Tag: Tambuwal

  • Mustapha was a tested, committed patriot, says Tambuwal

    Mustapha was a tested, committed patriot, says Tambuwal

    Sokoto State Governor, Aminu Waziri Tambuwal, has expressed shock over the death of Deputy Governor of Borno State, Alhaji Zannah Umar Mustapha.

    He described the late Mustapha as a tested and committed patriot that gave his time and energy to the peace and development of the entire people of Borno State.

    In a statement yesterday in Sokoto by his spokesman, Mallam Imam Imam, made available to newsmen, Governor Tambuwal also described deceased as a committed democrat who worked hard to ensure the return of peace to his dear state in particular and the North East in general.

    The late Deputy Governor was reported to have been confirmed dead yesterday in a hospital in Yola, Adamawa state.

    He said Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima has lost a trusted ally and a refined human being who never shied away from giving his best for the people.

    While sending the condolence of the people and government of Sokoto State to their Borno counterparts, Tambuwal prayed to almighty Allah to grant the decease eternal rest, and give his family the fortitude to bear the loss.

  • Reps leadership: Tambuwal, Dogara and Gbajabiamila

    Reps leadership: Tambuwal, Dogara and Gbajabiamila

    Governor Aminu Tambuwal of Sokoto State stoked controversy again when he indirectly claimed credit for the victory of Hon Yakubu Dogara in the June 9 leadership election of the House of Representatives. The governor made the claim when he received visiting Sayawa leaders from the Speaker’s constituency of Bogoro/Tafawa Balewa in Bauchi State. His main reason for backing Hon Dogara, he disclosed, was the Speaker’s competence. There is little in his summation of the June 9 election that showed Mallam Tambuwal was  completely honest, nor that even if he could be so regarded, that he spoke wisely, minded his logic, or paid heed to the wider import of his choices. Hon Dogara’s Sayawa leaders were clear who they thought championed the cause of their son, and they travelled to Sokoto to let the world know, and to pay homage.

    Hear Mallam Tambuwal: “Eight out of ten members of the Body of Principal Officers in the 7th Assembly supported Dogara’s aspiration. Only Hon Femi (Gbajabiamila) and Hon Datti Ahmad supported Femi. I have strong affinity with Hon Femi. He was closer to me than Dogara. But when talking about leadership and collective decisions, sentiments have to be put aside. I’m not here to tell you that my support made Dogara the Speaker, no. Two things made Dogara to become the Speaker, one is God and two, Dogara’s competence. The acknowledgement of Dogara’s competence did not start with me. It started from the time of Hon Patricia Etteh and Hon Dimeji Bankole when they entrusted him with a sensitive position of the Chairman of House Services Committee.”

    The governor continues: “The committee is one of the most sensitive in the legislature. Apart from taking care of the welfare of members, the committee oversees all procurement processes. As the Speaker, I only did what my predecessors did by giving Dogara this sensitive position. No person, as far as I know, has ever served as chairman of the House Services committee in two dispensations. Dogara broke that jinx. All through my tenure, I brought Dogara close to me because I found in him a person who is competent, accommodating, and with capacity to lead. Anyone doubting Dogara’s ability to lead, should ask members of the 7th Assembly how he handled their matter. So we supported Dogara not for any reason but because he was competent to deliver on any task given to him.”

    Mallam Tambuwal spoke engagingly to the Sayawa leaders; but he spoke fulsomely like someone whose conscience was troubled, partly indicating that he seemed oblivious of the wider ramifications of his statement. He must be a politician of enormous courage and indifference to anchor his backing for Dogara purely on competence. For a man with presidential ambition, and one who admitted he was closer to Hon Femi Gbajabiamila, it is still mystifying why he discountenanced that closeness and the support the Surulere, Lagos Rep gave him during his leadership of the lower chamber to back a different horse. In his address to the Sayawa leaders, Mallam Tambuwal was in effect saying that Hon Dogara was more competent than Hon Gbajabiamila, a fact he believed was reinforced by the support given the new Speaker by eight out of 10 principal leaders of the 7th House of Representatives.

