The Adamawa State governor is a man after my heart. He is a flashy dresser, appears urbane and
consciously cultivates the cosmopolitan look.
He dresses like a peacock and to all intents and purposes seems to be a
smooth operator. He has also been lucky
in his short time in politics. When he
sought to be elected a Senator, he easily defeated an ex-governor and he won
the election to the gubernatorial office at his first time of asking. Very lucky guy.
I pray that the glitzy dressing style is not a camouflage for
a mind of a village head. His circle of
advisers is made up of men with a tunnel vision whose foresight is limited by
the vista of their horizon. The
bespectacled governor’s idea of development may not necessarily be the same as
mine, but I believe there is a universally accepted standard of development. His notion of development may be judged by driving
around Yola, the state capital. Coming
from the airport, one is confronted with billboards and banners featuring the
governor in different poses with different attires. At first glance I mistook the billboards as
advertisements for those Kano dramas and then on second look, I thought the
governor was modeling for some tailors or watchmakers. Here is hoping that the reported N47billion
debt incurred by the government in the last one year (according to a report by
the National Bureau of Statistics) did not go into buying these braided livery
displayed to the man struggling for a plate of food.
Before I am pilloried, I will like to point out that
politicians and their followers always have their reasons for saying you hate
them, particularly when you question their motives. Truth is, they will hate you for asking them
to look in the mirror. They won’t say
they hate you. They will say that you
hate them. Asking a politician to look
in the mirror may be about the worst thing you will ask him to do. This is the primary function of the critic.
I have hesitated for long to comment on the government and
happenings in my native Adamawa. Such
hesitation is requisite when some of the audience may say my intervention as an
anomaly, taking into account certain factors and variables. Our governor seemed to have succumbed to the superstition
of beauty and ornament well before he became a governor. I therefore wonder how his excellency find
the time to subordinate himself to the demands of his office seeing how
besotted he is to his ornaments and beauty.
Governance, in my view, demands unadulterated simplicity –
like the honesty of the unspoiled common man.
In his Excellency’s desire to dress and look good in our modern day
braided livery, citizens like me are left to wonder where the next meal is
going to come from. Less I be
misunderstood, I am not trying to be a killjoy, particularly to those who exert
a lot of labour in erecting the governor’s billboards.
I know I have read a lot of rave reviews from both the
discerning and praise singers about the good works the governor is doing in
rehabilitating atrophied infrastructure hitherto abandoned by past governments,
particularly roads. It is a laudable and
welcome development, which shall be encouraged by all and sundry. Our state capital wears the look of a place
coming out of war, which suffered aerial bombardments, so rehabilitating
infrastructures in the state capital is to be lauded.
Being the skeptic that I am, coupled with the fact that my
idea of development and that of the governor differs as I pointed out earlier,
I have my suspicions on the over concentration of physical development to the
detriment of other areas of development.
An example here is accountability, which in my book is the bedrock of
any development that will propel our dear state to higher heights. Developments that by their nature are based
on the award of contracts to me are a negation of the concept itself. Contract awards are susceptible to abuse, and
over time our politicians have perfected the art of over invoicing, fictitious
awards and such other nihilistic practices to line their pockets. Areas and sectors that do not require heavy
financial investments and whose results can easily be measured and verified are
neglected. Sectors such as healthcare
delivery and education are reduced to merely cosmetic renovations of hospital
wards and classrooms. Equipment and
teachers/ healthcare workers welfare are not profitable and so are deliberately
neglected.
There is no wealth anywhere in the world that surpasses
manpower therefore manpower development is crucial to any concept of
development. Leadership is a burden
placed on the shoulders of leaders by the Almighty. They are obliged to lead the led in a just an
egalitarian manner. It doesn’t matter
whether the leader hate some and like others.
They become leaders only because the people made them. They must overcome the aversion for opponents
and critics and rather work with and for them.
It is the best guarantee for success in service delivery.
Our politics, and indeed politics everywhere, is in such a
way that no one man is any one thing which anybody else can’t be. If you believe in the doctrine of
equalitarian rotation, then you will know what I mean. A lot of people have been governors in the
past. Some are dead while others are
alive. None among them is remembered by
how flashy they dress or how much time they devote to pampering their
skin. They are chiefly remembered by the
impact they made on the lives of the ordinary man.
Your excellency, I beseech you not to allow yourself to be
deluded into believing that you are the best thing to ever happen to the
state. The men around you told Atiku and
Nyako the same thing and look where the duo is today. To them, you are all interchangeable, but the
yes men and praise singers remain.
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