Tag: Sani

  • Sani hails Gen. Abubakar at 74

    Sani hails Gen. Abubakar at 74

    Niger State Governor Abubakar Sani Bello has said the country owes the uninterrupted democracy being enjoyed today to the solid foundation laid by the short but memorable administration of former Head of State General Abdulsalami Abubakar.

    In a birthday message to General Abubakar, who clocked 74 yesterday, Bello described the celebrator as the father of the new Nigeria.

    A statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Jibrin Ndace, said General Abubakar’s contribution to democratic development gave birth to the current political dispensation in the country.

  • Sani alleges threats to his life

    Sani alleges threats to his life

    •APC: don’t take the Senator seriously 

    Senator Shehu Sanni representing Kaduna Central has alleged of plans by Governor Nasir El-Rufai to kill him.

    Sani, in a statement by his aide, Suleiman Ahmed, claimed that El-Rufai made the threat at a Town Hall meeting in Giwa Local Government on June 4.

    In the statement “Hate speech and threat to life by Governor Nasiru El-Rufai against Distinguished Senator Shehu Sani”, Sanni said Nigerians should hold the governor responsible if anything untoward happened to him.

    The statement reads: “Our attention has been drawn to a hate speech and threat to life made by Governor Nasiru El-Rufai against Senator Shehu Sani in the Governor’s circus christened as Town Hall meeting in Giwa Local Government on June 4.

    “The Governor evidently referred to Senator Sani, Dr Hakeem Baba Ahmed, Isa Ashiru Kudan as “Ants he will match and crush.” We could have ignored this statement as tantrums of an accidental governor, but we decided not to take things for granted in view of his mean and vicious history, and his allergy to criticism.

    “We hold Governor El-Rufai responsible for any harm done to Sani. This statement is to alert security agencies and the public that in the event of any injury or assassination of Senator Shehu Sani, Governor Nasiru El-Rufai should be held responsible.

    “We advice El-Rufai that he doesn’t need to “crush Ants” or spill the blood of Senator Shehu Sani and others to realise his political ambitions. Since he is not appeased with Sani’s “suspension”, he has now resorted to threats of crushing and matching.

    “We wish to let governor El-Rufai know that threats of “crushing” or execution cannot deter us from our noble path in protecting our people from his brigandage.”

    But the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Kaduna State has said Sani should not be taken seriously.

    Acting Publicity Secretary, Salisu Tanko Wusono said: “Crying wolf and insinuating that anyone wants to attack them further exposes them as lightweights. These are people clinging on straws, and trying to create mischief conscious of their political weakness as a coalition of the defeated, the deluded, the selfish and the discontented.

    “Their leaders lost bids to become state chairman and governorship candidate. They were trounced by democratic means, and they know it. The same democratic instruments and the rules of the party is what they seek to undermine. Since 2014, they have been engaged in these irresponsible antics. The party is now saying no more.

    “They have isolated themselves and demonstrated the inability to be disciplined or to commit to wider interests beyond their ego. The APC and its leaders have every right to warn them to desist from puerile politics. No one will be allowed to thwart the APC from deepening its roots and being strengthened as a party of the people, disciplined and focused on the public good,” Wusono said.

     

  • El-Rufai, Sani: The parting of ways?

    El-Rufai, Sani: The parting of ways?

    Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai and Senator Shehu Sani, who are chieftains of the All Progressives Congress (APC), are always at loggerheads. Attempts by stakeholders to reconcile them have proved abortive. Correspondent ABDULGAFAR ALABELEWE, who has been following the riff, explains the genesis of the disagreement and what it may portend for the party.

    The popular adage that when two elephants fight, it is the grass that suffers, may not apply to the feud between Governor Nasir El-Rufai of Kaduna State and the senator representing Kaduna Central in the Senate, Alhaji Shehu Sani. This is the view of many observers, who have been monitoring the disagreement between the two heavyweights of the Kaduna State All Progressives Congress (APC). Rather, according to the observers, it may end up undermining the harmony and cohesion within the ruling party.

    This is because the major issues that separate the duo border on how best the party can deliver democracy dividends to the people. The personality clash between the governor and the human rights activist-turned politician, according to sources close to them, has been in existence before the coming of the APC government. It reared its head shortly after the inauguration of the government when El-Rufai started rolling out his policies. Sani wasted no time in voicing his opposition to the governor’s policies; he took to the media to criticise the policies.