    Stung to the quick, and probably miffed by the suggestion that Hon Dogara was more competent than he, Hon Gbajabiamila retorted  that the God factor in his opponent’s victory was a more rational explanation for the outcome of the election. Just as it is not known what other motives really propelled Mallam Tambuwal to back Hon Dogara, it is also not quite certain that Hon Gbajabiamila told the whole truth on the value of Tambuwal’s influence on the election. Two facts are, however, obvious from the Dogara victory. The competence argument advanced by Mallam Tambuwal appears far-fetched. Given the margin of the Dogara victory (182 to 174) — or just eight votes — the vaunted influence of the eight out of 10 principal officers of the 7th Rep celebrated by Mallam Tambuwal may be a red herring. Second, the closeness of the Rep leadership election, though it ended in defeat for Hon Gbajabiamila, testified to his popularity and strength. Had Senator Bukola Saraki not become Senate President, thereby distorting the zoning arrangement in the National Assembly, Hon Gbajabiamila would probably have won, especially given his strong showing on June 9.

    There were insinuations that Mallam Tambuwal backed Hon Dogara probably because he was unhappy with the party’s preference for the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, Muhammadu Buhari, now president. Some staunch Southwest APC members had bought a nomination form for Mallam Tambuwal, and for a moment, it appeared the party’s leadership was poised to back him all the way. He was, however, unceremoniously dumped after a lot of political calculations and jostling. Mallam Tambuwal is thought to be still smarting from the incident. In addition, the Sokoto governor is also thought to be anxious to join others in curbing the influence of the national leader of the APC, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, who seemed to loom rather large over the party’s structure and ambitions. Mallam Tambuwal has declined absolutely to address these suppositions. Instead, he merely focused on what he described as Hon Dogara’s competence. Few politicians believe him.

    The implications of the National Assembly leadership elections will doubtless manifest in the coming months and years. Reacting to Mallam Tambuwal’s explanation on the outcome of the Reps leadership election, Hon Gbajabiamila said he wished the Sokoto governor well in his future endeavours. Many take this as a veiled indication that  should Mallam Tambuwal need the support of Hon Gbajabiamila and possibly the Southwest sometime in the future, he would find it tough going. It is however too soon to draw such inferences and conclusions.  Instead, the question to ask is whether in the political circumstances surrounding the Reps leadership election of June 9 Mallam Tambuwal acted with enough discretion and foresight to keep his presidential ambition alive for approximately the next four years. No conclusions can be drawn with any certainty.

    What is, however, clear is that Mallam Tambuwal may not have acted with substantial wisdom in retaining his friends and courting those outside his close circle of friends. Even if he was right to conclude that Hon Dogara was more competent than Hon Gbajabiamila, as an ambitious politician, he should have asked himself whether the call he was about to make was politically expedient for both his present and future needs. Given the closeness of the June 9 vote, it does appear there is no settling the precedence between Hon Dogara and Hon Gbajabiamila in terms of competence. Worrisomely too, Mallam Tambuwal’s choices may signify a hitherto hidden part of his person and psychological make-up. Was it possible that when they backed him for the Reps leadership election in 2011, the progressives in the then Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN) didn’t know him as much as they thought? Just as the drawn-out conflict between the pro-June 12 activists and the Gen Sani Abacha military government  in the 90s exposed the inner but appalling character of many otherwise respected Nigerian politicians, especially from the Southwest, the June 9 Reps leadership election may have exposed the true character, ideology and preferences of many supposedly principled and brilliant politicians.

    It also took the election of the Christian and South-South Goodluck Jonathan in 2011 and his reelection campaign in 2015 to expose the true nature,  prejudices and poor judgement of many southern and especially Southwest politicians. After Dr Jonathan, Nigerian politics, not to say Southwest politics, is unlikely to be the same again. After the June 9 National Assembly leadership elections , especially Mallam Tambuwal’s controversial ratiocination, Nigerian politics and power relations in the legislature and elsewhere at the national level are certain to be affected or even altered in ways many politicians cannot begin to imagine.

  • Tambuwal advocates no waiver for rice importation

    Tambuwal advocates no waiver for rice importation

    Sokoto State Governor Aminu Waziri Tambuwal has observed that local rice production is being hampered by the current waiver enjoyed by importers of the commodity, calling on the federal government to phase it out.

