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Sunday, September 4, 2022

Wike and the Limit of Arrogance by Umar Danjani Hadejia

 

28th August, 2022


By: Umar Danjani Hadejia

For some reason, Nyesom Wike has manged to become one of the trending talking points in Nigerian politics since June. From 2015 to date, many political leaders especially within the PDP have decided to remain calm as Wike’s arrogance keeps graduating from one empty stage to another. As the PDP is battling with its not-too-familiar role of a new opposition party, many have been reluctant in openly cautioning Wike’s antics to prevent any unnecessary explosion. This is what he has leveraged on to hold the party to ransom, the exact reason for our situation today.

Governor Nyesom Wike thinks he has the monopoly of intimidation believing that there is no line he cannot cross. He feels he has come of age to the extent that he can rudely utter anything against PDP elders like Sule Lamido. As one of the last three founding PDP fathers standing who has a duty to say the truth no matter whose ox is gored, we can’t fold our arms in the midst of Wike’s irresponsible behaviour towards him just because we want PDP to win elections. For Wike’s information if he doesn’t know, Sule Lamido and Abubakar Rimi were imprisoned by Late Abacha in the course of fighting for the establishment of the democracy. 

The issue is simple as Lamido pointed out, there was a convention in which even Wike who lost accepted to be credible. What then is the noise for? Is Wike the first person to lose a Presidential primary?

Ordinarily, there shouldn’t be any reason to interfere in Wike’s show of arrogance if he had not been disrespectful to the PDP leaders. Categorically, who or what has offended Wike? Is it his Southern co-contestants whom he couldn’t convince to work together with him? Is it Atiku Abubakar who settled for competence and exercised his constitutional right by picking a running mate he can be comfortable working with? What exactly is the issue here?  

To begin with, Wike is as empty as his intimidations. He doesn’t have any track record for excellence. As a Federal Cabinet member between 2011to 2015, Wike didn’t distinguish himself for anything good except for using his position to unleash the violence that brought him to office as governor in Rivers State. While President Jonathan’s cabinet was known for having the best brains then, Wike didn’t demonstrate any capacity to deliver in his four years as minister because he lacked any.

Wike’s assertion that Sule Lamido is promoting his family for political positions is the height of ignorance. For the over 45 years in which he has been in politics, he had supported and promoted the career of hundreds of people whom he never shared any family relationship with. Between 2007 to 2015, he could’ve easily opted to nominate his son or any of his family members into any position, but he instead decided to pick others. If he had done otherwise, nothing would’ve happened.

Over the years, Lamido has promoted and helped many people who later turned out to sabotage him and the political party he had laboured to build. Should he continue to be promoting people who are enemies of the PDP? In the last 24 years, Sule Lamido together with others laboured to build and nurture the PDP for which Wike has enjoyed and still enjoying today. It is PDP that gave Wike everything he is boasting of today. Even the Rivers State resources he is squandering today in travelling and holding meetings abroad are all thanks to the office of the PDP government he is occupying.

For the avoidance of doubt, Sule Lamido did not sponsor or promote the candidacy of Mustapha who happens to be his son. Mustapha contested like any other candidate, subjected himself to the rigours of the process and won the primary elections which was witnessed by everyone and certified by INEC and PDP National officials. He won on his own merit and he is qualified with his three degrees to occupy any office in Nigeria. If Lamido wanted to impose any family member, he could’ve done so in 2015 or 2019 when he had absolute control. Can Wike honestly claim to have emerged freely and fairly in 2015? Can he say with all honesty that his current governorship candidate emerged transparently? What moral right does he have to question other people’s choices?

Wike’s arrogance is riding on the illusion of owning Rivers State and the privilege of controlling its resources. This is why he apparently believes he can be rude to everybody as if he is the only state governor in Nigeria. Rivers State people are not Wike’s slaves or servants, they are independent and wise enough to vote the right candidates in any elections. If he thinks he can lay claim to the ownership of their freedom to exercise their rights, they will surely prove him wrong in 2023. Before Wike, PDP has been winning elections since its inception. Certainly, he can’t claim to have installed Dr. Perter Odili or Rotimi Amaechi as governors.

