that I have been privileged to stand in the gap for the people, the powerless and dispossessed, I have, many times, received insults. Been hounded about and exposed to danger. I covered riots and wars. Yes, I was in Liberia, but was lucky to have survived. In a country where men in power see themselves as the law, criticisms are regarded as sacrilege. This has never deterred me from talking to power. The attendant angry responses were many.

    These scenes are covered in The Nigerian Political Turf: Polity, Politics, Politicians, due to be presented to mark my years in journalism. It is indeed a first volume of a work that even a careful selection could have reduced to about 1,000 pages. The 362 pages represent a forerunner to a more powerful second volume that will be released by His grace next year.

    The underlying philosophy is that, if Nigeria must change for the better, the discerning section of the public must rise to the challenges of the moment, we must work to free our country from vampires who have held it hostage. And, where we see men who have contributed positively to the change movement, we need to acknowledge them. This is done in the present volume and more will come in the second part.

    To underscore this, Dr. Kayode Fayemi of Ekiti State will be on hand to deal with the theme of the book. He is billed to speak on Nigerian Polity, politics and Politicians: The perspective of an active participant. All patriots and nationalists have been invited to come around to reason together. It is a platform for discussion and sharing ideas.

    It is time to revisit what when wrong in past Republics and transition schemes. How did General Ibrahim Babangida impact on the polity? How and when did the promise fade? What impact did his ban on oldbreed politicians and the attempt to breed a new leave on the turf? What informed the endless IBB, Abacha transition schemes? What about the interim arrangement. How was the house built and why did it crumble within three short months?

    The most important task before us as a people is to ask: What is the way out. Dr. Fayemi has the charge to lead this discussion and provide us with food for thought as we prepare for a very uncertain future. It cannot be the end of the debate. It cannot foreclose further discussions, but, with dignitaries with Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, Alhaji Aminu Tambuwal, Governors Fayemi, Uduaghan, Fashola, Amaechi, Gaidam, among others, there is no doubt that the outcome would advance the course of progress and advancement.

    The future is here. We all must put our hands on deck to save a sinking shape. I am, overall, convinced that the future will be brighter than the past.

     

    • This article was first published on August 5, 2012.

  • Kalu and Abia politics

    Kalu and Abia politics

    Of recent, the media has been inundated with the infantile vituperation of some journalists of Lagos based media trying to defend their benefactor, former Governor Orji Kalu, who likes to seek attention where none exists.

    I have read the accounts presented variously by the media and I am able to decipher that they are all headed in one direction, to create noise in abundance. But it is not his fault, he wants to divert attention by mocking at our collective and corporate intelligence. Are those noise makers not aware that their benefactor is now gallivanting in a political valley and wilderness, and therefore seeking desperately to gain undue attention by telling them to attempt a comparison between him and Governor Theodore Orji?

    No amount of money can purchase integrity because it is not a commodity. What I find difficult to understand is why Kalu thinks he can always fool all the people all the time. He is angry because he has failed to supplant the incumbent governor of the state with his former deputy; he was beaten flat in his own game. In as much as we want to set records straight, I will try to avoid replying him and his workers word for word because doing so will give him undue attention and comfort since his motive is mainly to be seen as someone who is in popularity contest with a sitting governor.

    The rejection of Kalu both in PDP and Abia is not the fault of Governor Orji but his own fault and everybody knows why. Today, he is saying he left PDP because of Obasanjo, tomorrow he will say Jonathan is a bad man and the next time he will abuse PDP and Orji, all to no avail. Governor Orji was a civil servant and was later redeployed to Government House where he played the role of an administrative and intellectual back bone of Kalu’s government to the extent that he was considered good enough to become governor, at a time the EFCC and Obasanjo were at the heels of Kalu. This led to his incarceration since Kalu was under immunity while Ochendo (Orji) was presumed to have had prior knowledge of the financial recklessness of Kalu. Everybody knew Ochendo’s incarceration was a blessing in disguise because without it he could have failed in that election. The massive support he received was as a result of protest vote in Abia State and not because of Kalu.

    Governance is soldier go, soldier come, and not a private estate of any man, who is trying by all means to reckon with the elites of Abia State, who have, in conjunction with the people of Abia, said with one loud voice, ‘enough” of politics of brigandage in Abia’.

     

    •Onyechere is Special Adviser, Public Communication to Abia State Governor, Theodore Orji

  • Politics in 2013 (1)

    THE year following general elections in Nigeria should ordinarily be a year when stakeholders sit back to review the tapes of the election with a view to noting what went wrong and identifying where they got it right. Of course, to a politician, the next election is never totally kept out of view, but the post-election year is expected to be spent by losers licking their wounds, and winners setting the priorities.