    The governor spoke yesterday in Sokoto when he received the new Customs Area Controller for Sokoto, Zamfara and Kebbi states, Alhaji Muhammad Kabir while on a courtesy call on him in his office.

    According to Tambuwal” the current waiver regime being enjoyed by rice importers is grossly hampering local production of the commodity and should be phased out.”

    He noted that preliminary studies undertaken showed that despite efforts to boost local rice production, unfavourable government policies especially with regards to waiver to importers, coupled with other policies, is proving to be impediment to states’ objectives to achieve local self-sufficiency.

    Tambuwal further reiterated the fact that the quality of rice produced locally is of international standard and far better than many of the ones imported into the country.

    He said the state government will continue to support farmers in rice producing areas by ensuring that they  acquire standard modern facilities that will process their produce.

  • Why I supported Dogara, by Tambuwal

    Why I supported Dogara, by Tambuwal

    •Gbajabiamila: I’ve moved on

    Sokoto State Governor and immediate past Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon Aminu Waziri Tambuwal, yesterday explained why he supported his successor, Speaker Yakubu Dogara.

    Tambuwal spoke in Sokoto when he received leaders of Sayawa Community of Bogoro and Tafawa Balewa Local Government Areas of Bauchi State.

    He said: “He is a patriotic, committed and pious Nigerian who has been tested and trusted.

    “He is one young northerner and Nigerian who has not only integrity, but accommodation and the ability for leadership.

    “When you are talking about leadership you must put away sentiments and his emergence as the speaker was based on merit, and divined by God.’’

    The governor said competence, rather than any reason, led to the endorsement of Dogara by eight of 10 members of the Body of Principal Officers of the Seventh Assembly.

    He said the survival of the legislature as an important arm of government makes it imperative that competent hands are headhunted to be its leaders.

    “Eight of 10 members of the Body of Principal Officers in the last Assembly supported Dogara’s aspiration. Only Femi (Gbajabiamila) and Datti Ahmad supported Femi.

    “I have strong affinity with Femi. He was closer to me than Dogara. But when talking about leadership and collective decisions, sentiments have to be put aside. I’m not here to tell you that my support made Dogara the Speaker, no. Two things made Dogara to become the Speaker, one is God and two, Dogara’s competence.

    “The acknowledgement of Dogara’s competence did not start with me. It started from the time of Patricia and Etteh and Dimeji Bankole when they entrusted him with a sensitive position of the Chairman of House Services Committee.

    “The committee is one of the most sensitive in the legislature. Apart from taking care of the welfare of members, the committee oversees all procurement processes. As the Speaker, I only did what my predecessors did by giving Dogara this sensitive position.

    “No person, as far as I know, has ever served as chairman of the House Services Committee in two dispensations. Dogara broke that jinx. All through my tenure, I brought Dogara close to me because I have found in him a person who is competent, accommodating, and with capacity to lead.

    “Anyone doubting Dogara’s ability to lead, should ask members of the Seventh Assembly how he handled their matter. So we supported Dogara not for any reason but because he was competent to deliver on any task given to him,” he added.

    Gbajabiamila told The Nation last night that he had moved on.

    “Alhaji Tambuwal has finally spoken. For me, I have moved on and I can only wish him the best in his future undertaking.”

     

  • National Assembly crisis’ll soon be over, says Tambuwal

    National Assembly crisis’ll soon be over, says Tambuwal

    Sokoto State Governor Aminu Tambuwal yesterday said the crisis rocking the National Assembly would soon be resolved.

    He spoke with State House correspondents after a meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    Tambuwal, who is a member of one of the committees set up to resolve the crisis, said his committee had held series of meetings to solve the matter.

    He said: “We have commenced meetings and even today we are going to have yet another meeting and I believe that there is light at the end of the tunnel. Peace and normalcy will be restored to the chambers of the National Assembly.

    “And I assure that we will continue to support Mr. President for us to deliver on our promises to the Nigerian people.”