There is no problem whatsoever with Wike wanting to become president. But if he thinks he can bulldoze and intimidate his way like he did on his way to the Rivers Government House in 2015 and get away with it, he is mistaken. The office of the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria comes with a lot of responsibility which are too sophisticated for an arrogant rascal. The maturity needed for Leadership is beyond a bottle of whisky. Wike lacks the temperament to occupy such an exalted office.

We call on Nyesom Wike to embrace humility and concentrate on the victory of the PDP. We understand his fears of political irrelevance beyond 2023 when he no longer has the luxury of power and unlimited government resources to unleash his intimidation against the public. The only way out for him is to be humble, respect his elders and leaders, accept that power is transient, work for the victory of the PDP and perhaps reserve some hope for himself in 2027.

 

Wednesday, June 15, 2022

More Clarifications Ahead of 2023

 15th June, 2022


By: Amir Abdulazeez

W

hen President Obasanjo carelessly picked Goodluck Jonathan to serve as ‘Yaradua’s potential Vice President in 2007, little did we know that the politics of picking running mates will later become complex and problematic. The death of Ummaru, ascension of Jonathan, surprise emergence of Namadi Sambo and Patrick Yakowa becoming the first Christian Civilian Governor of Kaduna State would all combine to later add more relevance to the politics of running mate selection. In 2014, APC had more headache in picking a presidential running mate than the presidential candidate himself. It took them so much time and effort that one thought they will organize a fresh convention for that purpose.

Today, the Muslim-Muslim ticket debacle is the bane of Nigerian political discourse. While clamouring for fairness and balance which are needed for a fragile system like Nigeria’s, we should also remember that from 1999 to date, no religion can claim any net gain from this Nigerian version of democracy. Ordinary followers of all religions have been victims of bad governance, even pagans. We have suffered so much so that if a pagan/pagan ticket will eradicate insecurity, fix the economy and bring development while being fair to all interests and affiliations, we should allow it. Therefore, the choice is between searching for solutions and satisfying sentiments; we seem to favour the latter.

A section of public commentators and spectators are already suggesting a walkover for Atiku Abubakar in the 2023 polls. That is the biggest complacency I have ever seen in contemporary Nigerian politics. How can you be facing a ruling party with almost 65% of political stakeholdership in the country and be expecting to have a walkover? Atiku is an institution but his successes in the last two PDP primaries is more of financial supremacy than political dominance. That aside, barring a Buhari-like scenario, Atiku will definitely make a good president. He is perhaps the only fully independent candidate with a clear and accessible blueprint since 2007. In 2011, he had a better manifesto and approach than President Goodluck Jonathan; he only lost the PDP primaries to the power of incumbency. By the way, what happened to the Jonathan 2023 candidacy?

From 1992, this is Atiku’s 7th attempt at the Presidency with 2019 being his closest to success. Many believe 2023 is his year and so many obvious factors call for optimism in his camp. However, there are two fundamental things that may haunt Waziri; (in)consistency and (un)popularity. Buhari and Tinubu are successfully reaping the harvests of consistency and perseverance; they sticked to opposition politics all their lives. Atiku should’ve remained in opposition when he decamped to Action Congress in 2007 or should’ve remained in the ruling PDP when he decamped back in 2011. Ambition had kept him running from one place to another making him neither establishment nor anti-establishment. The second question is whether there is a single state in Nigeria which Atiku can secure one million votes or more in 2023? I hope we all remember Dr. Rabi’u Kwankwaso’s 3-K States theory?

Tinubu’s boast in Ogun State over his role in the emergence of Buhari as President needs some revisiting and clarification. For the avoidance of doubt, Muhammadu Buhari did not lose the 2003 presidential elections, it was brutally rigged to return Obasanjo for a second term. 2003 will easily enter the list of the worst elections in modern world history. In 2007, the presidential elections results were simply written, so we can’t even call that election not to talk of who won or lost. I have never relied on 2003 and 2007 election figures for any research or serious analysis, because they are largely fabricated. The 2011 elections were relatively fair but at least 40% of the vote was rigged, written or simply inflated especially in the South-South and South-East.

In circumstances like these, we cannot comfortably declare Buhari a loser of all the previous elections he contested and only became a winner when he met Tinubu. It is true that 2015 was the weakest version of political Buhari, it was true that he had lost hope and that the APC merger spearheaded by Tinubu was what brought him back to life. But it is also true that so many other factors other than Tinubu contributed crucially to Buhari’s victory, one major one was the abysmal performance of Goodluck Jonathan. One thing that is however certain is that, without Tinubu’s support, it would’ve been near impossible for Buhari to emerge APC flagbearer against the financial powerhouses in Kwankwaso and Atiku.