    One of such policies is the abolition of Ramadan, Sallah and Christmas largesse usually distributed to prominent persons and organisations. In El-Rufai’s view, the practice is detrimental to the progress of the state, because it entails wasting the resources meant for the development of the state on gifts to majority of people who could afford them.

    Sani believes that it was insensitive on the part of the governor to cancel such gifts and he went further to revive it within his constituency. In fact, the senator got a new nickname, Mai Rakumi at the event where he distributed rams, cows and camels to his constituents.

    Reacting to the development, a member of APC state executive, who doesn’t want to be named, the clash is a blessing in disguise. He said: “At least one good thing about the disagreement is that it is a win-win situation for the people. El-Rufai carried on in his resource saving move, yet the masses, particularly in Shehu Sani’s constituency, still benefited from Sallah largesse. The interesting thing is that majority of the beneficiaries of Sani’s gesture were not in the first place beneficiaries of the largesse that El-Rufai stopped.

    “So, to people who got Sallah gift for the first time, courtesy of Senator Sani, will pray that the feud never ends; at least to compel their Senator who will always want to prove that El-Rufai is insensitive to their plight, to come home and dole out his Abuja largesse to them.”

    Many observers are puzzle as to why a senator elected from the same platform with the governor should be at loggerheads. Some insist that it may have to do with the senator’s ambition to succeed El-Rufai by 2019. The situation became so bad that for every action taken by the El-Rufai’s administration, the senator representing Kaduna Central has a second opinion. For instance, at the outset, during the land recovery exercise, Sani, granted series of press interviews, condemning government’s action. Reports attributed to Sani said have accused El-Rufai of running the state “in such a way that he will end up ruining all of us, which I will not be part of. He has taken some steps which have only attracted anger from the general public against him”.

    Sani added: “He is a governor, I’m also a senator. He is not bigger than me, neither am I bigger than him. So, as far as I’m concerned, whether El-Rufai is a governor or whatever, anything which he does that does not tally with what is supposed to be done, I will certainly tell him.”

    Explaining the basis for his anger further, Sani said: “He (El-Rufai) is a technocrat, while I’m an activist and a revolutionary. So, my power base is the common people, the masses who constitute my strength. They are the people I have lived with and fought for over the years. The way the governor is running the affairs of government in Kaduna State is such, if care is not taken, we will all sink.

    “He has to take into consideration the fact that he met people that were impoverished; that were muscled, harassed and demoralised by the former administration of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). So, first of all, they don’t need harsh policies that will further impoverish and alienate them. We need to carry them along, taking cognisance their peculiar situation. I fundamentally differ with him on that issue. For that reason, he has decided on his own not to even appoint people who identify with me in anyway and who are also seen to be from my camp.

    “Kaduna is a place I have I lived all my life and since I came out of prison in 1998, I have never been out of Kaduna for more than two weeks and I’ve never been appointed to any public office which I will live in Abuja and not know what is happening in Kaduna. So, I can tell you that within Kaduna North, Kaduna South and metropolis of Kaduna, there is hardly any street that I don’t know anybody.”

    However, contrary to the senator’ claim, a source close to the Kaduna State Government House said Sani is simply angry with El-Rufai because he was not consulted, and asked to make an input, before the list of nominees for appointment into positions as caretaker committee chairmen of the councils within his senatorial district, was drawn up.

    Meanwhile, Sani was quoted as saying in an interview: “I want El-Rufai to succeed as a governor and give credit to our party, but we differ in two ways. The first is what he did to me personally and that was after the elections. He gave every elected stakeholder in Kaduna a slot in the positions, but when it came to my turn, he gave the slot to the person I defeated in the primaries. Will El- Rufai keep quiet if Buhari asks his opponent, Isah Ashiru, to present candidates for ministerial nominee and all the positions in the federal parastatals? Will he be happy? He will never be happy. He has amassed an army close to my territory and next thing is for me to fold my arms and see a missile landing in my house which I am not going to accept. What he cannot tolerate, he should try to shove down my throat. It is not possible.

    “Having won the primaries and general elections, we had decided to work together for the success of the party. I won my senate elections before Nasir won his governorship elections. After the victory, Nasir set up a transition committee and put all the other senators, and even the senatorial candidate who lost the elections, without my name there. I had to draw his attention to that omission. As a sitting senator, there is no way a transition committee would be set up without my name there.

