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One of
the biggest pieces of mischief
I’ve read in the press in recent
times was the front page lead
story in the Daily Trust of June
24 which said the “political
associates” of former military
president, General Ibrahim
Badamasi Babangida (IBB), were
grooming his eldest son,
Mohammed, for the governorship
of Niger State for 2011. Should
that fail, the author of the
story, one Malam Isa Lapene,
said, the IBB associates will
replace the son with a former
commissioner of health in the
state, Alhaji Dattijo Aliyu, a
paternal cousin of the general.
Lapene is a
Special Assistant on Youth
Network to the state’s governor,
Dr. Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu.
According to
Lapene, Mohammed’s presumed
political ambition was the main
motive behind the crisis that
has gripped the state since the
coming of Governor Aliyu over
two years ago, a crisis that
boiled over late last month when
the state set a record of sorts
by having three Speakers for its
House of Assembly in succession
within one week.
The crisis
boiled over, Lapene said,
because of the recent indictment
of the immediate past governor
of the state, Engineer
Abdulkadir Kure and several of
his lieutenants, by a judicial
commission of inquiry in to
contract awards during Kure’s
eight-year tenure. Naturally
Kure and Co. saw the indictment
as a witch-hunt and tried to hit
back first, by their swift but
in the end unsuccessful, attempt
to take over the House
leadership and, second, through
a spate of media propaganda that
tried to paint Governor Aliyu as
corrupt and self-serving.
Of all the
things any one may accuse
General Babangida of, grooming
any of his children for
political office is the most
ridiculous. The man himself may
be one of the country’s most
accomplished power players but,
paradoxically, few past leaders
of the country have worked as
hard as he has to keep his
children away from politics.
Certainly he and his wife,
Maryam, worked harder to protect
the privacy of their children
while in power than Generals
Olusegun Obasanjo and Sani
Abacha, some of whose children
became notorious for exploiting
their status to feather their
nests and to achieve their
political ambitions.
Nothing has
happened since the general left
office in 1992 to show the man
has decided to establish a
political dynasty. If Mohammed
has become famous for anything
since his father left office it
has been for polo playing and
not politicking. A’isha, his
elder sister, may be married to
a governor but she has
maintained a low profile for
someone who is well educated and
eloquent. Ahmed, Mohammed’s
younger brother, has maintained
an even lower profile than his
big sister as a young business
man. Halima, the youngest of the
lot, is still in school and too
young to engage in politics.
Not only was
it ridiculous for Lapene to
claim that Babangida is trying
to groom his son for
governorship, albeit by proxy,
it was even more ridiculous for
the governor’s aide to claim the
general has his cousin, Alhaji
Dattijo Aliyu, on standby should
the Mohammed option fail.
Aliyu has
lately been battling the state
authorities in the courts for
his freedom over charges of
illegal possession of government
documents. This battle has no
end in sight and only a stupid
godfather would push the
candidature of an embattled
godson for any office. Surely no
one can accuse Babangida of
stupidity.
Of course
certified crooks and even murder
suspects are known to have vied
for and won political office in
this country. But then they
needed the power of incumbency
of their godfathers behind them
which Babangida no longer
possesses.
In any case
anyone with some inkling of how
Dr. Aliyu became governor of
Niger State knows that the
general played a significant
role in it. Until the surprise
and somewhat belated emergence
of Aliyu as the candidate of the
ruling People’s Democratic Party
(PDP), it was common knowledge
that Babangida’s candidate was
Honorable Abubakar Bwari, a
former chief whip of the House
of Representative and son of one
his closest confidants, the late
Malam Bawa Bwari. Predictably
the loyal Governor Kure threw
his weight behind Bwari.
Things went
sour for the legislator when
someone was said to have
deliberately misinformed Kure
that Bwari nursed a secret
agenda to investigate his
tenure. Apparently he believed
the story; he suddenly changed
his mind about Bwari and shifted
his support to Alhaji Jibril
Bala Guna Alhassan, his loyal
permanent secretary of the
ministry of local government.
For whatever reason, Babangida
did not try to dissuade his
godson from his change of mind.
I am reliably
told that the source of the
misinformation was Aliyu,
Babangida’s cousin, then Kure’s
commissioner of health.
Angered by
this turn of events Bwari was
said to have used his
connections with powerful
figures in Abuja, notably Malam
Nasir El-Rufa’i, former FCT
minister, and Malam Nuhu Ribadu,
former EFCC chairman, to
successfully discredit and block
Kure’s new man. Aliyu saw a void
and tried to move in; he
reportedly told Cousin IBB that
he was interested in the job.
For some inexplicable reason
Cousin IBB reportedly told him
not to even think about it.
That put paid
to Dattijo Aliyu’s governorship
ambitions and eventually led to
the emergence of Muazu Aliyu as
the PDP candidate. Incidentally
the governor is also Babangida’s
cousin but on his mother’s side.
Clearly what
we have in Niger State is a cold
civil war of sorts but it
certainly has nothing to do with
any presumed attempt by
Babangida to establish a
political dynasty in his state,
much less in the country.
What the war
of the cousins in the state has
a lot to do with is their
positions on the record of Kure
as governor for eight years.
While the Dr. Aliyu thinks it is
a dubious record to say the
least – and most Nigerlites,
including this reporter, would
agree - the general believes
this is not enough reason for
the governor to wage a perpetual
war against his godson.
The last time
I wrote about this seemingly
endless crisis in the state on
these pages on December 12,
2007, I prayed for a quick end
to it so that the long suffering
people of my state of origin can
begin to hope for an end to the
underdevelopment of their
political-economy.
The renewed
feud following the release last
month of the state’s white paper
on contract awards during Kure’s
governorship suggests that my
prayer is yet to be answered by
the Good Lord, at least in the
way I have envisaged. Yet all it
would take to see a beginning to
the end of the feud is, on the
one hand, for Kure to swallow
his pride and accept that his
tenure was not a study in
transparency and accountability
and, on the other hand, for the
governor to accept that he talks
too much - especially for a
leader - and heed the lesson of
the Hausa proverb which says
“Baki shike yanka wuya.”
A humble Kure
and a reticent governor should
see that they both don’t need a
miracle to sit down and talk man
to man so as to put an end to
the political crisis they have
imposed on the state.
In any case
even if they do need a miracle,
the two gladiators should
remember the saying that the
miracle that moved mountains
carried a pick axe. Humility on
Kure’s part and reticence on the
governor’s are all the pick axes
needed to start moving the
mountain that has stood in the
way of the development of Niger
State all these years. |