    But, this has not really been the case in our dear country. The first post-independence federal election was held in 1964. It generated so much heat that the country’s corporate existence was threatened. There was still so much heat in 1965 that no one could breathe easy. This was so also because the Western Parliamentary elections were held that year.

    The desperation of the Northern Peoples Congress to consolidate its hold on the power structure led it into an alliance with SLA Akintola’s Nigerian National Democratic party. The NNDP was a party only in name and democratic only by nomenclature. It could not strike a pact with the people of the West; yet the NPC was determined to donate to it the region’s power structure.

    To form the federal government in 1960, the NPC had to enter into an alliance with the National Council of Nigerian Citizens. But, along the line, the accord turned to discord and NCNC was driven into a counter alliance with the Action Group. So, 1965 was a year of sweat, tears and blood. Fire burned, especially in the west. Chaos and anarchy reigned. Eventually, by the end of the year, it had become obvious that no force on earth could support the Akintola infamy. Two weeks into 1966, the gale swept away the governments.

    The story was slightly different in 1984. The 1983 general elections were so shamelessly rigged by the central government that it would require a battalion in every community of the aggrieved states to sustain the imposed governments. The National Party of Nigeria pushed away Bola Ige in Oyo State , Jim Nwobodo in Anambra, Ambrose Alli in Bendel, the two NPP governors in Borno and Gongola as well as PRP in Kaduna and Kano . Nigeria was literally turned to a one-party state. It created an opportunity for the military, ever hungry for power, to strike. Democracy created condition for military dictatorship. The 1991 t0 93 set of elections was an aberration.

    But, since 1999, the first post-election year has been non-eventful. In the years 2000, 2004 and 2008, Obasanjo had so dominated the scene, fouled the air that no one really bothered to breath easy. He systematically decimated the opposition that the leadership merely wrung their hands and took time to think of the next line of action. By the time they woke up to the reality, another election was already at the corner. The situation was so bad that the 2007 elections were held without a valid Electoral Act. Yet, the opposition was still so confused that it did not realize that disaster was looming.

    2012 was again different. There were governorship elections in Bayelsa, Cross River , Sokoto, Adamawa and Edo States with internal strife threatening to snuff life out of the PDP. Only in Edo did the ACN which was already in party able to trounce the national ruling party.

    If the first post-election year has been so controversial, the next year that marks the mid term marks the beginning of real politiks. The party in power wants to justify why it must be reelected, and the opposition gets jittery and begins to assemble its arsenal.

    2013 is here. It is mid-term again. After the lethargy of 2012, it is time again for active politicking. In Anambra, the electorate will be called to action in deciding the party to hand the mantle of power. Three political – the ruling All Progressives Grand Alliance, ACN and PDP parties are strong on ground and ready for battle.. The fact that Governor Peter Obi is running his second term, and thus ineligible for reelection, makes it even more open. His party, APGA, is in dire straits and the grand patron, Chief Chukwuemeka Ojukwu, who contributed immensely to Obi’s return to office, is no more. Victor Umeh, the national chairman, is fighting for his political life and unlikely to back any candidate that Obi may support. Obi, too, in case Umeh takes over the party structure and finds a way of fielding the candidate, would rather work for another party.

    Is Chris Ngige, a senator, likely to throw his hat in the ring again? What about Andy Uba, Nicholas Ukachukwu and Professor Charles Soludo. The heat race will come up stronger from the second quarter.

    2013 is not just about Anambra governorship election. The PDP has already shown that the stakes in 2015 are so high. Already, just two weeks into the new year, the BoT politics is threatening to tear apart the party. The tendencies and caucuses are agog.

  • Still playing dangerous politics with Boko Haram

    Still playing dangerous politics with Boko Haram

    For the umpteenth time, President Goodluck Jonathan has seized the opportunity of his attendance at a church service to reassure Nigerians that the end of Boko Haram insurrection in Nigeria is well nigh. This time it was a service on the last Sunday of last year at the Ekklisiya Yan Uwa a Nigeria (EYN), in Abuja, to mark the end of 2012.

    “We are,” he told the congregation, “suppressing the insurgency. For instance, before Christmas, we were told the whole of Abuja will be burned down, including Maiduguri, among others. Though we had some incidents but they were minimised… I assure you the excesses of Boko Haram will be brought to a reasonable control in 2013.”

    I do not know any member of the congregation, much less talk to anyone of them. But I’ll be surprised if the President’s assurances induced anything else but “we’ve-heard-all-this-before” big yawn. After all, have his past assurances not almost always been followed by even worse spate of bombings allegedly by the sect?