This brings us to the argument of access to public funds as the reason why some candidates (not aspirants) are stronger than others. Supporters of a particular presidential candidate even claimed that if their man had equal access to public funds, he would be better than certain candidates. This is laughable; a debate like this will take us nowhere. Just campaign for your candidate and persuade people to vote for him. If we are talking about the abuse of peoples trust and the utilization of our commonwealth for personal political development, none of the major politicians in Nigeria will come out clean. So, let us not deceive ourselves and others.

Where are our smaller political parties who had spent most of their last four years fighting INEC over deregistration? This is a good amount of time they would’ve spent in coming together to form a strong bloc. In case we don’t know, 74 of them were deregistered for failing to meet the requirements to continue to exist as political parties. Probably about 10 to 15 of the currently existing will be due for deregistration by this time next year. Instead of them to consider merging to form a decent alternative, they’ll rather hang on only to be fighting a legal survival battle with INEC next year. As the strongest and largest intellectual organization in West Africa, I don’t even know why ASUU is yet to form a political party or adopt any of the smaller parties to set up a path towards satisfying their own demands all by themselves instead for waiting and hoping for a hopeless Federal Government.

Why is nobody talking about the enormous task ahead of the next president whom credible international reports suggest will have to use 100% of his revenue in servicing (not repaying) debts by 2024? To execute projects or even pay salaries, the next government may have to borrow further. Nigeria is in trouble, we are drowning in the ocean of foreign debts, meanwhile we are concerned over the religion of a presidential candidate more than his ability to bring us out of this mess. Buhari has failed because Jonathan had built a solid foundation for that failure. Now he has built a worse foundation for his successor. Ladies and gentlemen, the possibility and danger of the next president irrespective of his affiliation and preparedness to economically be worse than Buhari is imminent. May God help us.

All of the political dynamics of today are closely related to that of 1999, some a bit earlier. If you have not directly experienced Nigerian political development from 1999 with a mix of some pre-1999 historical knowledge, you will find it difficult if not impossible to connect certain dots that you see today. Extensive and intensive reading may help, but politely interacting with veterans will do better. Social media where most of the political debates occur is dominated by youths who knew little or nothing pre-2011 and don’t invest significant time in reading but trying to engage or even confront the same veterans that would’ve been their best opportunity at understanding the genesis of the current situation.

There are some visible changes in Nigeria’s socio-political spaces, although not new but have taken a different twist from the previous. The renewed order is the attempt to criminalize certain political choices against others. Between 2014 to 2018, discourses were dominated by hate, campaigns of calumny, fabrications and outright abuse. Today, political promoters are trying hard to make it appear that only their candidates are good enough and any other choice is treason. This is extremism, let’s be careful, everything is a matter of opinion and everyone is entitled to his.

 

Twitter: @AmirAbdulazeez

Friday, June 10, 2022

Some Clarifications Ahead of 2023

 10th June, 2022

By: Amir Abdulazeez


T

he primary elections of the two leading political parties, APC and PDP had come and gone. The dusts raised by the exercises across various states of the federation are yet to settle. As things are currently going, it is unlikely that the primary election appeal committees of both parties will adequately or significantly settle these dusts to the extent of amounting to a major change of the status quo. Afterall everything was clear, the contests were majorly a measure of financial power.

As usual, our attempts to digest the intrigues and expectations of the upcoming grand 2023 event has once again resulted to endless debates that often lead to more confusions than clarifications. Certain political dynamics cannot be adequately explained by simple analysis or even complex ones. This is truer for cases like Nigeria where deep insight is considered old fashioned, authentic information is always scarce and genuine narratives are always twisted.

Ahead of the just concluded APC Primaries, many accused Yemi Osinbajo of being a traitor and betrayer by contesting against his benefactor Tinubu. However, few people will understand that only one out of a million people will go so close to the presidency like Osinbajo did without succumbing to the temptation of taking a shot at it. The cabal-theory notwithstanding, he is perhaps the Nigerian Vice President who was closest to the full privileges of the presidency in recent history. At a time, the Professor himself appeared like the next president in waiting. In sincere terms, Osinbajo may feel that running for the Presidency is more of an attempt to fulfil a destiny than betraying a godfather whose help he may not need any longer.

