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Redemptive Mission: Potholes Tinubu must avoid in appointing his lieutenants

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By Ismaila Bako

The triumph of President Bola Tinubu at the February 25, 2023 presidential election came at some costs. In the first instance, the weight of the trust Nigerians thrust on him was heavy, especially when considered against the backdrop of the precarious situation in which the country is currently enmeshed in. In Tinubu, Nigerians found a glimpse of hope.

To say the least in the mildest way, the trust was not a blind one; rather, it is based on his past antecedents in governance. He has gained positive notoriety as a recruiter-in-chief of. The thinking is that Tinubu is the lifeline on which the hope of redeeming Nigeria is hinged. Nigerians trust Tinubu’s pedigree not to settle for less. Records speak for themselves that Tinubu is not a man who entertains excuses. That is why he can search till the end of the earth to pull out result-oriented, tested and trusted brains to form his cabinet. Hence, he cannot afford to disappoint.

So far, Nigerians have started applauding Tinubu for the appointments already made. Their expectation is that he’ll maintain this streak without deviating. Though President Tinubu is a maverick politician who can never be tossed, dictated for or cowed around, the federal character principles impose some restraints. For instance, Section 147(3), which speaks to the need to appoint a minister from each state of the federation, serves one major purpose. It reinforces Section 14(3) in terms of ensuring that the federal character of Nigeria is reflected in the appointment of ministers. Accordingly, it enjoins the president to ensure that a minister is appointed from each state of the federation.

As excellent as the foregoing constitutional provision is, the president must however ensure that his templates for selecting those to work with as ministers and other cabinet members are not lowered. As expected, Since February when Tinubu was declared winner of the presidential election, political jobbers have gone to town, peddling names of those who are best suited to be appointed as ministers and officials of the new government. Now that Tinubu has taken office, these scavengers have intensified their nefarious activities of misleading the government, while lobbying for former government officials with questionable characters to be appointed ministers of head of key government agencies.

Tinubu cannot fall into this trap. He is a leader of no mean experience and pedigree. His administrative acumen is so vast that he knows the implications of appointing or working with those that are ill-equipped and whose reputations are tainted.

For example, one of the names that are been peddled for appointment as minister is a former Managing Director of a federal government revenue yielding agency. She was forced to step aside by President Muhammadu Buhari who appointed her and had defended her all along. But when her can of worms were opened to the former president, he was dazed, perplexed and jaw-dropped that he withdrew his support for her immediately and ordered her to step aside.

It would be an understatement to say former President Buhari regretted her appointment. Is that kind of person fit to return to government when she has shown obvious tendency towards pilferage, incompetence and nepotism? Your answer is as good as mine – certainly not!

Because of gross incompetence and corrupt tendencies, the likes of her do their job with impunity and slack hands. She exudes unimaginable arrogance and disrespected due processes and procedures. In government protocols, agencies under any ministry are answerable to the supervising minister. In her own case, she disregarded her supervising minister, and when corrected or called to order she flaunts her connections in high places.

Tinubu cannot afford to base his appointments on politics and party affiliation because of people like this. The enormity of responsibility on Tinubu’s shoulders is beyond politics. It is a national duty that requires open-mindedness and courage. The president should consider the larger picture, rather than party patronage. The buck stops on the president’s table. If he fails to deliver, no one will share the blame with him.

President Tinubu understands the harshness of the judgement of history; hence, he will defy the immense pressure some henchmen are mounting on him to appoint half-baked people of questionable public service track records.

Suffice it to highlight some of the breaches of this former public servant in question. She ran the federal government revenue agency like a personal estate. For instance, she concessioned berths 9, 10 and 11, FOT Onne, without recourse to the relevant provisions of the ICRC for the concession of Public Assets. This is gross breach of procedures and processes of government. According to findings, she allegedly excised that berth 9,10, & 11 in Onne from intels Ltd consolidated lease, and leased them out to a company from Philippines (ICTSI Ltd) which she brought into the country.