    It will be a big pleasant surprise if the President’s assurance makes any difference this time. However, I, for one, have my doubts based on at least three reasons. First, we have a President who seems easily given to hyperbole, at least on Boko Haram. This is a dangerous flaw in anyone’s character, but even more so in a leader, if only because it will invariably lead him to over-react in looking for solutions to a problem.

    The reader will recall how our President once described the sect’s threat as worse than the country’s civil war between 1967 and 1970. This was at the National Christian Centre, Abuja, during the 2011 end of year service. It simply beggars belief that anyone, much less the president of a country who, like our own President, is old enough to have experienced it, can compare the horrors of a full scale war with the effects of any insurrection.

    The President was back again to his hyperbole mode during last year’s end of year service. This time he went beyond our borders to compare the Boko Haram insurgency to the civil war in Syria and to the rebel insurrection in Central African Republic. The wars in those countries, he said, are “akin to what Boko Haram is trying to do in Nigeria, to take over Abuja so as to make me and those in government to go and hide.”

    His comparison of Boko Haram with the CAR rebels is understandable, but isn’t it incredulous that he will compare himself with Syria’s president, Bashar Assad, whom the West and Israel, the main sources of our President’s foreign security advisers in his fight against the sect, regard as the bad guy who should be kicked out of office and out of his country or who, better still, should be dead?

    The second reason I am sceptical about the President’s last assurance that the end of Boko Haram is nigh is his predilection for using churches instead of secular institutions to make pronouncements about the sect. Since last November alone he has used occasions of church events no less than four times to pronounce on the sect, as if Muslims too have not been victims, probably worse, of the sect’s terror. Our President’s apparent preference for churches, as against secular institutions, to speak on this ostensibly religious issue exposes him to suspicions that he is not averse to exploiting religion to divide and rule Nigerians.

    Thirdly, his recent altercation with his erstwhile benefactor, former president, Chief Olusegun Obasanjo – of recent there appears to have been a falling out between the two – over the President’s handling of Boko Haram suggests that, like so many Islamophobes in and out of this country, he believes in one law for terrorism in his part of the country and another for the Muslim North.

    The genesis of the altercation between benefactor and protégé, as we all know, was Chief Obasanjo’s dismissal of the President’s handling of Boko Haram as “tepid” compared to the iron fist with which he said he had handled a similar insurrection by the Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta (MEND) in November 1999.

    The former president couldn’t have chosen a more apt occasion to rebuke his protégé; the 40th anniversary celebration in Warri on November 22, last year, of the call of Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor to the ministry. As president of the Christian Association of Nigeria few, if any, have spoken more forcefully than the pastor against any form of accommodation with Boko Haram. To date no president of CAN has been as hawkish as the pastor, not even Dr. Sunday Mbang, the retired Prelate of the Methodist Church, who was once quoted as saying, “Whether they like it or not we will not allow any Muslim to be president of Nigeria. I am declaring this as President of CAN.” (Thisday, July 31, 2000.)

    As if to add salt to an injury, Chief Obasanjo’s belligerent former spokesman, Femi Fani-Kayode, added the gratuitous, and evidently incorrect, rider that Odi effectively destroyed MEND; as several press adverts that seem to have the imprimatur of the Presidency have pointed out, MEND merely went deeper underground after Odi only to return with a vengeance that ultimately forced the Federal Government to negotiate an amnesty for all Niger Delta militants.

    In his own response to the former president, President Jonathan, during his media chat last November, in effect, described Odi as a crime against humanity. When, he said, as then deputy governor of Bayelsa, himself and his boss, Diepriye Alamieyeseagha, visited Odi after the operation ordered by Obasanjo all they found were, “some dead people, mainly old women and also children. None of those militants was killed. None. So the bombardment of Odi was to solve the problem but it never solved it.”

    This raises the logical question of why the President has since persisted in using the same method against Boko Haram insurgency that he has strongly denounced as a crime against humanity. One possible answer is that for the president MEND was “us” but Boko Haram is “them.” Another and related answer is that it is against his political interest for peace to return to the North where opposition to his retention of the presidency in 2015 is likely to be strongest.

    Those, like the President, that insist on a hard-line solution to Boko Haram obviously miss the historical lesson of terrorism, even of the emergence of Boko Haram and of the apparent inability of government to destroy it. Contrary to Obasanjo’s claim of government’s failure to nip the sect in the bud, its massacre in Maiduguri in July, almost ten years to the anniversary of Odi, was predictably worse, if only because Odi is a hamlet compared to Maiduguri as Borno State’s capital.

    It is also telling that when the late President Umar Musa Yar’Adua ordered the army to put the sect down, he boasted that “The operation we have launched now will be an operation that will contain them once and for all.”