    “He said it was an oversight and assured me that my name would be included. During his inauguration and swearing in, I was there. We went round during the campaigns. After he won, it came to the point of sharing positions, he asked me to send the list of my people for appointment, which I did. But he threw the list away and decided to allocate some commissioners to the other senator representing zone 1, and from my zone, he gave it to the person I defeated in the primaries. Even my local government, no appointment, not even a councillor was considered.

    “So, what he was doing was simply gathering opposition and empowering people who are determined to fight me.  He never knew that I am an old fighter. He said he is stubborn, but he cannot be more stubborn than a person who spent so many years in jail. I believe Nasir’s men came to the political scene in 1999, whereas I have been in the trenches even before anybody heard of Nasir’s name. You go back to Abacha and Babangida eras and see how we stood up against military dictatorship and tyranny.”

    On the issue of demolitions, Sani said: “I could not have said anything if Nasir said he was recovering lands from hospitals, schools, and the affected persons have been given alternative lands or where to go. When you see a house, one is talking about the entire family, consisting husband, wife, children, grandchildren and livelihood tied to the family.

    “Nasir simply gave them two weeks to vacate before sending bulldozers to pull down everything. Abuja of 2007 is definitely not the same thing as Kaduna 2015. In a democracy, whatever you want to do people must be carried along.”

    Even though, El-Rufai and his team avoided comments on the crisis, the rift took a new dimension when the party handed the serving senator an eleven months suspension from the party. The letter, signed by Ahmed Abdulhamid, Auwal Mai Anguwa and Aminu Alilan, Secretary, Public Relations Officer and Ex-officio respectively, stated that the decision was arrived at after a meeting held on December 27, 2015, which reviewed a subcommittee report on allegations made against the senator.

    The letter, which stated that Sani’s criticism of El-Rufai and President Muhammadu Buhari violates the rules of engagement of the party, has only succeeded in fractionalising the party in the state. The letter added that the anti-party activities were so pronounced that hardly a week passes that his group will not be on air, criticising and challenging what it described as the enduring legacies of Mallam El-Rufai.

    It added: “That his statement on national issues is not inconformity with that of the governor and the Government of Kaduna State. That he has remained consistently in confrontation with the good policies of the Government of Kaduna State and considering it anti-people’s policy.

    “In view of the foregoing, we have unanimously agreed that Senator Shehu Sani, representing ward six, should be suspended for the period of eleven months and that henceforth he is disengaged in partaking or attending party activities in Kaduna State subject to other punitive measures respectively.”

    The party at the state level did not waste time in confirming the suspension. But, in a swift reaction, the Special Adviser to Senator Shehu Sani on Political Matters, Suleiman Ahmed, said the suspension was issued by persons ignorant of the party construction.

    He however said the suspension will not stop the senator from criticising or challenging El-Rufai’s “anti-masses policies”.

    According to him, the persons were acting the scripts of Governor El-Rufai. In another reaction, the Senior Legislative Aide to Shehu Sani said the senator was never invited to any meetings and was never given any opportunity to defend himself and so the suspension is invalid.

    Later, the National Vice Chairman and Zonal Chairman, North West, Alhaji Inuwa Abdulkadir, stormed Kaduna to convene what he called a reconciliatory meeting between the national body and some party stakeholders in Kaduna State. He used the occasion to declare Sani’s suspension invalid.

    According to him, the right procedure was not followed in the suspension of the senator. He said: “We wish to state here that the purported suspension is invalid and not binding and is of no effect, the right procedure was not followed, and the national body is in receipt of a letter from the ward chairman, dissociating himself from the suspension and giving an insight into the matter.”

    However, as Abdulkadir was departing Kaduna, the state APC said the National Vice Chairman was on his own, because he lacked power to lift the suspension slammed on Shehu Sani. The State Publicity Secretary, Salisu Tanko Wusono, said: “In lifting the suspension, Abdulkadir acted without the consent of the national leadership, contrary to Section 21 of the APC constitution.” He added that Abdulkadir’s action was a deliberate attempt to ridicule the party for his personal interest.

  • Sani’s suspension stands, says Kaduna APC

    Sani’s suspension stands, says Kaduna APC

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) in Kaduna State has said the 11-month suspension of Senator Shehu Sani stands.

    The National Vice Chairman (Northwest), Inuwa Abdulkadir, said on Monday that the suspension was invalid.

    But the APC state executive yesterday dismissed the decision.

    Addressing a news conference in Kaduna, the spokesman, Salisu Tanko Wusono, said Abdulkadir acted without the consent of the national leadership and contrary to Section 21 of the party’s constitution.