    On whether he supported the reports claiming that Femi Gbajabiamila’s camp was insisting on the emergence of four principal officers based on All Progressives Congress (APC) position, he said: “It is not a matter of caving into it, I am a mediator and I am not at liberty to pre-empt what should be the outcome of my report, therefore I am not in a position to confirm that.”

    Asked for his reaction to the belief that National Assembly members were emboldened by the unique way he emerged as the Speaker of the House of Representatives, he said: “I should leave that to you to make your own judgement. I believe they are all matured people representing their various constituencies in the Senate and the House of Representatives and they should know what is best for the country and the party.”

    He added that he was at the Villa to meet minds with the President on security and development of the country.

    He said: “Mr. President is the leader of the party and as a governor of Sokoto state, I have come to see him and indeed to seek his advice and meet minds with him on issues  on security and the continued development of the country.”

     

  • Tambuwal, Kebbi gov  head APC peace panels

    Tambuwal, Kebbi gov head APC peace panels

    •To liaise with Saraki, Dogara, Lawan , Gbajabiamila
    • Buhari, Atiku, Tinubu, Ogbeh make BoT list

    The search for an enduring solution to the crisis among members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the National Assembly gathered steam last night with the governors of the party raising two committees to “liaise with the President of the Senate, Dr. Bukola Saraki, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, Sen. Ahmed Lawan and members of the Unity Forum and Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila.”

    Governor Aminu Tambuwal of Sokoto State and the immediate House of Reps Speaker heads a three-man committee to fashion out amicable resolution of the House crisis while Governor Atiku Bagudu of Kebbi State, a former Senator, is Chairman of another   three-man panel on the way forward for the Senate.

    The six governors in the two panels, according to a highly placed source, “will meet with all the warring groups and agree on a win-win formula to put the crisis behind the party.”

    The two committees are expected to report to the APC Governors Forum later this week after which an enlarged session of reconciliation will seal the deal.

    “The choice of Tambuwal and Bagudu was informed by the fact that they are conversant with the politics of both chambers and they command tremendous respect from the APC members in the National Assembly,” the source said last night,” the source said.

    “By the time they submit their report next week, we would have put the crisis behind us. We are not expecting any deadlock at all going by the responses of the key actors to this peace initiative.”

    The APC Governors Forum was meeting with all state chairmen of APC in the 36 states and the FCT at press time.

    It was gathered that the meeting was part of the “broad consultations initiated by the APC governors.”

    Another source said: “The governors have also decided to involve state chairmen in finding a solution to the logjam at hand.

    “The crisis runs through all the organs and strata of our party. This is why it was imperative to meet with the state chairmen of APC nationwide.”

    It was also gathered that heavyweights of the APC have been included in the Board of Trustees (BoT) of the party.

    The board is expected to provide guidance for the party to stem the type of ongoing crisis among party members in the National Assembly.

    The membership of the BOT was ratified on Friday by the National Executive Committee of the party.

    Those on the list obtained by our correspondent last night include President Muhammadu Buhari, Vice President Yemi Osinbajo , a National Leader of APC, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, ex-Vice President Atiku Abubakar, National Chairman of APC, Chief John Odigie-Oyegun, President of the Senate, Dr. Bukola Saraki, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, all APC governors, all past governors (whether civilian or military), two Senators representing each of the six geopolitical zones and a member representing each state and the FCT.

    Also on the list are the pioneer Chairman of APC, Chief Bisi Akande, a former National Chairman of the PDP, Chief Audu Ogbeh, another former National Chairman of PDP, Alhaji Kawu Baraje, ex-National Chairman of ANPP, Chief Ogbonnaya Onu, Prince Tony Momoh, Chief Barnabas Gemade, Alh. Yusuf Garba Ali, Mustapha Aliyu, the National Secretary of APC, Mallam Mai Mala Buni, and Gen. Ahmed Aboki

    Others are ex-Speakers and Deputy Speakers of the House of Representatives including Ghali Na’aba, Patricia Etteh, Agunwa Anaekwe, Bayero Nafada, and Chibudom Nwuche.