    As we are all by now painfully aware, putting down Boko Haram has been anything but a cake-walk. And no one interested in ending its terror will deny the fact that what Amnesty International described at its November 1, 2012 press conference in Abuja as “serious human rights violations carried out by the security forces in response (to Boko Haram), including enforced disappearance, torture, extra-judicial executions, the torching of houses and detention without trial,” will never work.

    Anyone who imagines that it will should take a lesson in the history of terrorism. One good place to start, as I once mentioned on these pages, is a three-page primer on the subject in The Economist of August 20, 2005. As the report pointed out in a comparative history of 19th and 20th century anarchism and contemporary jihad, just like repression did nothing to stop the former it also cannot on its own deter the latter.

    Terrorists, the magazine said in its wise editorial to the West on the subject, “…can be caught, sometimes before they have done anything terrible. That argues for excellent intelligence and police work. Perhaps their numbers can be reduced by ameliorating the grievances that lend them justification for their attacks. That argues for political action. And certainly the public needs re-assurance. That argues for honest explanation – that terrorism does not threaten any western government, that retribution, like police injustices committed in nervous haste, is likely to provoke more violence, that new restrictions are unlikely to bring new safety.”

    None of these three elements – excellent intelligence and police work, political action and honest explanation – exists in President Jonathan’s strategy for bringing an end to Boko Haram terror.

    Instead what we have, as I said on these pages in my longest piece on the subject to date (December 6, 2011), is a government that seems hell-bent on playing dangerous politics with Boko Haram.

     

    Corrections

    Last week’s piece elicited a number of reactions on factual errors it contained along, of course, with many interesting comments. I’d intended to publish them but lacked the space. I’ll do so next week, God willing, along with reactions to the piece before on the 70th birthday of General Muhammadu Buhari, former military head of state and a leading opposition figure.

     

  • Kaduna politics after Yakowa

    Kaduna politics after Yakowa

    KADUNA is mourning. The death, on Saturday, of Governor Patrick Ibrahim Yakowa has cast a pall on the entire state. As the constitution provides, the erstwhile deputy governor, Alhaji Mukhtar Yero, has stepped in as the chief helmsman.

    Prior to the ascension of Yakowa in 2010, following the elevation of the elected governor, Alhaji Namadi Sambo, no one from Southern Kaduna had been the chief executive of the state. They are in the minority and politics, being a game of numbers, the majority in Northern Kaduna had the upper hand and dictated the pace, leaving the Southern Kaduna people always grumbling about marginalisation.

    The appointment of Sambo was a turning point. It demonstrated that the people were not lacking in the materials that could run the affairs of the state. Yakowa was the deputy governor. He was not new along the corridor of power. If there was anyone from the South qualified to run the state, it was Yakowa. He was fully immersed in the politics of the state. He had been Permanent Secretary, Secretary to the State Government before his appointment as Deputy Governor, following the death of Stephen Shekari in the last years of Governor Ahmed Makarfi in office.

    Ethnicity and religion define the politics of the state. Since inception, until Yakowa arrived the stage, the Muslims in the Northern Kaduna had always occupied the number-one office, while the Christians in the South played the second fiddle. Now, Yero from the North is in the saddle. He did not expect it. Even, if he had nursed the ambition, he knew it was an illusion of hope because Yakowa’s second term ambition was already public knowledge. But fate catapulted Yero to the captain’s seat yesterday. In the presidential system, nature abhors vacuum. According to the 1999 Constitution, he succeeded his boss, following his sudden demise. His first task after being sworn in today as number-one citizen of Kaduna State by the Chief Judge is an emotional one. He will preside over the burial of his predecessor.

    Yakowa’s demise has implications for the politics of the state. Politics in the Northwest state has been shaped by the forces of religion and ethnicity. The tension between Muslims, who are in the majority, and Christians, who are the vocal and resilient minority, has always played a major role in the choice of governorship candidates, their running mates and occupants of other key political positions.

    In line with political tradition in the state, the mantle of deputy governorship fell on Yero, former Finance Commissioner under Sambo Administration. The goal was ethno-religious balancing. When Yakowa completed Sambo’s first term, powerful forces rose against him. Their intention was to effect a power shift from the Christian-dominated minority ethnic group to the Muslim-dominated majority ethnic group. However, reason prevailed because Yakowa was able to convince the contending forces that he had become a rallying point and symbol of unity. Indeed, as the first citizen, he braved the odds and built a bridge of understanding and harmony in the divided state.