Without approval from the ICRC, FMT and the Federal Executive Council (FEC), which the president and commander-in-chief presides over, the former MD allegedly created a new terminal without concession. It was a new terminal with direct port calls.

The same pattern was adopted in the outsourcing of the Traffic Management system at Apapa where a unilateral action to swing the award of the contract from a prior qualified contractor to the present one was done without recourse to due process and approval thresholds. The failure to subject these processes to due process and transparent bidding process prevented the federal government from optimising the returns from such transactions as well as value for money.

The agency had long been in the process of appointment of a service provider long before the lady in question assumed office, but she jettisoned the company that was pre-qualified through compliance with the provisions of PPA 2007 and unilaterally picked the current company Truck Transit Park (TTP), whose operations had been widely condemned by truckers and other stakeholders for the introduction of clandestine charges and lack of transparency in its operations.

The (TTP) truck call up concession was allegedly awarded to her childhood friend in Kaduna without the approval of the FMOT, Certificate of no Objection from ICRC and no FEC approval in contravention of the requirement of the law.

The initial preferred bidder (Truckit Limited) was to be given a one-off payment, while subsequent earnings were to the Authority directly. However, the TTP Ltd contract is on revenue sharing which shortchanges the Authority. The TRUCKIT solution was a reliable app and the company appeared to be of good pedigree with a credible track record. This beautiful concept was jettisoned for more expensive concept with its attendant problems.

She assumed office as the head of the agency with a smack of arrogance never seen before. She vehemently undermined the culture of courtesy and camaraderie that existed in the agency to the extent that her office became like sacred room that even a General Manager cannot have access to except on her personal call, no matter how urgent the matter was. This attitude resulted in breach of known procedural channels on several occasions as she sidelined General Managers and other ranking officials in decision making.

Her time as managing director of the agency witnessed the most of abuse of public service procedures, with the appointment of her crony, who she grew up with in Zaria as the general manager (Procurement), with her PA who coordinated the activities of several companies they used for cornering contracts.

Service contracts that were met in 2010 at five years tenure were extended to 10 years tenure to ensure the protection of entrenched interests long after she must have left service. Old competent contractors for stevedoring and cargo survey were all disengaged and replaced by new and inexperienced companies with protection from the MD.

Since the engagement of the JV companies, the agency had remained competitive with complete elimination of outrage of the shipping community over the inadequate channel depths of the past. However, upon realizing that contracts were nearing expiration, rather than engage in fresh negotiations with the companies that have provided world class services and made the ports stay competitive, she advertised the jobs for open bidding and positioned her cronies to take over the jobs that were performing well.

Throughout the entire duration of her tenure as the MD of the agency, she was replete with official recklessness fueled by her purported closeness with the President. This access emboldened her to take actions in outright circumvention of official channels of communication and disregard for Public Service Pules (PSR). These acts were manifest in emergency procurement of official vehicles to the tune of over N1.2billion, direct communication for procurement waivers on expenditure above the Authority’s thresholds which should have been routed through the Ministerial Tenders Board, conclusion of award of contracts requiring FEC and other layers of approval without recourse to such approving authorities, among others.

The new administration of President Bola Tinubu must be given the space to breathe, supported to succeed but not pressured to appoint people of questionable character, who will only be a burden rather than asset to the new government.

Bako, an economic analyst, wrote in from Abuja

Opinion

Ekiti’s next leap!

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By Abiodun KOMOLAFE

One of the off-cycle elections next year will take place in Ekiti State, where Governor Biodun Oyebanji will face reelection. Oyebanji has several strengths to leverage when campaigning begins, particularly his efforts to redirect the state’s political economy in a positive direction, as widely acknowledged by conventional wisdom.

Ekiti State has navigated the current economic transformation in very steady ways. The state’s poverty level is relatively manageable, rather than crippling. The governor’s strategic intervention in agriculture has built up buffers of price-modulating as well as supply-adjustment mechanisms. This approach has effectively withstood economic headwinds, serving as a model that other states would do well to emulate.