    The list also includes Sam Ewang, Ex-Minister John Akpanudohedohe, ex-Governors Olagunsoye Oyinlola, Abubakar Audu, Rabiu Kwankwaso, Kayode Fayemi, Murtala Nyako, Babatunde Raji Fashola, Isiaka Adeleke, Niyi Adebayo, Segun Oni, Prof. Osunbor, Dr. Chris Ngige, Mohammed Sha’aba Lafiagi and Timipreye Sylva among others.

  • Atiku, Kwankwaso, Tambuwal and Ekweremadu

    Atiku, Kwankwaso, Tambuwal and Ekweremadu

    It is worrisome what dire portents the controversial National Assembly (NASS) leadership elections of June 9 have let loose. The elections were supposed to be a routine, if slightly competitive, exercise to choose those who would preside over the affairs of the 8th Senate and 8th House of Representatives. But it turned out to be a harbinger of unsettling and inextricable complications for the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). Given what the disputed elections signposted, the APC must ready itself for more intrigues and fierce competition for dominance by party leaders. In defiance of his party, APC’s Bukola Saraki had struck an alliance with the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to emerge as Senate President, with PDP’s Ike Ekweremadu as his deputy. In the lower chamber, Yakubu Dogara, also defying his party, had emerged as Speaker, with Lasun Suleiman of the APC as deputy.

    While the APC was still fuming over the developments in the National Assembly, some of the party’s key leaders offered their views on the election and managed in the same breath to show where they were headed politically. The viewpoints of three APC leaders — former Vice President Atiku Abubakar, former Speaker Aminu Tambuwal and former Kano governor Rabiu Kwankwaso — indicate just how poignantly the NASS election transcended merely producing the leaders of the 8th NASS. Senator Saraki, Alhaji Atiku, Governor Tambuwal and Senator Kwankwaso are thought to eye the 2019 presidential race. Their actions and opinions on the June 9 NASS leadership elections were believed to have been influenced by their ambitions. But whether each has pursued that ambition ethically and healthily, and with the insuperable circumspection of a future presidential aspirant, will be clear in the coming months.

    The election, or more accurately, the affirmation, of Senator Ekweremadu appears to be the leitmotif of the forthcoming presidential struggle. The reaction of the four APC leaders to the presence on the APC ticket of PDP’s Senator Ekweremadu is serving as the litmus test to gauge their loyalty to the party, their character as individuals and politicians, and their understanding of the dynamics of Nigerian politics. Senator Saraki’s ambition is hardly disguised. While he is entitled to nurse any ambition, many party leaders and followers are uneasy over the guileful but facile manner he ceded the important and valuable position of Deputy Senate Presidency to the PDP, and act attributed wholly to his machinations. Even after the brouhaha over the political heresy is quietened, it is doubtful whether Senator Saraki can be trusted again. Party leaders, members and the populace will wonder whether there is a limit to what and who Senator Saraki can trade for his ambition. He will be judged blameless for resisting his party and pursuing his ambition to lead the senate; but he will not be exculpated for undermining his party in such a grand, reckless and offensive manner. He is unlikely to live down that betrayal, or celebrate for long what is evidently a pyrrhic victory.

    Alhaji Atiku denies that his celebration of the outcome of the NASS elections has anything to do with the 2019 presidential race, but he has offered no forceful or convincing justification for turning a blind eye to Senator Saraki’s subversion of party discipline. Indeed, Alhaji Atiku was enthusiastic in welcoming the new NASS leadership. “The Nigerian people are looking up to the new National Assembly to work with the executive arm to find solutions to the problems of insecurity, poverty, illiteracy and joblessness in the country,” gushed the former vice president. “Their election is indeed a call to duty, and it is a call for which they cannot afford to fail the nation.” He goes on to suggest that the new NASS leaders should not be discomfited by the circumstances of their emergence, but should swing to work immediately and not let personal political interest supersede national interest. He offered no direct or indirect opinion on the subversion of party discipline plotted by Senator Saraki, nor of the embarrassment and dire implication to the APC which the affirmation of Senator Ekweremadu as Deputy Senate President disgracefully connoted.