May be, many have forgotten, the Vice President had at a time been an Acting President with virtually full Presidential powers. He is aware of people's confidence in his competence and he quite knows that there are many factors against Tinubu's candidacy. With the Southwest as the default region where APC will likely have its next candidate, it is only natural he (the second default candidate) tries his luck in case Tinubu (the default candidate) does not get the nod. If he doesn't contest, how can he cash in on a Tinubu collapse? If he hadn’t contested, his promoters would never have forgiven him. Now that he had contested, he knows the extents and limits of his political strengths which might have been hitherto exaggerated.

Some analysts have accused Tinubu of trying to become President at all cost despite being sick and unstable. What we have forgotten is that, he had since 1998 invested almost 25 years of his life (and health) trying to reach this point and we all know he will need an ultimate reward at the end of it all. Now that the reward is within reach, only one out of a million people will back off over health challenges that are yet to prevent him from managing a public appearance. When he was making all those sacrifices and concessions, many of us did not bother to understand the larger picture of where he was heading to. If not for democracy, one will suggest that, the APC ticket should’ve been handed over to him unopposed

Therefore, Tinubu has fought for long, he has been in the opposition all his life, he has helped build a new political order in Nigeria. Without him, power will still likely be with the PDP now and may be forever. It's not his making that his health appears to be failing him at this moment of near fulfilment, but as a human he will continue believing his condition is good enough to manage him to the finish line. The Late President Ƴaradua’s situation in 2010 should teach us some lessons, that of Buhari in 2017 too. Tinubu is certainly not the best APC had on offer capacity-wise, but he is the most formidable, his political structure is out of this world. Win or lose, at least they have repaid a significant part of the debt they owe him.

In the build up to the primaries, we all thought everyone was an enemy of the South east since the rest of Nigeria had refused to exclusively zone the presidency to the region. In his speech at the APC convention, Ogbonnaya Onu emotionally shouted for justice against the Igbo marginalization. If not for the APC and PDP Southeast delegates who proved the Igbos unpreparedness by refusing to vote for any of their kinsmen, everyone will simply be emotionally blackmailed. Besides, we have all seen how disorganized the Southeast aspirants were across both parties.

In 2003 to 2010, the South east was considered a strong political bloc, but they wasted opportunity after opportunity to consolidate, instead they focused on ethnic and religious politics. Conceding the Presidency to the Southwest in 1999 was largely a Military arrangement executed against democratic principles. The southeast demanding same in a maturing democracy is quite difficult. In this era, no one will dash you the Presidency, you have to earn it.

Another aspirant is NNPP’s Rabi’u Kwankwaso whose critics accuse of being a local champion. However, his supporters insist on rating him higher than Atiku and Tinubu base on tangible track record. However, the debate is not as simple as it seems. The same scale cannot be used to measure Tinubu, Kwankwaso and especially Atiku as their political career paths are distinctively different. The truth is Kwankwaso is a national figure who has invested too much energy on local politics and that was why he was able to achieve what he has achieved. This has come with a price though because he has dominated and taken away all the local relevance that he could’ve easily allowed his subordinates to coordinate, a feat that would’ve given him a Tinubu-like aura. At the end, he ends up fighting for crumbs with local people that makes him unavoidably more local than national.

What of Peter Obi? He appears to have more packaging than substance but, he is yet another litmus test for the Southeast. They feel denied, marginalized and short-changed. Their response should be a massive vote for him even if he may not win, they will succeed in sending a strong message ahead of 2027. However, there is a wiser option. They can use Petr Obi as bargaining tool with someone like Kwankwaso for example; form an alliance, challenge the red-cap man to deliver the Northwest zone while they offer southeast and see whether something will come out of it.

The bottom line is that we don't need to be too much upset or over obsessed with anybody's ambition, any region's miscalculations or any party's misdirection. There are so many choices in the political landscape which our myopia is hindering us from utilizing. For example, if you truly want an Igbo president, Labour party has fielded Peter Obi, if you want somebody whose hands is not shaking, NNPP has fielded Kwankwaso, etc. Quietly do the needful and enjoin others to do same. Give it try, the strong parties and candidates are only frontliners because you and me made them so.