    He added that the national vice chairman’s action was a deliberate attempt to ridicule the party for his personal interest.

    Wusono said: “The 11-month suspension given Sani by the Kaduna APC stands. Abdulkadir does not have the power to lift the suspension, and acted on his own without authorisation by the national leadership of the party.

    “What happened on Monday in Kaduna between Abdulkadir and the so-called APC chieftains was an abuse of his office, as he promoted the narrow agenda of the people who have never been interested in the progress of the APC.”

    Wusono accused Abdulkadir of embarrassing the national leadership and membership of the party through his conduct.

    He said: “Can a senator in Inuwa, Sokoto, Abdulkadir’s state, abuse and denigrate the party’s leadership without being disciplined? Take this from us, the national leadership of the APC, President Muhammadu Buhari, Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo and others, are aware of Sani’s anti-party activities and involvement in a plot to undermine the APC government at the federal and state levels.

    “Sani is only wasting his time, running from pillar to post; he is like a crocodile in a dry river. He stands suspended from participating in APC’s activities in the state. Why is he not attending President Buhari’s and Vice-President Osibanjo’s functions in Kaduna? Why is he not participating in our activities? Why is it that the PDP senator from Kaduna South attends state functions and not him? The 11 APC lawmakers in the House of Representatives from the state are loyal to our leadership. The 28 APC legislators in the House of Assembly are supporting the party and its government. Sani has chosen to be on his own, and the APC cannot tolerate his irresponsibility.

    “There is a difference between grandstanding and genuine representation. Kaduna Central, which elected him to the Senate, is one of the most populous senatorial districts with a lot of complexity and dynamism. Rather than represent them well, he is consumed by his penchant for popularity shows and irresponsible comments.”

    The spokesman said Sani and his group tried to use the backdoor to get back to the party, having realised their failure to destroy it.

  • My grouse with el-Rufai -Sani

    My grouse with el-Rufai -Sani

    Senator Shehu Sani is the Senator representing Kaduna Central in the National Assembly. He has remained critical of the el-Rufai government in Kaduna State despite coming from the same party with the governor. In this interview with Tony Akowe, the civil rights crusader speaks on his disagreement with the former FCT minister, why the Senate confirmed former Rivers State governor, Rotimi Amaechi, and other issues. Excerpts 

    The senate confirmed ministerial nomination of former Rivers State Governor, Rotimi Amaechi, despite protest by the PDP. What informed that decision?

    The decision of the senate is more of partisanship than morality. Senators from both the PDP and APC had taken positions based on the exigent interest of their own political parties. As for the PDP senators, the allegation they brought at hand were that Amaechi had corruptly enriched himself in office and so must be slapped. But in the actual sense, they had grudges against him over the role he played in the termination of the PDP out of power. As for the APC senators, the moral question raised about Amaechi’s eligibility into office was suppressed and instead, the senators took positions that are in line with the interest of the party. Posterity is the best judge of controversies. Actually, senators have a duty to confirm ministers, present the best and ensure that those who are going to serve have the right moral, ethical and professional qualification to be in that office. But politics is like a “war”. You can use any means by which you are going to win. The APC sees Amaechi as one of its own. On the other hand, the PDP is not against Amaechi because he is allegedly corrupt, but because he worked against their party and posses an existential danger to the survival of the party.  Amaechi is a beneficiary of conflict of interest and a beneficiary of a political atmosphere that put forward partisan interest ahead of conscience and moral standing.

    You have been at dagger drawn with the Kaduna State governor. What is the cause of the quarrel considering the fact that two of you worked for the success of APC in the state?

    Well, I have said this in several interviews which I have given. The problems between el-Rufai and I began from the primary elections. I was not his favorite candidate for the primary election because he had his own candidate who I defeated. The second aspect has to do with his style of governance. Many people say that as a politician, you are not permitted to speak against any of of your own publicly. But I don’t believe in that. If you can speak out against your brother or sister, if you can speak out against your neighbour and people whom you share the same religion, there is nothing wrong in speaking out against a person simply because he is from your political party. Kaduna is today being presided over by a man who perceives himself as an emperor. He has emasculated the political party. If you go to the party headquarters in the state, nothing is happening there because he has appointed the leading members of the executive into his government and now, you don’t see anybody in the secretariat. He has marginalised all those who struggle and fought to build the party in the state and made it possible for the party to win the general election. He has also marginalized people who contested the elections with him.