In many ways, Oyebanji’s agricultural policies echo those of Gabriel Akinola Deko, a former Minister of Agriculture from neighbouring Ondo State. Deko, known for his astuteness, established Marketing and Commodity Boards to shield the masses from inflationary pressures. Oyebanji continues this approach!

The governor also excels in two key areas: infrastructural development and management of the political class. His efforts have secured the Federal Government’s approval for the reconstruction of the Ado-Iyin-Igede-Aramoko Itawure Road. The Bola Tinubu government has allocated N5.4 billion for this project, aiming to enhance connectivity and economic growth. As the state's resources continue to improve, the expectation is that the ongoing Ado-Ekiti Ring Road project, connecting the new airport, will also be dualized.

The dynamics of Ekiti State provide the incumbent governor with a highly favourable position, particularly in terms of electoral advantage. In a country seething in the grip of its own helplessness, Oyebanji has proven himself to be a quality leader! Fortunately for him, but unfortunately for the polity, there is currently no coherent alternative emerging from the grassroots to convincingly challenge his position.

To upset an incumbent, one needs a coherent position, even if the incumbent is laughably incompetent. It is tragic that no such alternative position is in the offing, which says a lot about the current state of politics, not just in Ekiti State but nationwide.

May the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world, grant us peace in Nigeria!

*KOMOLAFE wrote from Ijebu-Jesa, Osun State, Nigeria (ijebujesa@yahoo.co.uk)

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Opinion

2027: A crossroads of choice

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President Bola Ahmed Tinubu

By Abiodun KOMOLAFE

We are at midterm, which means that the next electoral cycle has already started. Unfortunately, governance will begin to slow down as politicking and jockeying for advantage become more pronounced, distracting from the real work of administration and the quest to achieve sustainable development.

The ruling party currently holds a significant advantage, facing an ill-defined and unfocused array of interest groups lacking cohesion. Unlike parliamentary systems, presidential systems don’t truly have an opposition; concept. Instead, they offer a focused alternative platform, presenting a distinct and more positive stance than the governing party’s. It sums it all that, within the reality of a very difficult economic crisis, there is no realistic, properly-costed alternative on offer. This is a clear indication of intellectual indolence and the absence of political parties showing up our present reality that what we have are Special Purpose
Vehicles (SPVs).

To understand the 2027 outlook, we need to examine past election data, shifting alliances and current trends. One key point from the past data is that the presidential candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC), now President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, got 63% of his total votes from the 1966 Northern Region. This raises important questions: What does this mean if there's growing disaffection with the current administration in the North and how will this impact the national majority that brought Tinubu to power?

Assuming, of course, that there's genuine disaffection in the North, rather than just posturing by those seeking advantage, it’s essential to recognize that there’s no ‘monolithic North’. So, the strength of the Tinubu coalition will vary significantly from state to state. In Kaduna, for instance, the APC is currently gaining ground due to defections, despite Abubakar Atiku’s comfortable win in the last presidential election.

Given these dynamics, projections suggest Tinubu will win Kaduna by a comfortable margin in 2027, particularly as Southern Kaduna appears to be shifting towards the APC for the first time. The dynamics will shift from state to state, requiring analysis from this perspective, particularly as it affects senatorial and local government elections. With an expanding base in the South, the odds strongly favour Tinubu’s reelection by a convincing margin. Furthermore, the opposition’s disorganization and focus on personalities rather than programs undermine
their effectiveness.

Had Nigeria been blessed with a robust opposition, it would likely have by now replicated the ‘Popular Front’ model, which was successfully done in Europe and Latin America in the past. This approach, which originated in the 1920s, reached its peak with Salvador Allende Gossens’ victory in Chile in 1971, and the subsequent formation of a Government of Popular Unity. A Popular Front is essentially an alliance of diverse groups, activists, political parties, and Civil Society Organizations (CSOs). In Latin America, it incorporated the LT, which was rooted in the Catholic Church. The Popular Front's key strength lay in its clearly-defined alternative economic program, which aimed to achieve macro-economic stability as a means to attain social justice.