Nigerian public discourse often makes complex political analysis look simple and simple political analysis look complex. And finally, we end up achieving no political analysis at all.


Twitter: @AmirAbdulazeez

Friday, May 27, 2022

Osinbajo: A Memo to APC Delegates by Ahmad Abdullahi

 27th May, 2022


By: Ahmad Abdullahi


I

n a few days time, political parties in the country would have concluded all the rituals of producing candidates that will represent them in the 2023 general presidential elections. This election season has seen an unprecedented rise in the number of aspirants who want to take the country’s number one top job. While many are contenders, there are many who are pretenders, and a host of others are just bystanders.

It has been reported that over twenty-five people have purchased the presidential nomination forms of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). The major ones among them include the APC National Leader, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, Senate President Ahmad Lawan, erstwhile transportation minister Rotimi Amaechi, former President Good luck Jonatrhan, a host of state governors and of course the Vice President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo.

The calibre of the contestants suggest that it will be very difficult if not impossible to achieve consensus in favour of any candidate. It is therefore highly likely that Nigerians are going to witness one of the most hotly contested primary elections in this 4th Republic. As the country is battling with so many challenges, citizens will be hoping that the right and best candidate emerge from APC as it stands the best position to clinch power at the national level. As all eyes will be on the delegates in few days, the question is therefore, who represents the best option at the moment.

To be honest, many candidates that have expressed interest so far have good political credentials and prerequisite experience to lead the country. We have had presidents in the past who were probably not as good as some of theses candidates. However, a among the best, we have the very best. This is why, the vice president, Professor Yemi Osinbajo is head and shoulders above his co-contestants.

While going into the contest, Nigerians and particularly the APC delegates should note that the Vice President is the first and only Professor to become President or Vice President in Nigeria and has so far adequately demonstrated why the most educated among us need to be allowed to serve at the highest level. He is the one who has supervised and presided over the initiation and implementation of the largest Social Investment Programme in the history of Contemporary Africa. Irrespective of the challenges, this programme has been a huge success and signpost achievement for the Buhari administration.

Yes, under normal circumstances nobody will attempt to aspire for president of a country if he is not soundly educated and experienced. Among the lots, Yemi Osinbajo is the undoubtedly the most adequately educated and professionally inclined Presidential hopeful among the very top living Nigerians today. This should give him an edge over other aspirants.

The law professor has spent seven solid years serving Nigerians and the President with uncommon patience, dedication and humility. He has never disappointed on any task assigned to him. Nigeria's major problem being basically that of justice, law and order, he is the foremost elite with the best understanding of the needed legal and judicial reforms to turnaround the fortunes and future of the country.

Osinbajo is the man who understands all the successes of this administration and is in a better position to build on them, and also the man who understands all its shortcomings and is in a better position to make up for them. As one of the brains behind the APC Manifesto at the party's inception and its operationalization in government as VP, Osinbajo is in the best position to consolidate its implementation as President.

Unlike many Presidential hopefuls who are planning to run from regional, religious, political and selfish motivations, the VP plans to become a true Nigerian candidate and a president for all Nigerians. As Acting President, he made one of the most diplomatic and yet authoritative efforts to save Nigeria from untimely disintegration. He brought together all political, traditional and professional stakeholders in Aso Rock to further boost their confidence in the Nigerian Project.

In his tour of the 36 states to campaign for delegates votes and stakeholders support, he has always been close to his tablet. He listens  passionately, digests carefully and records almost everything himself in the device. This shows his level of commitment which is quite exceptional.

It would’ve been a very big political injustice if the Vice President had been bullied out of the Presidential race for some parochial unsubstantial reasons. It would’ve been a case of the best contender being intimidated out because he couldn’t be beaten on competent grounds. He is prepared for the job and will make a good president. The initiative now lies with the APC Delegates who will be the deciders. Once they stand on the part of patriotism and do their part, Nigerians will complete the job early next year.

 

The writer is the Team Lead of the Osinbajo-Face of Hope Project.
www.ofaceofhope.com            info@ofaceofhope.com

 

 

Sunday, April 17, 2022

Osinbajo: The Face of National Unity by Ahmad Abdullahi

 

17th April, 2022

By: Ahmad Abdullahi


A

bout eight years ago, the All Progressives’ Congress (APC) appeared to be in a huge dilemma over the selection of a Presidential Running Mate who will fly the flag of the party alongside its candidate General Muhammadu Buhari who just won the party’s primary election. APC’s dilemma was justifiable as they were trying to bring on someone credible that will balance the ticket and make it acceptable enough to stand a strong chance against the mighty PDP.