    Now that Yero, a Muslim, is in the saddle, it is expected that the deputy governor would be selected from the other ethno-religious divide. Observers think that this has become more compelling as a mark of honour to Yakowa’s memory. The struggle for the number-two slot will be intense, nevertheless. But it would also be restrictive. Since Yero, who enjoyed cordial relations with Yakowa, won’t not be indifferent to the personality of his second in command. It is likely that his choice may be a politician from the South who enjoyed close intimacy with the departed governor.

    Expectedly, Yero is now on the firing line. At 44, he is a vibrant young man. All eyes are on him as the new leader. In 2015, he will be a major contender for the governorship on the platform of the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). As the chief executive, it may be relatively easier for him to stabilise immediately, unlike his departed boss. The first challenge is whether he would retain the cabinet composition or make some adjustments. Since politicians treasure loyalty, it may not be out of order to recruit dependable allies as new aides. Then, he should be able to allay the fear of marginalisation by the minority group the same way Yakowa allayed the fear of subjugation of the majority by the minority. The new governor has inherited the challenge of insecurity in the state compounded by the insurrection of Boko Haram sect. Yakowa Administration had started the implementation of some laudable projects in the state. The onus is on him to complete them and initiate more in the interest of the state.

    The new governor is a home boy. He was born and bred in Kaduna State. Born on May 21, 1968 in Akwan Kaura, Zaria City, Yero attended Local Authority Primary School, Kaura between 1974 and 1980. He attended Government Secondary School, Ikara, between 1980 and 1985. A year later, he completed his Higher School Certificate (HSC) programme. Yero is a distinguished alumnus of Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria, where he obtained a Diploma Certificate in Banking, Bachelors Degree in Accounting (1991) and Master of Business Administration (MBA). He is a Certified Public Accountant.

    After completing his youth service corps programme, he worked in the Bursary Department, ABU, in 1993. Between 2007 and 2010, Yero served as Commissioner for Finance. Later, he served as deputy governor.

    Who’ll be new deputy governor?

    Twice, the office had been vacant. On each of the two previous occasions, the jostle for the position of the number-two man had been intense. The first time was after the sudden death of Shekari in 2005. There was little dispute over where the deputy governor should emerge from. The deceased deputy governor, being from Southern Kaduna, it was obvious to all that it was not a time to bicker. Besides, Makarfi was fully in charge. He had served out a first term and had been resoundingly returned for a second term. No one who aspired to succeed in the politics of the state dared challenge his voice and choice at the time.

    But Makarfi had a dilemma in deciding whom to hand the mantle. Many of the party apparatchiks watched him closely. They wanted to have a glimpse into the working of the mind of their governor. Would he choose a politician or a technocrat? What part of Southern Kaduna would be lucky to fit the bill? Makarfi gave no reason for deciding on Yakowa from Fadan Kagoma in Jema’a local government area.

    However, when the office inadvertently fell vacant again in 2010, those who jostled for recognition were two former executive secretaries of the Petroleum Technology Development Fund (PTDF), Alhaji Yusuf Abubakar and Alhaji Hussein Jallo. Jallo had also served as Political Adviser to Sambo. There was also a former Managing Director of Alhaji Shehu Ladan, while the Majority Leader of the state House of Assembly also got a look in. The Secretary to the State Government, Alhaji Idris Mikati took interest in the office, too. At the end, Yakowa, a technocrat and establishment man triumphed.

    In the current contest for recognition, three men are central in deciding the fate of the contenders: Ahmed Makarfi, a former governor and representative of Kaduna Central in the Senate, Vice President Namadi Sambo and the new governor, Yero. They are the political power brokers who will decide the fate of the contestants. In the last contest, Sambo had the upper hand. Yero who was his protégé moved up the ladder from Commissioner for Finance to Deputy Governor.

    Who moves up the dais this time? The next few weeks leading up to the nomination of a candidate, screening by the House of Assembly and eventual swearing in will throw up scenarios leading up to 2015.

  • Terrorism, politics  and the law

    The  bombing of a church in a military barrack in Kaduna in Nigeria and the placement of a bounty of 50m naira   by the army on leaders of the terrorist group Boko Haram highlight  Nigeria’s  intractable and messy problem with terrorism. Unlike Nigeria, however Egypt faces a new problem from the use and misuse  of power from its new president  Mohammed Morsi,  who recently issued presidential orders granting him powers that are not challengeable in any court in Egypt.

    In Nigeria   again ,in a strange concoction of politics and finance,  the nation’s Central Bank Governor Lamido  Sanusi,  the Champion of Islamic banking in Nigeria  asked the Federal government   to  sack 50%  of its civil servants because  it is spending 70%  of its revenue on paying the salaries  of   these  civil servants .In  far away New  York , the UN Secretary General  Ban Ki Moon asked the UN Security Council to approve the sending of an ECOWAS force to Mali to rescue that nation from invaders both Tuaregs and religious militants  but asked the UN body not to provide the funds said to be worth  $50m.

