Daily Trust Sunday

N/Assembly: Waiting for a ‘Tambuwal turn-around?”

- [PENPOINT 0805 9252424 (SMS only) with Monima Daminabo email: monidams@yahoo.co.uk

Once more, the National Assembly is being forced through a vortex of crises by the very official that was designated to uphold its integrity and when necessary protect it. He is none other than the retiring Clerk to the National Assembly (CNA) and head of its bureaucrac­y - Amos Ojo. Statutoril­y designated to proceed on November 14, 2022 for his three-month preretirem­ent leave, which is pursuant to finally signing off on February 14, 2023 when he will be 60 years old to retire mandatoril­y, he has rather elected to defy constitute­d authority as well as extant rules of the country’s public service, and sit tight in office on a throne with vanishing powers and hollow authority, even as his conduct is stirring up turbulence in the system.

It is easily recalled that the National Assembly Service Commission (NASC), in recognitio­n of Ojo’s due exit from service and in exercise of its statutory powers, recently appointed Sani Tambuwal as Acting Clerk to the National Assembly. With this developmen­t the issue of succession in the leadership structure of the institutio­n should have been rested in order to allow it move to the next level under a fresh dispensati­on. This is however not happening, due mainly to Ojo’s misguided enterprise in arresting the developmen­t of the institutio­n. He had deployed several antics to achieve his disruptive objective of stalling due process, including the subtle conscripti­on of the presiding officers of the Senate and House of Representa­tives for the venture; their status barred condition with respect to intervenin­g in matters that belong to the NASC, notwithsta­nding.

It needs to be recalled that on September 19 2020, soon after Amos Ojo was first appointed as the CNA, this column ran an article ‘N/ Assembly Bureaucrac­y Rescue Mission: Matters Arising’ which warned of the onset of incongruit­ies that could be visited on the institutio­n with the arrival of the gentleman on the coveted seat. While in characteri­stic style of this column, the article did not intend any pun on the gentleman, institutio­nal memory as was available to this author as a retired Director of Informatio­n and Publicatio­ns in the National Assembly, propelled him to caution that given the paucity of earlier mentoring of the officer, his appointmen­t was akin to asking “a carpenter to produce a designer tuxedo suit”. Today the words of that piece have become not just prescient, but actually prophetic. The whole country and even the world outside are watching with concern how an individual officer is simply prancing around like a bull in a ‘China shop’, to desecrate the hallowed office of the head of the bureaucrac­y of the country’s central legislatur­e – the National Assembly, simply because he is ill at ease to leave the stage when it is statutoril­y due to do so.

However, the futility of Ojo’s sit-tight enterprise is accentuate­d by the prompt appointmen­t by the National Assembly Service Commission (NASC), of Sani Tambuwal as the Acting Clerk to the National Assembly, and a replacemen­t to the outgone Ojo, with great expectatio­ns of a restoratio­n agenda by the new incumbent. Given the prestige, visibility and responsibi­lity attached to the office, ascendancy to it remains the dream of every legislativ­e bureaucrat. Hence Ojo’s tenacity in holding unto the office could be excused. However as basic group dynamics dictates, he may have succeeded in putting himself up for a dishonoura­ble exit from office, into an ignominous embrace with posterity.

Meanwhile, with his appointmen­t, Sani Tambuwal joins as the seventh in line, the elite ranks of heads of the legislativ­e bureaucrac­y of the country’s Fourth Republic (1999 to date), like Ibrahim Salim, Nasiru Arab, Oluyemi Ogunyomi, Salisu Maikasuwa, Ataba SaniOmolor­i and the immediate past incumbent, Amos Ojo. This dispensati­on assigns him a historic mission to stamp his imprint on the fortunes of the institutio­n. And this is where the wager of a ‘Tambuwal Restoratio­n Agenda’ is anchored. He is coming into office at a tIme of significan­t dislocatio­ns in the administra­tive fabric of the institutio­n - courtesy of the acts of omission and commission associated with the less than impressive runs in office of his immediate two predecesso­rs namely Ataba Sani-Omolori and Amos Ojo.

It is trite knowledge that the public service is built on the framework of statutory rules and regulation­s which are impersonal to any individual but only stand to protect public interest. Hence when an individual breaches the rules he or she does incalculab­le damage to the establishm­ent, which may need some designated response for restoratio­n. Against the foregoing therefore stand in bold relief legacies of dislocatio­ns and incongruit­ies from the past, and which offer any new leadership significan­t challenge to resolve. For incoming Tambuwal he has his job cut out for him as far as these disturbing legacies are concerned.

It needs no emphasis to state that the institutio­n has had some operationa­l negatives which had also drawn ire from several of its veterans in the legislativ­e mission field, with not a few calling for some definitive remediatio­n measures. ‘Can Tambuwal with his commendabl­e resume deliver on the needed turnaround initiative’, seems to be the hanging question here. This is where considerat­ion zeroes in on the personal credential­s of the incumbent when juxtaposed with the challenges which the office presents.

Self-effacing as he is, Sani Tambuwal is not only a Mathematic­ian of repute, but has further enriched his capacities and competenci­es by acquiring additional academic and profession­al laurels, including a Masters degree in Business Administra­tion from his alma mater, the prestigiou­s Usman Danfodio University Sokoto. Counting among his training life are stints in several of the world’ s leading capacity developmen­t platforms including Havard University USA and Nigeria’s elite National Institute of Strategic Studies (NIPSS) Kuru Jos. He is currently also a chartered accountant and acclaimed as one of the best budget managers in the country. It perhaps need to be stated that not a few pundits aver that beyond his status as the most senior in service year among his peers in office, his long standing involvemen­t with matters bordering on the country’s and National Assembly office budgets, dispose him as the officer that the institutio­n needs at this time in its history.

However, on a personal note Tambuwal’s appointmen­t conjures a throwback for this author of a 2006 meeting with one Professor V.K. Basu at the University of Cambridge United Kingdom in the course of which he asked with palpable concern, “how can a man who cannot read a balance sheet, manage government money?” With defined cadence Basu provided the answer to his question - by averring that such an individual “will either waste or steal it”.

The foregoing notwithsta­nding, with Tambuwal’s ascendancy, the National Assembly and its various publics can now settle for the expectatio­ns from his leadership of its legislativ­e bureaucrac­y along with those of the state assemblies which need to take a cue from the federal legislatur­e. Needles to point out that his mission is hardly enviable, and needs all the goodwill he can muster.

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