    He is out to experiment the Adam Smith school of thought on Kaduna. All the steps he has taken are steps meant to enrich consultants, commissioned agents, the rich, contractors and middle men. His policies are aimed at lifting the people out of poverty or unfolding people oriented programmes. He has a conservative, capitalist world view. The world is moving east and he is insisting that we go west. So, I do not live on the same frequency with el-Rufai. I am from the left wing of the political divide and he is from the right wing. My background is that of activism and his own background is that of an accidental civil servant and now the governor of the state. He has been out of Kaduna for over two decades and APC brought him back to Kaduna. He is so detached and disconnected from the people on the ground. While governors from other states are building mass housing estates, el-Rufai wants to build a five star hotel, amusement parks and shopping malls in Kaduna. He has brought in an Abuja real estate mentality into Kaduna. He wants to mortgage Kaduna to private property, private interest and private business consultants. I am disturbed about that.

    So, we are deeply concerned. We need to understand that in Kaduna, APC does not have total control of the state. APC has the northern and central senatorial zones while the southern part of the state is still PDP. If we don’t take measures in winning the heart of the people, we will stand a serious danger in 2019 because the balance between the APC and the PDP in the state is still very fragile.

    You have embarked on several projects within your constituency. How did you source the money for this in view of the fact that no money has been made available for that, especially the Talakawa empowerment programme you launched recently?

    Before I became a senator, I have always been involved in helping the poor. The poor masses are my constituents. I stand for them and they also stood for me by voting me into office. I will use the little I have to execute projects to help alleviate their sufferings and meeting their expectations. We are living in difficult times as a nation when our earning from oil has depleted so much. The value of our currency is stagnant and government is facing serious cash crunch. There is also a mountain of expectations on those in position of authority to perform. There is also the need to prove that the change we promised Nigerians is possible. I am simply using the little I have to maximize impact in the lives of those I represent. Nigerians will not take any excuse.

    It is in the realm of difficulties and hardship that leaders are expected to perform. We have a duty to rescue our country from the economic doldrums; to give hope and meaning to the lives of our people. We have a duty to restore the glory of our father land. As a senator, I have, all my life, fought for the masses and so, I cannot waste this golden opportunity. It is not how long you have been in government, but how you use the opportunity to maximize impact on the lives of the people. Our people are mostly poor. The talakawas are our primary, political and ideological constituency. We have ideological, constitutional and institutional responsibility to liberate them out of poverty as we liberate them from tyrannical and corrupt leaders. The talakawas are the most oppressed Nigerians. They have been exploited, dominated, plundered, neglected and abandoned for decades and the change government of President Muhammadu Buhari is a historic opportunity to lift them out of poverty, educate them, and enlighten them and to empower them. This is part of my contribution to that vision.

    What impact would you say the talakawa project you launched recently is having on your constituents?

    I call it the Talakawa Grassroots Revolutionary Development Programme. It is a programme aimed at the political and ideological enlightenment of the people to know their political status and also the political and economic indices that stand as pillars of their own oppression. Secondly, it is an intervention in education. It is also an intervention in the area of health by addressing some basic health issues that challenge their existence as a people. It is also an intervention in the area of faith. I think this is the time we should all get involved in the issue of religion itself. If the state withdraws from moderate religious courses, we will simply create a vacuum for extremists to take over, mobilise and incite the people against the state. My intervention is a revolutionary intervention to mobilise the people.

    Recently, the Emir of Kano calls for the devaluation of the naira and removal of subsidy. As the immediate past governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, people expect that he knows what he is talking about. But you are opposed to this call. Why is this so?

    The Emir of Kano is an intelligent economist and has proven to be a man of impeccable character and vision. He is also a man who has spent most part of his life speaking out his mind. But he is a vendor of capitalism. His views are inimical to the economy of Nigeria. He is an apprentice of IMF and the World Bank policies that has emasculated Africa and has not led us out of poverty. We are not exporting anything apart from oil and no investor is coming in to invest in anything in Nigeria other than oil. Devaluing Nigerian currency will simply make it easier for those who have been in public offices and have amassed wealth in foreign currency to live comfortably within and outside Nigeria and to oppress us the more. You don’t have to make our national currency worthless in other to revamp our economy.