    The issues highlighted above raise issues of terrorism, authoritarianism, economic planning and finan ce;  national, regional and global stability – and I intend to highlight these issues in that light and context today. Let me stress that it will  require a huge   balancing act to do this and it is in that regard that I will make reference  to an article by Burmese leader Aung San Suu Kyii  titled – ‘A  Sense  of Balance ‘   in The Economist which stressed  that both peoples  and nations will need to balance their acts to make the world a peaceful place to live in.

    In  that fine article Suu Kyii noted that the end of authoritarianism is not synonymous with the end of dissent or the  demise  of fundamentalism. The  power  impasse  in Egypt is a clear  vindication of that. Dissent she said should be channeled towards   concensus  and compromise  while she stressed that fundamentalism,  which can be volatile in times of change and uncertainty,  is   in reality  the natural enemy of balance .Suu Kyii  identified terrorists as those people lacking in self-respect who are incapable of compassion and restraint when they have an opportunity to deal with those who  they  think put them in a state of incapacity to attain what they perceive as their deserved niche. Such people who lack self respect are incapable of respecting others. The terrorist mentality she   concluded  is spawned by intellectual and social influences that  widen to an extreme  ‘the gap‘ between the terrorist and others   –  and this destroys the essential balance that promotes a common bond of humanity.

    It  is in the light of the wisdom of this  Burmese    Nobel  laureate that I take on the issues raised first on terrorism in Nigeria and the resurgence of authoritarianism in Egypt in the wake  of President Mohammed Morsi’s surprising and bold move to concentrate power in his hands. In  Nigeria,  terrorism  unfortunately is waxing stronger as terrorists  recently  week  bombed the headquarters of the special police unit in Abuja    where terrorists  were  being kept,  and some were said to have escaped. There have been reports that some suspected terrorists were found round the State House in Ekiti  State while Members of the National Assembly are  said  to be apprehensive that the Assembly could be the target of Boko Haram terrorists.

     It  is my considered view  that no government should allow terrorists to operate with such impunity as this weakens respect for constituted authority  and casts aspersion on the sovereignty of the state. It  is ironically to protect such sovereignty that President Mohammed Morsi   in Egypt seized the powers of the courts and decreed they  could not be used to challenge him in his bid to control law and order in Egypt.

    In Nigeria’s case it is apparent that the state is lax in tackling insecurity and terrorism for reasons best known to the authorities.  But  human lives should not be treated with  levity and nonchalance  by the rest of us because we have not had any  relatives killed yet  by terrorists. It is dehumanizing to see churches bombed on a weekly basis while Christians elsewhere  and   those  not directly involved just pause for a moment and move on while the state wrings its hands in futile admonitions and does nothing to deter the terrorist against the next attack. In Egypt where there is no such terror as in Nigeria, President Morsi has seized power ostensibly to forestall such state impotence in the face of expected terror.

    Morsi  is acting proactively  in anticipation of  spurious litigations that could hamstring the state – even though his anticipation and actions  are  decidedly undemocratic. The  difference between the Nigerian and Egyptian situation is that the party  of President Morsi, the Islamic Brotherhood is a Fundamentalist Party and secular Egyptians are afraid that  Morsi and his party will use the power  he has seized to introduce Sharia  Law  in Egypt,  to the detriment of opposition parties  and other religions in Egypt. Whereas in Nigeria the terrorist is rampant and running amok as it were.

    Yet,  there is still some caution and restraint in the way the stakeholders  and  politicians in  the Egyptian state deal with each other. When the demonstrations against  Morsi started, the Muslim Brotherhood  planned its own counter one for   the next week. But it cancelled this to avert bloodshed when it saw the turn out  of opposition  demonstrators  at Tahrir Square against the president’s usurpation of the power  of the Egyptian Courts. This  week the demonstrators in their thousands have piched camp  in front of the Presidential palace in Cairo.

    Unfortunately,  Such restraint is barren in the way Boko Haram bombs Churches,  killing and maiming   Christians and passers by in Nigeria. Worse still the business as usual stance of the security forces as well   as the ‘not my turn yet‘  attitude of the rest of us has  portrayed  Nigeria  as a nation of people thick skinned  to murder and mayhem in their midst. Which simply means that human life is cheap here as in the Hobbessian theory that says that in a state of terror, where  might is right,  human life is violent, brutish and short. Surely that is a sad and unfortunate image for any nation  not enmeshed in America’s war on terror like Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq,   nations   where most unfortunately, suicide bombing has made a mockery  of the sanctity of human lives.   Again, it is in that  light that I  consider the call   by the CBN governor to sack half the work force of our civil service as well as the  posture  of the UN not being ready to spend money on rescuing Mali. The  CBN governor’s call reminds one of ‘the shoot the messenger‘ syndrome while the UN uncharacteristic  frugality on Mali’s survival reminds one of the   proverbial  cat that would eat fish without getting its paws wet.

