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Wednesday, January 28, 2015

ADAMAWA GUBERNATORIAL CONTEST: THE CHOICES BEFORE US



Adamawa State has been serially raped, constantly brutalised and continually drawn back by its leaders in the past fifteen years.  The people of the state have become so used to bad governance that the act of lightening the streets of the state capital by erstwhile acting governor, Rt. Hon. Ahmadu Umaru Fintiri was a cause for celebration by the inhabitants of Yola, a town that has been a state capital since 1976.  The state one may assume has been placed on the shelf labelled “potential” by a leadership devoid of conscience, bereft of ideas and immune to the pains of its followership.  We have been taken to the bottom of the pit by a combination of armed robbers masquerading as religious and ethnic champions.  To all intents and purposes, Adamawa State and its citizens are still living in the dark days of military rulership.  We are yet to know, what for a better word, one may be forced to call “democracy dividend”.

This is a state that is still grappling with developmental and infrastructural issues like roads, water, education and healthcare delivery in even the state capital let alone other towns and villages.  While Boni Haruna was busy being a “big man” and others were laying the foundations of ethno-religious divide, Murtala Nyako came with a posse of bandits bent on stealing the state blind and sadly, they succeeded beyond their wildest imagination.  They left the state in ruins reminiscent of the wild, Wild West in 18th century United States.  It was a government peopled by those whose religion and ethnicity was lucre and not service, whose mantra for good governance was a personalisation and outsourcing of governance to immediate family members, to whom success is measured by the balances in their bank accounts and the number of those who genuflect before them everyday.

Now the campaigns are here.  We are presented with three leading contenders and a coterie of pretenders to the exalted yet much abused office of the governor.  You have Mohammed Bindowo Jibirilla of the APC, Mallam Nuhu Ribadu of the PDP and Dr. Ahmed Mohammed Modibbo of the PDM as the leading contenders.  All the three may be eminently qualified to vie and even win the contest – but have we really interrogated ourselves on the type of leadership we want for our state?  Is it just enough that we allow any would-be bandit access to our treasury for another four years taking into account our past experiences?

I am a card-carrying member of the APC, lest anyone mistake my political allegiances.  Am mindful of the fact that I am first of all and indigene of Adamawa State before being a member of the APC. I am also burdened by the knowledge that my state is among the least developed in a Nigeria that is bedevilled by the scourge of underdevelopment occasioned by bad leadership.  I have had occasions in the past to take on Mallam Nuhu Ribadu and Dr. Ahmed Modibbo on the political development and direction in Adamawa State.  I have had cause to interact with the two on different occasions and on different issues.  Bindowo appears to me to be someone used to hanging on the coattails of others to achieve his aim.

If one may be objective in assessing the three “frontrunners” one may be forced to be blunt – and I believe we are in a season where the hard facts must be laid bare for the people to see them as they are.  I will start with Bindowo Jibirilla being a fellow party man.  I cannot see any coherence or sense of purpose in the Senator or his principal lieutenants.  As a matter of fact, apart from my personal assessment of the Senator lacking the capacity to be a Chief Executive of a state like Adamawa, the variegated crowd around him gives me the jitters.  These are the same bunch that began the journey into perdition with Nyako in 2007 but couldn’t muster the clout to save their necks by saving his government from impeachment.  The same people who have been in Nyako’s government from genesis to exodus yet couldn’t get hold of eight legislators to save their skins.  They have been part of the Nyako administration all through in one form or the other.  Their interest was only limited by their avarice and their disdain for the people were legendary.  Anyone with a contrary opinion from theirs was labelled an enemy.  I now ask – if they couldn’t save Nyako from impeachment because they lack the human relations, basic empathy and even self-preservation, what are they bringing to the table different from what they have served in the not too distant past?  I will feel guilty for the rest of my life if I will be party of thrusting such people on the emaciated shoulders of Adamawa citizens.  The candidate, as is usual with him, is banking on the Buhari tsunami to take him to the government house.

On the other hand, Dr. Modibbo is someone with a questionable public service in both the National Teachers Institute (NTI) and the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) the two institutions he headed.  I have said this elsewhere and I don’t believe it bears any repetition.  His style of leadership isn’t too far or different from that of Nyako as was shown in how he ran the two institutions.  Nepotism is not a crime and arrogance is celebrated by this candidate.  The huge amounts of money he deployed during the two primaries he contested in the PDP should be cause for concern to anyone with a modicum of decency.  How did he make the money and how is he planning to recoup his “investment”?

Mallam Nuhu Ribadu made his name as the scourge of corrupt politicians while he was head of the EFCC and had to go into forced exile when the late ‘Yar Adu’a took over and the likes of Ibori took up residence in the Aso Villa.  He jumped into politics immediately he came back from his exile and went for the presidency. With his naiveté, it was not unexpected that he will fail – and he did.  He joined up with progressive elements to form the APC but later ditched the party for the PDP.  Unfortunately for him, PDP is today anathema in most parts of the country.   I had discussed his ‘jumping ship’ with him before and after the act.  I gave him my piece of mind on this particular issue both privately and in the public domain through two articles.  I likened his joining the PDP to committing political hara-kiri.  Stoically, he took my umbrage on the chin, sought me out and calmly explained his reasons for joining the PDP.  I respected him for that and still do.

What I keep asking myself is that – are we really serious about changing things in the state from how they are to how they ought to be? If that were the case, I think we have to jettison our romanticism with political platforms and go for Mallam Nuhu Ribadu.  I will rather vote for him than either a man who perpetually wants to hitch his wagon onto another’s or someone whose very mien exudes arrogance and profligacy.