Influential figures like Pope Francis and St. Karol Józef Wojtyła emerged from the Liberation Theology Movement (LT). Other prominent figures associated with this movement include St. Óscar Romero, Jamie Cardinal Sin, Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo and Jean-Bertrand Aristide. This movement was particularly powerful in Latin American countries like Brazil, Argentina and Mexico. It was similar to Nigeria’s National Democratic Coalition (NADECO), with
its own political, socioeconomic and related programmes.

In today’s Nigeria, many of those competing for power have no intention of forming a popular front that would lead to a government of popular unity. Otherwise, the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) wouldn’t have been so entangled in the Godswill Akapbio/Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan drama at a time when Sunday Jackson, who had killed his attacker, was facing a Supreme Court ruling upholding his conviction. If you ask CAN about Leah Sharibu’s whereabouts, they might respond flippantly, saying she’s sipping ‘fura de nono’ in its coldest state, somewhere in the Sambisa Forest. Similarly, inquire about what has come out of the senseless murder of Deborah Samuel,
and the usual refrain, ‘God gives, God takes; glory be to God’, would rent the air! It is that bad; and it is
sad!

For the religious leaders, religion is more of a means to an end even as the followers continue to wallow in self-deceit. The sanctity of traditional thrones in Nigeria has also been carelessly and dangerously politicized that any Ganduje could just wake up from the ‘other room’ and disrupt an age-old system without considering the consequences of his actions. So, how do we develop a society in the midst of all kinds of social-yet-avoidable threats?

Without an alternative perspective and the formation of a unified popular front, 2027 is looking like it’s going to be an anticlimax. Why? There will be gales of decamping to the ruling party, eliminating any impetus for policy review. It therefore means that Nigeria is actually between a rock and a hard place, with an opposition driven by self-interest rather than a genuine desire to provide alternative solutions and position itself as a viable government-in-waiting. Even Organized Labour today resembles what Karl Marx described as “an aristocracy of labour”, rather than an organization fighting for sustainable development and the continuous elevation of living standards. The country will have to grin and bear it, for such is the nature of a political economy that’s based on rent seeking, rather than building a sustainable production base.

Tinubu’s reelection in 2027 appears certain, and one doesn’t need to be a soothsayer or visit Okija Shrine to foresee this outcome. As Detective Sherlock Holmes would say, “Elementary logic, Watson!”

May the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world, grant us peace in Nigeria!

*KOMOLAFE wrote from Ijebu-Jesa, Osun State, Nigeria ( ijebujesa@yahoo.co.uk )

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Opinion

2027 Poll: El-Rufai slices, dices Tinubu, Ribadu, Sani (2)

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By Ehichioya Ezomon

Former British statesman, Labour Party politician and twice Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (1964 to 1970 and 1974 to 1976) James Harold Wilson (1916-1995), stated that: “A week is a long time in politics,” which, in today’s world of social media, is being updated to, “A day in politics is a lifetime.”

Thus, ahead of the February 2027 General Election in Nigeria, “a day in politics is like a lifetime” in which anything – the anticipated and the unexpected – could happen in the political arena, with one politician already predicting the poll outcome, and embarking on a warpath to hinder those on his radar even up to 2031.

But how many political combats can former Kaduna State Governor and ex-Minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, Mallam Nasir el-Rufai win till Election Day in 2027 and beyond? How many of the politicians posturing for elective offices will grace his “enemy list”? Will he ultimately compromise and reconcile with his “enemies”?
Controversial and outspoken el-Rufai has a grievance, which’s that President Bola Tinubu, who promised him a ministerial portfolio didn’t deliver, but was actually the one who didn’t want him in his government.

To el-Rufai, it’s Tinubu – and not the Senate over alleged security concerns – who gave the order for his ministerial rejection in 2023. He recalled that proposing to name him for the power ministry, the president had told him, “Let’s join hands to defeat the electricity mafia,” adding that he accepted to serve because of that challenge.

In his extensive and no-holds-barred interview on Arise TV on February 24, 2025, el-Rufai said: “The president begged me publicly to come and serve in his government.