    What  the CBN governor has said is the correct thing for any government spending 70%  of its revenue on salaries to do, but even he knows that no  politician   or  government in Nigeria will do that and survive. Even the host governor at the venue where the CBN delivered his   stricture said it was not possible. So  the CBN governor was just barking at the moon even though every one knows that sacking of civil servants was never part of his schedule of duties and that makes the civil servants happy as they plan his downfall in the full Nigerian retaliatory syndrome. Anyway,  the CBN governor is as impervious to criticism as the politicians in the way he carried through his Islamic Banking  agenda  which is in tune with his Master’s degree in Islamic studies  from the University of Khartoum.  Really what is good for the  goose should be good for the gander.

    Lastly,  Ban Ki Moon has shown that he or the UN does not understand the gravity of the situation in Mali. ECOWAS  states alone cannot fund the reclamation of Northern Mali because they all have financial problems of their own. They  mostly rely on Nigeria   as the Father Xmas  of such military adventures. But Nigeria has problems of its own such as the one pointed out by the CBN governor, the oil subsidy theft, the huge allowances of its legislators as well as the fight against Boko Haram to which huge funds have been committed.

    The UN should not turn the proposed Mali ECOWAS force  into another laughing stock like  the  blue beret UN Congo troops who stood by and watched unconcerned as M23 rebels seized the town of Goma  from government forces  in the  DRC recently. Mali  is a member state of the UN that is in trouble because of regional problems stemming from the growth of militancy and fundamentalism on the northern part of all ECOWAS states and needs help,  especially the financial type to maintain its stability and sovereignty.

    If Mali falls there will be a wrong signal to militants  in the Sahel  that  they can simulate the situation in  Mali  in any state in ECOWAS . That  is one message that is lost to the  UN Scribe  for  now  .  Not  funding the military rescue of Mali can be counter productive and very costly for the UN in the short run not to talk of in the long. A  word is enough for the wise.

  • Terrorism, politics and the law

    The bombing of a church in a military barrack in Kaduna in Nigeria and the placement of a bounty of 50m naira by the army on leaders of the terrorist group Boko Haram highlight Nigeria’s intractable and messy problem with terrorism. Unlike Nigeria, however Egypt faces a new problem from the use and misuse of power from its new president Mohammed Morsi, who recently issued presidential orders granting him powers that are not challengeable in any court in Egypt.

    In Nigeria again, in a strange concoction of politics and finance, the nation’s Central Bank Governor Lamido Sanusi, the Champion of Islamic banking in Nigeria asked the Federal government to sack 50% of its civil servants because it is spending 70% of its revenue on paying the salaries of these civil servants. In far away New York, the UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon asked the UN Security Council to approve the sending of an ECOWAS force to Mali to rescue that nation from invaders both Tuaregs and religious militants but asked the UN body not to provide the funds said to be worth $50m.

    The issues highlighted above raise issues of terrorism, authoritarianism, economic planning and finan ce, national, regional and global stability and I intend to highlight these issues in that light and context today. Let me stress that it will require a huge balancing act to do this and it is in that regard that I will make reference to an article by Burmese leader Aung San Suu Kyii titled -‘A Sense of Balance‘in The Economist which stressed that both peoples and nations will need to balance their acts to make the world a peaceful place to live in.

    In that fine article Suu Kyii noted that the end of authoritarianism is not synonymous with the end of dissent or the demise of fundamentalism. Dissent she said should be channeled towards concensus and compromise while she stressed that fundamentalism, which can be volatile in times of change and uncertainty, is in reality the natural enemy of balance. Suu Kyii identified terrorists as those people lacking in self respect who are incapable of compassion and restraint when they have an opportunity to deal with those who they think put them in a state of incapacity to attain what they perceive as their deserved niche. Such people who lack self respect are incapable of respecting others. The terrorist mentality she concluded is spawned by intellectual and social influences that widen to an extreme ‘the gap‘ between the terrorist and others – and this destroys the essential balance that promotes a common bond of humanity.

    It is in the light of the wisdom of the Burmese and Nobel laureate that I take on the issues raised first on terrorism in Nigeria and the resurgence of authoritarianism in Egypt in the wake of President Mohammed Morsi,s surprising and bold move to concentrate power in his hands. In Nigeria terrorism is waxing stronger as terrorists this week bombed the headquarters of the special police unit in Abuja where terrorists are being kept and some were said to have escaped. There have been reports that some suspected terrorists were found round the State House in Ekiti State while Members of the National Assembly are said to be apprehensive that the Assembly could be the target of Boko Haram terrorists.