    Many countries in Latin America and in Europe have taken this IMF prescription that has led them to nowhere. The economic experimentation that has grown the nations of China, Brazil and South Africa has to do with putting national economic issues first. In 2012, Sanusi supported the removal of subsidy and we were on the street protesting against it. While in office, he also has the opportunity to devalue the currency. We believe that devaluation of the currency and removal of subsidy is an invitation to chaos that will lead to a national upheaval against the Buhari administration. If you remove subsidy and devalue currency, you are simply going to spark off inflation and life will be most terrible and brutal to the common man and it will ignite a national uprising that will unsettle, if not subdue the Buhari administration. I think this advice is wrong and also coming at the wrong time and that is why we are opposed to it. With all due respect, he is a respectable person who has done a lot to save Nigeria and the Nigerian economy, but his views are out of touch with the realities of life outside his palace. People are finding it difficult to eat, feed their children, pay their rent and hospital bills. The mass of our people are without employment, many of our industries have closed down, we have inherited a debt ridden economy and the masses of our people must not continue to be guinea pigs for economic experimentations. The poor should not continuously be sacrificed for the wrong doing and mismanagement by government of the past.

    Considering how Buhari came into office with support from some past leaders and some of those accused of corruption, do you think he has the moral standing to try those last leaders.

    Politics is not a straight line and the tragedy of change is having to deal with the wastage which becomes part of our luggage to the destination which you have reached. When you are fighting to defeat an enemy, you need all the support and solidarity as well as all the backing to achieve that. At that time, you are blind to realities and the character and content of those backing you. By the time you are in the seat of power, you will now have to battle entrenched interests who were part of the forces that brought you to power.

    Why Obasanjo was not able to spark off his reform from the early time has to do with the fact that in his earlier years in power, he has to please and appease those very forces who aided him into power. When you embark on such policy of pleasing and appeasing, you will sacrifice a legacy and your opportunity to perform, so, a leader has a choice either to side with the people and hurt entrenched interests or to appease entrenched interests and sacrifice performance and delivery and this is the challenge before the Muhammadu Buhari administration. If you have found yourself in power, and faced with the problem of paucity of foreign exchange, and then you have to deal with rice importers who were part of the contributors to the campaign, then, you will have your conscience to fight. In all sense of the word, entrenched interest has been the undoing of the government of the past and also a big challenge to President Muhammadu Buhari to break away from them and move Nigeria forward.

  • Sani slams governor for ‘reckless’ utterances

    Sani slams governor for ‘reckless’ utterances

    The senator representing Kaduna Central in the National Assembly, Shehu Sani, has cautioned Governor Nasir El-Rufai for what he called the governor’s reckless statements.

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) lawmaker, who has been tackling the governor since inception of his administration, described as “irresponsible” a statement in which El-Rufai allegedly told aggrieved persons on his appointments to climb the Kufena Mountain and jump.

    The governor, at a town hall meeting with stakeholders from Kaduna Central, reportedly said: “Whoever is angry with his appointments at all levels can go and climb the Kufena Mountain and fall.”

    Sani was reacting to the governor’s statement when he hosted some youths from Southern Kaduna.

    He said: “The positive aspect of the governor’s proclamation on the Kufena Mountain is that he has put it on a national discuss and it has become a tourist attraction for people who want to see where opposition are supposed to climb, fall and die.

    “But in a serious sense, it is an irresponsible statement to have called on people who voted us into power to climb such a hill, fall and to die.

    “My advice to all the opposition forces in Kaduna State is that we should turn Kufena Hills into our meeting place to demand good governance, accountability and government without arrogance.”

  • Sani defends herdsmen

    The senator representing Kaduna Central, Shehu Sani, has defended Fulani herdsmen, following the recent kidnap of a former Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Chief Olu Falae.

    Falae was kidnapped last month on his farm by suspected Fulani herdsmen.

    Sani, in a Facebook post, said the Fulani were not terrorists or kidnappers.

    There have been calls by the Pan-Yoruba socio-cultural group, Afenifere, for the abolishment of nomadic cattle rearing.

    The senator wrote: “Fulani  are not kidnappers; they are not terrorists; they are not ‘tsetse flies’.

    “They are peaceful and humble and accommodating stock of Nigerians; they consider all parts of Nigeria and all parts of Africa as their home.

    “They are nationalists, patriots and Pan-Africanists. As long as you eat beef, you drink milk and you use leather, you are a beneficiary of the trade, skill and hard work of the Fulani herdsmen.”

  • Sani says it’s wicked, despicable

    Sani says it’s wicked, despicable

    Senator Shehu Sani has condemned in strong terms the multiple bomb explosions in Nyanya and Kuje, describing it as despicable and wicked.