After so many intrigues within some intense and eventful 48 hours, Professor Yemi Osinbajo got the Vice-presidential ticket to the surprise of many Nigerians. Many expressed fears on whether he carries the political capital strong enough to help the ticket deliver. Little did many knew of the Professors’ charming simplicity and intelligent technicality alongside his mass appeal that saw the ticket going all the way. The rest is now history.

Like in 2015, today, we are again witnessing a period when Presidential candidates are being profiled based on their ethnic affiliations instead of their pedigrees. We are having candidates getting attacked desperately on sentiments and arguments that bring nothing to the table except confusion and division. Being a front-runner for Nigeria’s number one job, the Vice President is one of the most prominent victims of these ethno-religiously motivated attacks

As expected, the build-up to Osinbajo’s presidential declaration has been greeted by so many criticisms, many of whom are targeted towards tarnishing his image and rubbishing his candidacy through lies, character assassination and carefully tailored misinformation. Osinbajo’s attackers are hell-bent on bringing down his candidacy even before it gets started. This goes to tell how significant he is in the political equation of 2023 despite many trying hard to dismiss his impacts over the last seven years.

The Vice President has been accused of being a religious and ethnic bigot. Some have gone as far back as his pre-political life to try to convince people of what many facts has proven him not to be. If we are to be fair to Osinbajo, the man is solely building his presidential campaign on the strength of his adventures of the last seven years in which opportunity has entrusted him with a national assignment that requires him to be fair to all Nigerians. As such you cannot use any other criteria to judge him.

In his first five years in office, he has supervised and presided over the initiation and implementation of the largest Social Investment Programme in the history of Contemporary Africa. A program that has been transparent, just and detribalized. No body can prove that he has used his position to skew the benefits of the social investment programme towards favouring any religion or region. It is one of the rarest programmes that tricked down to the door steps of the poor and downtrodden across all states of the federation.

In mid-2017, Nigeria almost plunged into a national ethno-religious crisis when the Biafran agitators were at the peak of their renewed call for separation. The Federal Government under the wisdom and initiative of the then Acting President Professor Yemi Osinbajo conducted series of consultative meetings with various groups of leaders and people of societal influence across the country to make sure that the situation is tamed and controlled. Osinbajo tirelessly interacted separately with leaders of thought from the North and the South East, traditional and religious leaders from the same regions as well as all 36 state governors. This was no doubt a big positive step which even the opposition Peoples Democratic Party commended.

In their first tenure, Osinbajo’s same Christian constituency which some believe he is favouring accused him of working with President Buhari to Islamize Nigeria. The outcries became so worrisome that Osinbajo made a public clarification. He said that, one day, he woke up around 6:00am in the morning and saw a text message on his phone sent by a renowned Christian leader who said to him that one day he will account for his actions of allowing Muslims to dominate and take over the government of Nigeria. The Vice President has passed through all this only now to be labelled a Christian bigot.

He further said that, he wondered what informed that sort of message while statistics show that there are two more Christians than Muslims in Buhari’s cabinet as at then. He cited an example of a time when a Northern Senator visited President Buhari in his presence and complained bitterly on marginalization of his people. He however left with the embarrassing information that North West, his zone was leading in the number of heads of government parastatals with 47, followed by South West, South South, South East, North East and then North Central. Why didn’t this senator do his homework before complaining? Misinformation.

I remember in one of our interactions with him in the last two years, he said if Nigeria disintegrates into smaller countries that can be run over at will by powerful ones, every region will be disadvantaged in different proportions. He therefore said our strengths lies in our diversities, number and size. He gave the example of Lagos State’s economy being six times bigger than that of Rwanda despite all the so-called giant strides recorded by Paul Kagame over the years. He emphasized that the country needs not disintegrate into smaller parts for people to have the opportunity of holding public office and if it is his face or that of President Buhari you dislike that you want secession, then know that, their days in office are numbered but Nigeria can live forever.