    While Alhaji Atiku has achieved some renown in crisscrossing political parties, Governor Tambuwal, another party leader who might be interested in the 2019 presidential race, had a reputation for general stoicism and ideological politics. During his tenure as Speaker of the House of Representatives, he came across to many as a dependable politician and leader, one who mixed well, and was sagacious, intelligent and courageous. Why he seemed blithely unaware of the damage to his reputation which his inappropriate reaction to the NASS leadership election implied is hard to understand. He was an ardent defender of the independence of the legislature, and he stood ramrod against the political and executive malfeasances of the Goodluck Jonathan administration. But surely, given his perspicacity, he should be capable of drawing a line between legislative independence and legislative ethicalness, and between party discipline and executive interference. Yet, he was not too incommoded by the desire to defy his party when he felt it was justified. Whether that justification had anything to do with principles or personal interest cannot now be easily established. But in embracing the June 9 NASS elections, which he claimed exampled the maturation of Nigerian democracy, he showed none of the gifts, accomplishments and oratorical endearments for which he had been celebrated as a hero of the 7th Senate.

    Senator Kwankwaso has never hidden his interest in running for president. In fact, he is unabashed in showing his interest. He has a solid political pedigree, and his time as governor of Kano State, not to talk of his Kwankwasiya ideology, continues to resonate quite well with many Nigerians. In the last APC presidential primary, he surprised many by coming a famous and inspiring second to the winner, Muhammadu Buhari. Since then he has talked sensibly, fearlessly, independently and clairvoyantly. What is more, he seems somewhat uncannily prescient in judging political matters. Weeks before the June 9 NASS elections, he had warned of an impending catastrophe if APC leaders failed to handle the NASS leadership elections well. After the elections, when some party leaders waffled, he forthrightly lambasted Senator Saraki for rank indiscipline, and described other beneficiaries of the aberrant elections, such as Senator Ekweremadu, as undeserving. He also counseled the party to establish its authority over its members if the Buhari presidency was not to be threatened by the new and unholy alliance between Senator Saraki and his new PDP affiliates.

    It may be too early to project into the 2019 presidential race, for four years is a very long time in politics. But so far, Senator Kwankwaso has talked the talk most engagingly. His sound bites are clear and crisp, and his stand quite geomorphologically close to the Rock of Gibralta. It however remains to be seen how well he can stay faithful to, and be focused on, doing and saying the right things effortlessly. At the bottom of the posturing by these ambitious APC leaders is the expectation that President Buhari could choose not to run in 2019. If he does however run, the hopes and plans of these early aspirants will be summarily dashed. If he does not run, the field will be crowded by many presidential wannabes, some of them accomplished flip-floppers, and others too short-termist to endure a long race. Among them, if he can stay the course, and nurse his principles, will be Senator Kwankwaso, ebullient, iconoclastic and pragmatic as ever.

  • Atiku, Tambuwal, Ahmed sue for peace

    Atiku, Tambuwal, Ahmed sue for peace

    Former Vice President Abubakar Atiku, House of Representatives Speaker Yakubu Dogara, Kwara State Governor Abdulfatah Ahmed and his Sokoto State counterpart Aminu Waziri Tambuwal have called on Muslims to pray for peace being threatened by the Boko Haram insurgent in some parts of the country.

    Atiku said he was saddened by the frequent explosion of conflicts and violence.

    He called on political leaders to show extra vigilance to stem the growth of extremism.

    The Turaki Adamawa expressed sadness that people have been turned to captives of fear because of the spectre of terrorism.

    He called for urgent action to attack the roots of terrorism.

    To attack the ideology, he explained that, innocent Muslims should be shielded from the influences of extremist teachers, who might exploit their ignorance and push them into criminal atrocities.

    Atiku expressed sadness at how a minority group of misguided bigots are giving innocent Muslims a baggage of negative image.

    Dogara said the present crop of leaders in Nigeria came in at a very critical time, saying that the promise of change by the new government can only be realised if Nigerians rededicate themselves to the service of God and humanity.

    “As mere mortals, we cannot achieve anything of our own wisdom and strength but with prayers, and determination, we can collectively overcome our challenges as a country,” he said.

    Governor Ahmed said the country seems to be experiencing unusual economic and security challenges that require concerted efforts and prayers from everyone to get it back on track.

