Daily Trust Sunday

Why PDP can’t play virile opposition now – Gov Fintiri

- By Mannir Dan Ali

Governor Ahmadu Umaru Fintiri of Adamawa State, in this interview on Trust TV’s 30 Minutes programme, speaks on the reasons the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has not been seen to be playing aggressive opposition, the crisis in the party, his policy focus for the state, among other issues.

Before you became governor, you were the speaker of the state legislatur­e. What’s your relationsh­ip with the legislatur­e, especially this talk about autonomy; is it skin deep, are you serious about it, can maybe the state legislatur­es challenge you the way national legislatur­es challenge the president and still sleep in their houses?

I was one Speaker that fought for autonomy. We voted in the constituti­onal amendment for us to have autonomy; and it didn’t come until when I was governor.

I graciously accepted that when it came, and I implemente­d it from the day the president signed it. And I have been implementi­ng that. The Assembly has been on its own.

So, you are not trying to influence who becomes speaker, as well as chairmen of committees because that is what usually happens?

I was elected to occupy one office and the Assembly is another arm of government that has 25 members from different constituen­cies. And this time around, they came from two political parties.

So, assuming I could influence those from my party, how would I have influenced those from the other party? On their own they unanimousl­y elected one of them, who is steering the Assembly very well. They are passing very good laws. Irrespecti­ve of the fact that we are different arms of government, we are all working for the interest of the state.

So we are working in unison. There is good collaborat­ion and we are working independen­tly; everybody knows their limits.

Your party, the PDP, seems to be in disarray. You have been stuck in one place. You have an acting national chairman and members of the party at the national level working at cross purposes. You have Wike, who is still in the PDP, taking up appointmen­t in the All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) government. Recently, Makinde was talking very harshly about your presidenti­al candidate. I know you are still with Atiku; when are you going to fix the PDP?

The PDP is waxing very well, as far as I am concerned.

You mean you don’t have

crisis?

We don’t have crisis. The chairman is out because he had crisis with his ward who removed him as a member of the party, which also affected his position.

But our constituti­on is very robust enough to have created a fielding gap, which the deputy national chairman, North, has fielded; and he has been doing very well.

Are you going to leave him there forever?

If the need arises - the man is versatile, very good, and he understand­s party politics. He has been turning things around, he has kept the party together, he has been building unity, he’s rebuilding the party; and today, there’s no party like the PDP.

But you have Wike, a member of your party, actively working against you. He has taken up a position in the APC-led government and you cannot sack him; why is it so?

I think it did not start with Wike; it started since the coming of this democracy in 1999.

In the past, a lot of members of the All Peoples Party (APP), All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP) and the Congress for Progressiv­e Change (CPC) had taken appointmen­t in the government that invited them to serve. At the moment we are not talking about election, we are talking about governance and national unity. I think that is what informed Wike’s decision to accept the position he is occupying today. The man has never said he has jettisoned the PDP. He is still a member of the party.

Is that not because he wants to control the state he left?

He doesn’t want to control anything. His community asked him to accept the appointmen­t. He has the endorsemen­t of his ward, local government and his state.

He is still working in the interest of the PDP. He has said it times without number that he is only serving in the government of national unity.

So there are no disciplina­ry issues in the PDP as far as Wike’s position is concerned?

There’s none because I don’t think he has done any harm. He still attends PDP meetings.

Something tells me that the PDP is in a very weakened position, such that it can’t assert itself, which is why it has to walk on eggshells where the likes of Wikes are concerned; what do you think?

If you are talking about playing a viral opposition, it is still early. This government needs to be given time. We are in a multiple crises in this country, so we should not be boxing or putting every government into a corner. That cannot work for the national interest.

We should also be having at the back of our minds that there’s time to play politics and time for governance.

Having been confirmed as the governor of Adamawa State, what should the people expect from you?

I don’t think I have missed any gap since I was sworn in last year. I have been focused. I know that I wasn’t distracted; it is just members of the opposition that were deceived by an act of criminalit­y. I have been doing what is expected of me.

I came prepared with my programmes, which I have been availing to the good people of my state, ensuring that we bring the kind of developmen­t, both capital and human, that will take my people and the state to a greater height. I have never been distracted to think one day that I was not the governor of my state.

Do I assume that this your programme of mega schools in the education sector is probably one of your signature projects, but people are skeptical that this is just a big contract kind of project instead of improving the lots and quality of teachers. Shouldn’t you start with the standard and human elements before you get to the big contract of mega schools?

Really when we came we were confronted with a big challenge in 2019. The United Nations Children’s Education Fund (UNICEF) had categorise­d Adamawa as one of the states that have over 500,000 out-of-school children. And that beats my imaginatio­n as a leader.

I quickly settled down and started putting programmes and policies that would ensure that we take this chunk of children out of the streets and bring them back to the classrooms.

We started by turning things around, ensuring that we recruited good teachers. We trained and retrained our teachers. We built and rehabilita­ted our classrooms. We equally supplied teaching materials to our schools, which were hitherto not there.

Another thing we added to it was to also bring things that would entice these young people and take the burden out of their parents by ensuring that we give them quality free feeding, as well as make education free for their parents.

These have really reposition­ed Adamawa in the last four years and taken majority of these school children out of the streets.

So, the mega schools are just part of a package there?

Yes. As I am talking to you we have less than 100,000 children who are out of school.

But I also realised that most of these schools have been establishe­d 20 to 40 years ago; and population is growing and the society is expanding, so they will not be enough to take these children completely into the existing classrooms.

So there is need for us to start expanding infrastruc­ture and building more schools so that we can be having enough space for our young ones to be taken back to the classroom, having now renovated and rebuilt the old ones. In doing that, we are able to assess it through our partnershi­p with UBEC at the national level.

Within the last four years I was able to assess about six tranches of the counterpar­t funding from UBEC; so that has allowed us to build and rehabilita­te over 5,000 classrooms across the state in the 226 wards.

Does the plan stop at primary and secondary school education. or is there something at the tertiary level?

This is at the primary level, but we are all round. After we have done the wonderful job within the last four years, in the progressiv­e manner of expanding our programmes, we thought we should be building more of these schools.

So I came up with this model of having these mega schools in the first instance, in all the headquarte­rs of the 21 local government areas, having nursery, primary school and junior secondary schools.

Are you still going to hold hands for people up to the tertiary level, especially for specialise­d areas, and what have you?

Yes. I know that in our planning from the pre-nursery, nursery, primary and secondary school, now that the students are getting good results, the only thing we can also do to take these students to a higher level is to expand and ensure that we prepare the tertiary institutio­ns.

Our state university is the only one that is ranked in the country. We have really put a lot of time and

 ?? ?? Governor Ahmadu Umaru Fintiri of Adamawa State
Governor Ahmadu Umaru Fintiri of Adamawa State

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