As Acting President, he made one of the most diplomatic and yet authoritative efforts to save Nigeria from untimely disintegration in 2017. He brought together all political, traditional and professional stakeholders in Aso Rock to further boost their confidence in the Nigerian Project. Therefore, no one can question his resolve for national unity and integration.

I think the Vice President can be accused of anything but not religious, regional or ethnic bigotry. If anything, he is perhaps the most qualified Nigerian among those seeking for the Presidency. He is the first and only Professor to become President or Vice President in Nigeria and has so far adequately demonstrated why the most educated among us need to be allowed to serve at the highest level. He is the most adequately educated and professionally inclined Presidential hopeful among the very top living Nigerians today.

The Vice President has delivered within the limit of authority, opportunity and responsibility at his disposal. He has spent seven solid years serving Nigerians and the President with uncommon patience, dedication and humility. He has never disappointed on any task assigned to him. Unlike many Presidential hopefuls who are planning to run from regional, religious, political and selfish motivations, the VP plans to become a true Nigerian candidate and a president for all Nigerians.

That he has been to almost every Local Government in Nigeria is not and cannot be an exaggeration. His long-life push for justice reform in Nigeria have taken him to so many nooks and crannies in the country, The trader and market Moni social investment programmes have seen him monitor and visit rural and remote areas that even ward councillors may not fancy going. The same people who were accuse him of show-off and pretence when he was making such visits are now the ones denying he ever embarked on such visits.

That he has declared to continue from where the President Buhari has stopped is a diplomatic way of saying that he is the man who understands all the successes of this administration and is in a better position to build on them, and also the man who understands all its shortcomings and is in a better position to make up for them. However, some are hell-bent on twisting the narrative.

Those accusing him of political betrayal are tactically telling Nigerians that the Presidency is the birth right of some mighty individuals and it is therefore a crime for ordinary people like Osinbajo to make an attempt on it. What some people are having it very difficult to swallow is that why will an ordinary teacher and lawyer who is not even a former governor or ex-minister and having become Vice president just become President? Who is he? But they forget, power belongs to God.

The 2023 presidential election would have been won and lost by this time next year. It may be Osinbajo or anyone else. However, it is clear even to his worst enemies that the Vice President has all the required credentials to make a good President. Deploying arsenals of calumny campaigns to stop him will not work, only divine destiny can do that.


The writer is the Team Lead of the Osinbajo-Face of Hope Project.
www.ofaceofhope.com            info@ofaceofhope.com

Friday, January 7, 2022

A Personal Tribute to Bashir Tofa

 6th January, 2022

By: Amir Abdulazeez


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e have begun this new year on a very sad note following the death of one of Nigeria’s finest individuals, Alhaji Bashir Othman Tofa. Aged 74, he died in Kano at a hospital after a brief illness. The demise of Tofa in the first week of 2022 means we have to carry on with this turbulent journey of returning Nigeria back to sanity, this time without one of its strongest pillars. But most importantly, it is another reminder to all that our days on earth are numbered and there will be a day to account for all our actions.

Late Bashir Othman Tofa, the former Presidential Candidate of the defunct National Republican Convention (NRC) will easily enter the list of the top 100 greatest Nigerians of all time irrespective of the criteria employed to make up the list. The only people that will argue against this are those who do not really have knowledge of the type of life he lived and the diverse nature of lives he touched and then of course the young people who don’t know much about him.

In Kano, Tofa sits top in the hierarchy of past and present most influential people in the history of the state. Kano has had many elders, politicians and great men, but none was as unique as Tofa. When Late Yusuf Maitama Sule died in July 2017, I had one major fear of who will replace him and the calm wisdom he represents, not until I remembered Bashir Tofa. Today both are gone; May Allah have Mercy on them. Before he died, Tofa was the Chairman of the Kano Elders Forum.

Unlike many Nigerian statesmen, Bashir Tofa’s political journey was modest. His profile is not filled with government positions and appointed portfolios. In fact, I can’t think of any other politician who managed to reach the peak of the ladder without riding on the back of so many government positions. During the Nigerian Second Republic, Tofa was at various times the secretary of the Kano branch of NPN before he later became the party’s national Financial Secretary and was a national member of the Green Revolution National Committee.