    It is my considered view that no government should allow terrorists to operate with such impunity as this weakens respect for constituted authority and casts aspersion on the sovereignty of the state. It is ironically to protect such sovereignty that President Mohammed Morsi in Egypt seized the powers of the courts and decreed they could not be used to challenge him in his bid to control law and order in Egyp. In Nigeria’s case it is apparent that the state is lax in tackling insecurity and terrorism for reasons best known to the authorities. But human lives should not be treated with levity and nonchalance by the rest of us because we have not any relatives killed by terrorists. It is dehumanizing to see churches bombed on a weekly basis while Christians elsewhere and those not directly involved just pause for a moment and move on while the state wrings its hands in futile admonitions and does nothing to deter the terrorist against the next attack.

    In Egypt where there is no such terror as in Nigeria, President Morsi has seized power ostensibly to forestall such state impotence in the face of expected terror. Morsi is acting proactively in anticipation of spurious litigations to hamstring the state even though his anticipation and actions are decidedly undemocratic. The difference between the Nigerian and Egyptian situation is that the party of President Morsi, the Islamic Brotherhood is a Fundamentalist Party and secular Egyptians are afraid that Morsi and his party will use the power he has seized to introduce Sharia Law in Egypt, to the detriment of opposition parties and other religions in Egypt. Whereas in Nigeria the terrorist is rampant and running amok as it were.

    Yet, there is still some caution and restraint in the way the stakeholders and politicians in the Egyptian state deal with each other. When the demonstrations against Morsi started, the Muslim Brotherhood planned its own counter one for last Tuesday. But it cancelled this to avert bloodshed when it saw the turn out at Tahrir Square against the president’s usurpation of the power of the Egyptian Courts.

    Such restraint is barren in the way Boko Haram bombs Churches killing and maiming Christians and passers by in Nigeria. Worse still the business as usual stance of the security forces as well as the ‘not my turn yet‘ attitude of the rest of us has portrayed Nigeria as a nation of people thick skinned to murder and mayhem in their midst. Which simply means that human life is cheap here as in the Hobbessian theory that says that in a state of terror, where might is right, human life is violent, brutish and short. Surely that is a sad and unfortunate image for any nation not enmeshed in America’s war on terror like Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iraq where suicide bombing has made a mockery of the sanctity of human lives.

    Again, it is in that light that I consider the call by the CBN governor to sack half the work force of our civil service as well as the posture of the UN not being ready to spend money on rescuing Mali. The CBN governor’s call reminds one of ‘the shoot the messenger‘ syndrome while the UN parsimony on Mali’s survival reminds one of the proverbial cat that would eat fish without getting its paws wet. What the CBN governor has said is the correct thing for any government spending 70% of its revenue on salaries to do but even he knows that no politician or government in Nigeria will do that and survive.

    Even the host governor at the venue where the CBN delivered his stricture said it was not possible. So the CBN governor was just barking at the moon even though every one knows that sacking of civil servants was never part of his schedule of duties and that makes the civil servants happy as they plan his downfall in the full Nigerian retaliatory syndrome. Anyway, the CBN governor is as impervious to criticism as the politicians in the way he carried through his Islamic Banking agenda which is in tune with his Master’s degree in Islamic studies from the University of Khartoum. Really what is good for the goose should be good for the gander.

    Lastly, Ban Ki Moon has shown that he or the UN does not understand the gravity of the situation in Mali. ECOWAS states alone cannot fund the reclamation of Northern Mali because they all have financial problems of their own .They mostly rely on Nigeria as the father Xmas of such military adventures. But Nigeria has problems of its own such as the one pointed out by the CBN governor, the oil subsidy theft, the huge allowances of its legislators as well as the fight against Boko Haram to which huge funds have been committed.

    The UN should not turn the proposed Mali ECOWAS force into another laughing stock like the blue beret UN Congo troops who stood by and watched unconcerned as M23 rebels seized the town of Goma from government forces in the DRC recently. Mali is a member state of the UN that is in trouble because of regional problems stemming from the growth of militancy and fundamentalism on the northern part of all ECOWAS states and needs help, especially the financial type to maintain its stability and sovereignty.

    If Mali falls there will be a wrong signal to militants in the Sahel that they can simulate the situation in Mali in any state in ECOWAS. That is one message that is lost to the UN Scribe for now. Not funding the military rescue of Mali can be counter productive and very costly for the UN in the short run not to talk of in the long. A word is enough for the wise.