    Sani who is representing Kaduna Central in the National Assembly urged Nigerians not to allow their spirits to be weakened by the series of bomb explosions and terrorists’ activities in the country, expressing optimism that the resolve of the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari would soon bring the acts of terror to an end in the country.

    In a statement in Kaduna, Sani said “the ultimate defeat of terror is the ability and capacity of the government to protect lives, livelihood and properties of the citizenry.”

    According to him, “The bombings must not weaken our resolve to resist and end terror, it should rather strengthen our faith in the ultimate triumph of good. Terrorism is a global menace and a challenge to our generation.”

     

    The lawmaker, who is also the president of the Civil Rights Congress, expressed condolences to the families of the victims of the terror attack.

  • El-Rufai saved N1.2 billion in two months -Sani

    El-Rufai saved N1.2 billion in two months -Sani

    In this interview, Governor Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai’s Special Adviser on Political Matters, Malam Uba Sani, spoke on the achievements so far recorded by El-Rufai’s administration in the last 100 days. Abdulgafar Alabelewe was there. Excerpt:

    Recently Governor Nasir El-Rufai’s policies, particularly his resolve to demolish and recover government properties that have been occupied by some individuals, created a lot of tension in Kaduna State. As a Political Adviser to the governor, what is the true situation now?

    I think the issue of recovering some lands that belong to schools and hospitals in the state is a very straight forward one. You will recall that during the campaign, Malam Nasiru El-Rufa’i promised he was going to make six things his priority; namely education, health, agriculture, infrastructure, security, youth and women empowerment. These sectors are the most important issues for this government. That is the reason why, when he assumed office we believed education, which is the bed rock of any society, should be given full attention. So, he decided to first of all create an enabling environment for our secondary school students in the state. To get a full picture of the situation, we went round all the secondary schools and even some primary schools too. You see, government’s effort was to ensure that our children have the best education this time around. We realised that the first thing we needed to do was to give them a very conducive environment.

     Though the government has started making positive impact in many other areas, nobody is talking about them.

    What are some of these things you are talking about?

    As I speak to you now, nobody is talking about the move by the government of Nasiru El-Rufai to provide all the junior and senior secondary school children in the state free and customized tablets (computers). The tablets will have all schools’ syllabus, WAEC past questions and answers, text books ranging from English, Mathematics, and Sciences to Social Studies and so on. Again, nobody is also talking about free uniforms. They are not talking about the free education that this government has introduced from primary to Junior Secondary School. They are not talking about the free feeding for primary school that we are about to start. We realised that the state also needs quality teachers; so after providing them with these things, they need to have quality teachers and in doing that, the government has decided to send the teachers for training and increase their salaries, which will be one of the best in the country.

    The public is somehow confused that those opposing your government policies are members of your party, the All Progressives Congress (APC). What would you say is responsible for this?

    I think anybody, whether in APC or any other party, who decides to attack the government’s intention in implementing this programme that is purely aimed at helping the children of the less-privileged to have good education, may be basically because his children are not even schooling in this country talk-less of being in the public schools. All these people making noise, I can bet that their children are not in public schools. Their children are in private schools; some are even abroad, so they don’t care about what happens to the children of the poor. They are only talking because they want to score cheap political points but I am sure that the general public understood their agenda and nobody will believe their stories because they have nothing to lose; but we have, we are in government and we have responsibility to help the poor and the less-privileged and we know what our people want and the government of Nasir El-Rufai is ready to provide those services to the people.

    A prominent member of the APC in the state once accused Governor El-Rufai of implementing programmes that are anti-masses in the state; that the governor stopped Ramadan feeding, sharing of essential commodities during festivities; cancelled government sponsorship of Muslims’ and Christians’ pilgrims to holy lands in Mecca and Jerusalem respectively. What is your take on this?

    Whoever is saying that is just being mischievous. Let me tell you something. Yes, we were voted in by the masses of this state, precisely the beggars, hawkers, the physically-challenged and the general public but it is not the intention of Nasir El-Rufai to leave them in the situation we met them.

    What about the cancellation of Ramadan feeding?

    Well, the issue of the Ramadan fasting is clear; the governor and I are Muslims, but we did nothing wrong. We have reached out to all the Islamic scholars and the Muslim Umma in the state and they are happy with our decisions; and so, we did not just take this decision on our own. We had a town hall meeting, which was organised by my office. In that meeting, we sat with all the stakeholders and the governor told them that in every festivity, the government spent over N400m distributing food items to very few people in the state and those people are the wealthy people in the society, going by the records. That was what has been happening in the past administration.