During the Third Republic, he was part of the Liberal Movement which metamorphosed to Liberal Convention when it was not registered as a political party. He joined NRC in 1990. In 1993, Tofa was elected the presidential candidate representing Kano and later defeated Pere Ajunwa, Joe Nwodo and Dalhatu Tafida to clinch the NRC ticket. His running mate in the election was Sylvester Ugoh, an Igbo and a former governor of the now defunct Central Bank of Biafra and an ally during the NPN days.

Indeed, his character, humility, and love for one Nigeria stood him out. This is reflected in his utterances. He preached peace, love, justice and tranquility. In 2011 when President Goodluck Jonathan was declared winner of the Presidential elections, Kano was one of the places where hell broke loose. Hooligans and hoodlums were busy destroying everything that looks elitist irrespective of political affiliation. Some of these hoodlums attacked and burnt a section of his house, reportedly destroying some of his properties in the process. He ordered that np body should maltreat the attackers.

Bashir Tofa was only concerned with the future of those youths and how they could be reformed as he blamed the decay in societal values for their actions. He said, if the society had done its job properly, these attackers would probably be in school or work places, therefore, he pardoned them. He was a known inspiration to the youth and always advised everyone on the need to maintain peace, law and order. Being a man that always strived for orderliness, he set up the Bureau for Islamic Propagation in the mid-80s that helped to unite Muslim scholars in Northern Nigeria, narrowing the differences that characterized their relationships.

I have for long had fears over the longevity of Bashir Tofa, although God has preserved him for much longer than my fears. I can’t really say why, but since after the deaths of two Principal June 12 actors, MKO Abiola and Shehu Musa ‘Yaradua over 25 years ago, my worry was that Tofa will also go home someday, a reality I had never wanted to come to terms with. He survived much longer, but I wished some of his other June 12 compatriots had also lived long enough to witness the type of Nigeria we live in today. When we met in early 2021 at the funeral of his youngest brother, Alhaji Abba Tofa, I had a reoccurrence of those fears.

Many people have misunderstood Tofa for long and some had only gotten the chance to truly know him from 15 years ago to date when he had focused less and less on politics and business to rather shift his attention to private life, authorship and philanthropy. Though he has been combining all throughout his life, but as he became an elder, he focused more on guiding the society to the right path.

It is unfortunate that many people never had the opportunity to have a taste of his wisdom and calmness. But it is more unfortunate that some who had the opportunity of doing that did not utilize the opportunity. In the wake of the balkanization of the Kano Emirate, Tofa made a last-minute attempt to save our heritage even when the Governor will not listen to elders. It was reported that the Kano State House of Assembly suspended plenary session to see him when he visited. It was said that they received him quite well and treated him with utmost respect while he appeals to them to ditch their plans. As destiny will have it, they went ahead to pass the law that disintegrated the long-standing emirate shortly after he left. After that, he said he has satisfied his conscience by doing his part.

Tofa is the type of elite you can only find in the most developed countries of the world. An elite in the class of Abraham Lincoln and the likes. He was the most organized Nigerian elite I have ever come across. A renown politician, A social and family leader, a successful entrepreneur, a vastly knowledgeable gentlemen, an erudite scholar, a formidable stateman and an intellectual author. Who will fill this vacuum? Perhaps there will never be another Bashir Tofa again.

Standing on his grave where he was buried in between his late father and mother, I held back tears severally while thinking about the complexity of life and simplicity of death. Even such a great soul had to eventually succumb to death; we must be careful with this life. Every other person around the cemetery not only wore a sad look, but also an image of an uncertain future. This great man will be mourned forever.

Bashir Tofa has had a successful life which impacted on society at every stage. He is indeed a hero and role model for all generations. He understood society quite well, he acknowledges its rot and the task required to fix it. I still remember Bashir Tofa’s simple campaign slogan when he ran for president; Tofa is the Answer. There was so much wisdom in the slogan; whatever are the problems, past and present, Tofa is the answer.

In Primary school, we had so many MKO Abiola and SDP sympathizers in my primary six class. However, some weeks before the June 12 Presidential elections, my classmates came to realize that Bashir Tofa was my Grand Uncle. Since that day, whenever I come in the morning, the routine chanting praising Tofa will fill the air. My class teacher enquired about the new development, when I explained to him, we laughed about it. He was supporting Abiola though, but whenever he sees me, he’ll jokingly say Tofa is the Answer.

Twitter: @AmirAbdulazeez