“After two months of negotiations, we finally agreed that he would nominate me as minister. I think along the line, the president changed his mind. Please, don’t believe the story that the NASS (National Assembly) rejected me; it has nothing to do with this. The president didn’t want me in his cabinet.”

Rhetorically, el-Rufai queried: “What was the security issue? I had been the Governor for eight years in one of the most difficult States in the country. Where is the (security) report? What about other ministers who are far less qualified and have huge controversies around them that scaled through because the president made a call?”

If the President, as el-Rufai claimed, “made a call” to the Senate on behalf of some nominees, why didn’t Tinubu do likewise for el-Rufai, who most Nigerians were sure would be the first to be cleared by the Senate, owing to how Tinubu publicly cajoled him to be part of his cabinet.

Nigerians were elated over speculations that el-Rufai would be named the Minister of Power due to his antecedents as Minister of the FCT, which he sanitised in line with the territory’s Master Plan.

And they can’t forget that iconic video of Tinubu and el-Rufai walking almost hand-in-hand when then-President-elect visited Kaduna State, and pleaded with el-Rufai to be part of his government, even as el-Rufai stated he wanted to take leave from public service.

But alas, el-Rufai’s screening by the Senate ended in controversy, with claims that the Department of State Services (DSS) had issues with his clearance, and that the Kaduna Senators didn’t suppot his nomination – a main criterion for a nominee’s approval by the Senate.

Barring any undercurrents, Tinubu owes el-Rufai a reciprocal gesture for a yeoman’s job of fighting for the Presidency to rotate to Southern Nigeria in 2023. El-Rufai thrust his chest out in support of the zoning, at least under the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), which benefited Tinubu!

If, indeed, Tinubu hadn’t a hand in el-Rufai’s rejection by the Senate, why didn’t he carve out another appointment for him in government, which doesn’t require Senate clearance? That he didn’t do so is food for thought, as el-Rufai’s only scratched the surface, and Tinubu remains taciturn about what went wrong along the way!

El-Rufai also spoke about how he and the Kaduna chapter of the APC endorsed Tinubu among the aspirants for President in 2023, saying: “I don’t know if I will support Tinubu in 2027. I will evaluate the situation at the time and I will consult widely. When I supported President Tinubu before the primaries, it was a decision that the leaders of APC took in Kaduna. Who do we support?

“We succeeded in ensuring that power goes to the South, and we know that all the Northern candidates (then-Kogi State Governor) Yahaya Bello, and (then-Senate President) Ahmad Lawan will go nowhere.

“Among the southerners, who do we support? They know those that are my friends. Tinubu was not my friend. I was never close to him. (In spite their political association of over a decade, from 2012 to 2023 – pre-formation of the APC, and through the campaigns and conduct of the 2015, 2019 and 2023 General Elections).

“But the consensus of the APC in Kaduna was that we should support Bola Tinubu because he is the one that is more likely to win. Politicians make these calculations. In 2027, I am going to consult the same people. We are going to take the same decision, which candidate to support and in which party!”

El-Rufai admitted he might not possess the same clout in 2027 as in 2023, to determine who and from which region the APC candidate will emerge. “Now, I am a private citizen. I am not sure I would be in the APC 2027, so I cannot answer that question (about his support for a Southern candidate). Now in 2027, I will not be a governor, so I will not have the sort of clout that I had in 2023,” he said.

Going haywire, el-Rufai boasts of rallying like-minded Nigerians, to upstage Tinubu in 2027. He’s created an “enemy list” that so far contains Tinubu; the National Security Adviser (NSA), Mallam Nuhu Ribadu; and Kaduna State Governor Uba Sani, who el-Rufai “anointed” to succeed him in 2023.

El-Rufai’s tackling Tinubu from the angle of performance of his administration barely two years in the saddle. And he’s given the President and his team the thumbs down, as one of the reasons he may not endorse him for re-election in 2027.