    “At a time like this when our state, and indeed our country is passing through dire economic challenges due to the slump in national earnings, national rebirth through good governance, Allah’s intervention in guiding our leaders in rejuvenating the economy and rebirth  is crucial”, the governor said.

    Tambuwal appealed to the citizenry to prioritise the plight of the needy by spending from their wealth to ease the pains of the people.

    According to the governor, “by taking care of the poor, the vulnerable and the less-privileged, the society is doing itself lots of favours.”

  • Tambuwal reconstitutes  feeding committee

    Tambuwal reconstitutes feeding committee

    Sokoto State Governor Aminu Waziri Tambuwal has reconstituted the state’s 23-member Ramadan Feeding Committee.

    According to the statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Public Affairs, Imam Imam, former Chairman of the committee, Alhaji Aliyu Attahiru, the Galadiman Gari, and secretary, Garba Bello, Director, Social Welfare in the Ministry of Women and Child Affairs, retained their positions.

    The new reconstituted committee has its membership drawn from the civil service, clergy, elder statesmen and politicians.

    It further said the appointment is with immediate effect.

  • Tambuwal: I’ll run participatory government

    Tambuwal: I’ll run participatory government

    Sokoto State Governor Aminu Tambuwal spoke with reporters about the focus of his administration, shortly after taking his oath of office in Sokoto, the state capital. Victor Oluwasegun was there.

    What are your plans for Sokoto State?

    What we have here in Sokoto is not a complete ‘change’ like we have at the centre and some other states. Our own is a continuity in ‘change’. The administration that came to an end today was headed by Alhaji Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko, who is a very strong member of the All Progressives Congress (APC). Therefore, we intend first and foremost to continue with the ongoing projects of the administration and of course initiate new ones that will better the lives of the people of Sokoto State. Fundamentally, we are going to focus on areas of education, agriculture, healthcare delivery services, empowerment of our youths and women and indeed we are going to also pay special attention to the infrastructural development of the state.

    That is not to say that we are not going to pay priority attention to the areas of mining because we know the economic challenges we are facing in this country at the moment and we need all hands on deck to ensure that we generate more revenue. Indeed, we have identified the mining sector as one key sector that, if properly harnessed, will benefit Sokoto State and indeed the Nigerian federation enormously from the mineral deposits in the state. Of course, we’re also going to ensure that we introduce policies that cater for our women. I have in mind the issue of a micro-finance bank that will be called ‘Bankin Mata’ (Women Bank), which will be used as a medium to empower our women.

    What are the challenges you encountered as Speaker?

    Well, I started by this morning or afternoon (May 29) as it were, by extending an olive branch and hand of friendship and fellowship to the state House of Assembly for us to work as a team. What matters is the trust and confidence building between the two arms of government and respectability. If they have their position and we have our position from the executive side, what we need and we require is for us to sit down and agree and harmonize our positions and have synergy. I think that was what was lacking reasonably between us and the government when I was the Speaker of the House of Representatives. We shall engage ourselves; we must not allow friction between the legislature and the executive arm of government here in Sokoto State.

    What will you miss most about the House of Representatives?

    Definitely, I will miss the chambers; I will miss my colleagues. What you have in the National Assembly and other legislatures is a relationship of equals. Here, the expectation is different; the arrangement is different. The Governor or President or Chairman, as it were, is the chief executive; you dish out instructions. But, in the legislature you must court friendship; you must carry along your colleagues in what you intend to achieve.

    How do you intend to sustain the goodwill of the people till the end of your tenure?

    For us to sustain the goodwill of the people, we must engage the people; we must interact with the people; we must carry them along. We must also be open and transparent in conducting the business of government. What is expected of us constitutionally is to encourage participatory democracy. And once you’re open and accessible as a leader, I believe that the followers will always appreciate and understand your own position. Once you have that, by the grace of God, you will have a smooth ride.

    What will you do to unite the people of Sokoto now that you are in the saddle?

    In my inaugural speech today, I requested and appealed particularly to those who ran for the office of governor and other positions in other political parties to join hands with us to continue building the state. It’s not a personal estate of an individual; the state is for all of us. And I believe that the appeal to them will go a long way in ensuring that we win back their friendship. I intend to go the extra mile, of course, to continue till we get there.