Tuesday, August 26, 2014

CRY, MY BELOVED ADAMAWA




Oh, Adamawa, my Adamawa.  Adamawa is on the verge of being raped again, no thanks to the lowering of the leadership bar.  All manner of gangsters are now free to go for the highest executive office in the state.  It may appear the state has been diminished by the ousted administration to the extent that any would-be bandit has thrown his hat into the ring of the forthcoming gubernatorial by-election for the residue of Nyako’s tenure.  I am at pains to comprehend how we came to this sorry past.  Adamawa, home to academic giants, military heroes, business moguls and first class civil and public servants since independence.  The same Adamawa that produced the likes of Mallam Ahmed Joda and Musa Bello, Professors Samuel Aleyeidino, Iya Abubakar and Jibril Aminu, the Adamawa of General Jalo and Air Marshal Idi Bello.  My Adamawa is lying naked before some good and some not so good aspirants vying to be the next governor or looter, depending on who emerges or is imposed as the next governor.

I just finished going through an advertorial in Daily Trust by one of the aspirants, Dr. Ahmed Modibbo, listing his programmes.  On paper, they all appear laudable and achievable if handled by the right person.  Right person in morality, temperament and perpendicularity.  All the objectives listed by the candidate are critically required for the state to at least pretend to join the list of modern states.  From insecurity bedevilling the state in the extended war in the northern part of the state to the near total collapse of education; to the unprecedented decay in healthcare delivery.  All these sectors must be tackled for Adamawa people to begin to “live”.  But my caveat is that, the right person must be voted before all these are realised. 

Dr. Ahmed Modibbo spent the better part of his life in the education sector – I deliberately refused to say he is an educationist.  I hope the reader will understand the difference.  As far as I know, a person who spends his life selling books, or making furniture for educational institutions only or even selling chalk and dusters can claim to spent his life in education but that doesn’t qualify one as an educationist.  And I shouldn’t be misunderstood to be referring to Dr. Modibbo in the above group.  He spent his entire career between Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria (ABU), National Teachers Institute (NTI) Kaduna and the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC).  He also headed the last two institutions.  These are no mean achievements and may therefore be termed as preparatory ground for any higher executive office.  It ought to be, but is it?

Almost four years back, spates of allegations that are yet to be denied flew around on the man’s moral corruption when he supervised the above organisations ranging from unsavoury revelations regarding admissions in ABU, to award of contracts to particular companies in which he had pecuniary interests.  These contract award scandals dogged his last years in UBEC, thereby denying him a second term and they were subjects of various litigations where he admitted in a direct testimony in court to have awarded a N2billion contract to a yet to be registered company and collecting and clearing their payments on their behalf since they don’t have a bank account.  There was also the question of ethical and moral uprightness hanging on his head, which refused to go over time.  May be he is banking on the fact that time erases such things from our memories.

Among the key areas he listed that he will tackle head-on once elected, is education and this sector needs a lot of attention.  But if Dr. Modibbo’s track record the NTI and UBEC are to be the yardstick by which to judge him and gauge the seriousness of his intent, then as far as my vote goes, he should forget his gubernatorial ambition.  And Adamawa state should be prepared for more of what obtained in the recent past.  Contract awards galore.  Nepotism.  Cronyism.  Can the state survive this mode of leadership again so soon after coming out of the misadventure perpetrated by the carpetbaggers recently kicked-out?  Adamawa state reminds me of one of the classic movies, the Good, The Bad and The Ugly, where bandits will invade a town, raze it to the ground after stealing its valuables and disappear into the sunset.  I hope we are not on the road to perdition.

The people of the state should be careful in choosing their next governor.  Yes, the state needs to be rescued – but from who? Definitely from those with questionable moral standards who may not be averse to dipping their hands in the till to satisfy the cravings of spouses and their relations.  The state needs to be rescued from those who cannot differentiate between the personal and the official.  We just got out of one mess, let’s be careful not to rush into another.

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