In his Arise TV interview, el-Rufai asked if Tinubu has performed averagely to contemplate running for a second term, saying, “As a private citizen, I can afford to be reckless and say, ‘You know what? We gave the southerners their chance. They gave us Tinubu; has he done well? If he hasn’t done well by 2027, let’s vote him out’” (and vote in a northerner).

El-Rufai talked about a “Project to destroy el-Rufai,” allegedly motivated by Mallam Ribadu’s purported ambition to succeed Tinubu in 2031, even as he accused Governor Sani of working with Ribadu, and levelling corruption allegations against him, to destroy his image.

“This project… is Nuhu Ribadu’s conception. He is the architect and builder of that project. He is the one working with Uba Sani to implement it. So far, it has been frustrating for them,” el-Rufai said.

Denying el-Rufai’s claim, Ribadu, in a post on X platform on February 24, stated: “If my silence wouldn’t be misconstrued as consent, I would have ignored him. I am too preoccupied with my current assignment to engage in a media fight with Nasir el-Rufai or anyone else.

“Despite the incessant baiting and attacks, I have never spoken ill of Nasir on record anywhere. This is out of respect for our past association and our respective families. I will not start today. I, however, urge the public to disregard El-Rufai’s statements against me.”

On the claim by el-Rufai that he’s planning a 2031 presidential bid, Ribadu stated: “For the avoidance of doubt, I want to put it on record that I have never discussed running for president in 2031 with anybody.

“All my focus and energy are geared completely towards the advancement of Nigeria and the success of President Tinubu’s administration. I therefore ask Nasir el-Rufai to allow me to face my onerous national assignment, just as I do not bother myself with his own affairs.”

El-Rufai, like some topshots, boycotted the APC first caucus meeting under Tinubu’s headship on February 25, stating: “Unfortunately, I won’t attend the APC national caucus meeting, because I will be on my way to Cairo where I spend most of my time. I didn’t get adequate notice.

“The constitution of our party requests 21 days or I think 14 days’ notice for this kind of national organ meeting. I don’t think that notice was given. If it was given, I don’t think I’d received such an invitation. I’ve my plans, and I am leaving tomorrow (February 25). Many of my friends will attend and they will give me updates. I don’t think I will miss anything. Ramadan is starting. I’ve made my own plans, too.”

Anyway, el-Rufai said he’s been vocal about his grievances with the APC and its leadership, especially his earlier declaration that, “he’d not left the APC, but it’s the APC that’d left him.”

“When the party meets, I think I’ve shouted loud and clear. So, we’ll wait and see what the party will do about it. I don’t have to be there. I’m not the only member of the party that’s unhappy” (about APC’s alleged deviation from its core progressive principles and values).

It wasn’t all gloom and doom about President Tinubu and his economic policies, and reported lopsided appointments that favour the Yoruba. “I support some of his (Tinubu’s) policies; most of the economic policies are the right orthodox policies, but the sequencing is wrong and the quality of the people implementing the reforms leaves much to be desired” el-Rufai said.

“President Tinubu is appointing his own boys, not because they’re Yoruba, and most of his appointments do not reasonably cover the Southwest. People should stop confusing the two; the appointments are not balanced, but it’s not a Yoruba thing. Please, don’t punish the Yoruba.”

Despite hobnobbing with and chaperoning former Vice President and ex-presidential candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, across the power bases in the country, el-Rufai ruled out joining the PDP, but may find another platform “to pursue the progressive values he believes in if he can’t find them in the APC.”

“(But) one thing I can say for sure is that PDP is not a party I will go to, ever. I thought about it and decided long ago, and nothing has changed; in fact, if anything, the PDP has gotten worse,” he said.

With friends like Mallam el-Rufai, President Tinubu, Mallam Ribadu and Governor Sani don’t need enemies! Who’ll be next to appear on el-Rufai’s “enemy list” as he proceeds apace towards his 2027 goal of removing Tinubu and the APC from power? The political arena is pregnant with anxiety and anticipation!

(END)

Mr Ezomon, Journalist and Media Consultant, writes from Lagos, Nigeria. Can be reached on X, Threads, Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp @EhichioyaEzomon. Tel: 08033078357

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