    And what about the Hajj seats?

    Talking about Hajj operations, we sat down and x-rayed the activities and we discovered that a greater percentage of the pilgrims are being sponsored by the government. We discovered that over N300m was being drained every year in that exercise. We also looked at those who go to Jerusalem and found out the same thing, although the figure is not as much as that of the Hajj. But even at that, only five per cent of Jerusalem Pilgrims pay from their private pockets, the rest were being sponsored by Kaduna State Government. When we looked at all these things we concluded that it would be of immense benefit to stop government sponsoring people to both Hajj and Jerusalem because those who benefit are capable of sponsoring themselves. I think people should commend the governor for taking this bold step to save the state.

    The anti-corruption war is taking the center stage at the national level, are we expecting a replica of that in the state soon?

    Governor Nasir El-Rufai has not come to Kaduna to fight anybody or witch-hunt anybody. His primary goal of coming here is to move the state forward. Look, when we came in we discovered that Kaduna has been taken backwards many, many years back. I can tell you that this state has not witnessed any development over a decade now. Things are more or less stagnant in the state. This can be confirmed by comparing the newly-created states that have overtaken Kaduna in terms of development..

     When we came in to pay salaries and overhead costs we discovered from the records we met that there was always a deficit of N100million every month. That is minus capital projects. That means if the state wants to initiate anything, she has to borrow money to do that, because there is no money. Therefore, when we came in we discovered that a lot of money was being wasted unnecessarily. The governor swung into action to block all the unnecessary wastages and today, we have saved N1.2 Billion in two months. The governor started from himself and the deputy governor by cutting their salaries to 50 per cent and that was extended to all other overhead costs around the governor and government agencies in the state. Today, those wastages have been addressed. We don’t pay salaries with deficit in Kaduna State any more.

  • Sani, Marwa hail Buhari on federal appointments

    Sani, Marwa hail Buhari on federal appointments

    SENATOR Shehu Sani, representing Kaduna Central and former military administrator, Gen Buba Mohammed Marwa were on the same page yesterday on the appointments made by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The duo said those reading ethnic meanings to federal appointments got it wrong, as the ability to deliver, rather than filling quota in public office was the guiding principle.

     Sani, a civil rights activist, urged Nigerians to judge President Buhari on the moral standing and capacity of those he appointed into public office rather than looking at religious and ethnic identity.

    In a statement in Abuja yesterday, the senator appealed to critics to help the President build “a tower of change” by clearing the rot bequeathed by the previous government.

    Tracing the upsurge in attacks on the President to sentiments rather than substance, he described as unfortunate that every issue in the country had to be subjected to ethnic interpretation.

    According to him, the concern raised by the people of the Southeast on the appointment, though genuine, credible and needed to be looked into, the agitation should not allowed to be exploited by “spent forces, vultures and political dinosaurs.”

    The lawmaker said as a man who fought the civil war and staked his life for the unity and peace of the country, President Buhari “needs no lecture or homilies on nationalism.”

     He said: “It is sad and most unfortunate that every issue in Nigeria has to go through the process of ethnic interpretation or religious translation or sectional categorisation and at the end sapped of its moral taste.

    “It is sad and unfortunate that with over a century after amalgamation and over five decades of political independence, some Nigerians still view our union as an incest; capitalising on every mundane issue to question its morality.

    “President Buhari is neither ‘a northern President’ nor ‘King of the North’. Among those on a smear campaign against the President are notorious ethnic irredentists, chauvinists and jingoistic politicians.

    “We must collectively safeguard our unity and defend our democracy from the verbal raid and oral onslaught of retrogressive forces against the currents of change.”

    Marwa, a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Adamawa State, praised the appointment of Babachir David Lawal, an engineer, as Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF).

    A statement by his aide,  Bello Zubairu, quoted the former Borno and Lagos State military administrators as saying that Lawal’s appointment “is not only a plus to his tribe or state or the North but to the country.”

    He described the new SGF as a thorough-bred party loyalist and philanthropist with great contacts across Nigeria.

    The statement reads: “His life as an accomplished businessman, a pastor, his military background will in no little way ensure high level of discipline and impact positively on his duties as SGF.

    “Lawal is a fair, straight-forward and honest man who is not a yes man. He will, no doubt, bring new sense of direction into office and as engine room of government, we are sure the president will get honest advice and as such policies will be well implemented and properly monitored.”