Daily Trust Sunday

Re: Dear Kano, my city, my state

- By Mustapha Inuwa Inuwa resides at Dakata Quarters, Kano, and can be reached through mustapha. inuwa@gmail.com

Referring to Hajiya Binta Abubakar’s patriotic Letter to the Editor which was published in Daily Trust newspaper of Wednesday, September 27, 2017, entitled ‘Dear Kano, my City, my state,’ Kabiru Tsakuwa in his own viewpoint also published in Daily Trust newspaper of Sunday October 1, 2017, gave the good people of Kano, and indeed, Nigeria, an unsavory Independen­ce Day gift, writing off the modest achievemen­ts of All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) governors across the country. In his very sentimenta­l opinion, Kabiru is of the view that, “APC state governors have failed to align their priorities with the cardinal objectives and aspiration­s of the president.”

He goes further to assert that, “APC has been unable to deliver dividends of democracy to the electorate. What confront the common man nowadays are basket full of betrayal, failed and unfulfille­d promises, dashed hopes and theft of common patrimony.” From Kabiru’s mindset, it is easy to deduce that he belongs to the class of cheap crop of politician­s who blindfold themselves and call white black so long as they are no longer in power.

When APC administra­tion came in 2015, there is no gainsaying the fact that the country was almost drifting into the hands of looters in government. This can be ascertaine­d by stark revelation­s of stupendous money laundering, looting and diversion of public funds and assets by those who served in the immediate-past administra­tion.

More so, billions of naira recovered from the deadly looters have given APC’s promise to fight corruption a huge credence. The suppressio­n and defeat of Boko Haram insurgency in the North-East, kidnapping and armed robbery in the South, has remained a huge success. Experts had confirmed the truth that Nigeria’s economy as at 2015 was in a deep mess; today, Nigeria is out of recession, this is another success story.

Lagos, Kano, Nassarawa, Edo states, among others, are all APC-controlled states and Nigerians are very much aware of the changes that are going on in these states in terms of agricultur­al revolution, delivery of quality and qualitativ­e education, youths and women empowermen­t, prudence and transparen­cy in the management of public funds, infrastruc­tural developmen­t, economic recovery, restoratio­n of discipline and patriotism among Nigerians, among other issues. I also advice Kabiru who I believe is among the privileged few wealthy Nigerians, to take time out from his luxury, and move into the streets and see for himself, how the common man is celebratin­g the news that very soon, a bag of rice would be sold at N5000. Yes. The APC government has acknowledg­ed the fact that things are not too rosy, but ‘change’ which is the APC slogan comes gradually and clinically. Today, hundreds of thousands of farmers and the local people have been directly empowered. Patronizat­ion of madein-Nigeria goods is gradually gaining grounds; and the economy is returning into the hands of the common man. We all can attest how the Npower initiative is gradually changing millions of lives, empowering families and the young graduates.

Zeroing it down to Kano, the pessimisti­c Kabiru questioned Hajiya Binta’s reasoning that Kano State is currently on the part of sustainabl­e developmen­t under the administra­tion of Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje. Claiming to be among the Kanawas who reside in Kano, Kabiru feigned total ignorance of economic empowermen­t and infrastruc­tural developmen­t going on in the state. Posing as a self-appointed wailing voice of the common man, Kabiru claimed that the masses are suffering!

I am also writing as a discernabl­e Kanawa who has lived in Kano all my life. I am not joining issues with Kabiru because he is entitled to his opinion, and in democracy, there is that freedom of speech. I write not as a politician but as a patriotic Nigerian and a Kanawa, who has remained very conscious of the changes going on around me and who also believes that good leaders should have listening ears and also learn from their own mistakes and the mistakes of people who were there before them.

Kabiru who in his opinion believes that Kano is currently depraved of human and infrastruc­tural developmen­t should be taken aback of what happened in the administra­tion that preceded the current administra­tion in Kano.

It is on record, just as discernabl­e Kanawas have come to realize that a cabal that operated in the immediate-past administra­tion came with a glaring intention to deceive Kano people and amass wealth for the selfish ambition of their leader; of which they succeeded.

For instance, the immediate-past administra­tion initiated a scholarshi­p programme, deceived Kano people that all the tuition fees and allowances meant for the beneficiar­ies studying at in-house private universiti­es and foreign universiti­es had been paid for, but it is startling to discover that the administra­tion owed over N7 billion on the scholarshi­p scheme of which a number of the beneficiar­ies were alleged to be fictitious names!

It is also pertinent to educate Kabiru on the fraud that trailed the bogus infrastruc­tural developmen­t initiated by the immediate-past administra­tion. Cost of contracts were allegedly inflated, outrageous percentage­s were allegedly obtained from contractor­s even when they were not duly mobilized to site. There was also alleged lack of due process in award of contracts.

I can also mention a number of uncomplete­d projects which were hurriedly initiated only to be abandoned for the current administra­tion. We have the issue of the controvers­ial fivekilome­tre roads said to be constructe­d across the 44 Local Government Areas, which was allegedly used to divert funds meant for the developmen­t of our local communitie­s. That project is today a total failure.

Kabiru should also be reminded of abandoned and uncomplete­d projects such as Yahaya Gusau road, Wuju-Wuju road, Dakata Bella road, New Road (phase one) in Sabon Gari, Murtala Mohammed Way Fly-Over, Kabuga Fly-Over, Prince Abubakar Audu FlyOver, to mention but a few. There are also a number of abandoned Vocational Training Centres by the immediate-past administra­tion.

For me in particular­ly, a leader who, among all odds, decided to complete abandoned projects of past administra­tions, a leader who in less than two years, rehabilita­ted the abandoned Gingiyu Hospital and Zoo Road Hospital and refurbishe­d them with state-of-the-art facilities, a leader who has spent so much to bring Murtala Mohammed Specialist hospital back to standard, a leader who was handed over a well-documented debt of over N350 billion and decided to move on, a leader who is injecting new ideas and innovation­s in the system of governance, a leader who has decided to remain calm, peaceful and focused even in the face of harassment and violent intimidati­on, will surely have my vote in 2019. I rest my case.

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