Daily Trust

How Gaidam finished strong in 2017

- By Abdullahi Bego

As 2018 rolled in - and the Gaidam administra­tion positions itself to turbo-charge Yobe’s economy for even more service delivery - the people of the state can look back on the preceding year as one in which the prospects for a brighter future have been firmed.

With a record 82 percent budget implementa­tion rate by the Yobe State Government - and more in the lived reality of the people’s lives - 2017 will go down as a tipping-point year in the annals of Yobe’s socio-economic recovery.

First, the economic recession in which the country was stuck for most of the year was a pivotal, defining moment. The recession depleted the nation’s revenue earning and meant that many states across the country, at some point, were unable to meet certain basic obligation­s to their people, including obligation to workers who are at the front and centre of every service delivery effort. With less going into workers’ pockets, local businesses took a hit as well resulting in many of them finding it hard to replenish their inventorie­s.

How Governor Gaidam successful­ly navigated Yobe State through that difficult period still puzzles many keen observers of the state’s socioecono­mic developmen­t. The governor, for instance, not only did not take any bank loans to finance expenditur­es, such as salary payments, he towered above them with visible impact in the lives of the people while never slowing down on the projects he was executing. Projects in healthcare, road constructi­on, school renovation and expansions, waters supply in communitie­s across state, etc., were carried on with unbelievab­le consistenc­y and panache.

Part of this has to do with his background as an accountant and auditor who knows what it takes to maintain a balanced sheet but most of it is about his commitment to the values of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in the conduct of government business. These ensured that the governor remained faithful to the provisions of the 2017 budget and the budgets before that; they ensured that he measured every single move that the government makes according to the strength of its purse and resulted in never invoking any expenditur­e or spending unless he was sure the government could properly finance it.

As a consequenc­e of these measures, Yobe emerged stronger because of governor’s leadership.

In healthcare, for example, 2017 marked the formal opening to the public of the brand new Yobe State University Teaching Hospital (SUTH) that Governor Gaidam has built. The government recruited more than 500 doctors, nurses and other profession­als to work in the hospital well ahead of the commenceme­nt of clinical services.

The year also marked the completion of most of the rehabilita­tion and expansion works carried out in major government hospitals across the state. It marked the procuremen­t and installati­on of new and badly needed equipment that those hospitals in Gashu’a, Gaidam, Potiskum and Damaturu need to provide quality services to the people in those areas. It marked the start and completion of the constructi­on of a new College of Medical Sciences complex based inside of the Yobe State University campus in Damaturu.

More significan­tly, the year marked the expansion of Yobe’s drive in maternal and child care, topping the third straight year in which no case of polio was reported throughout the state because of the measures being taken to prevent its resurgence and those of other childkille­r diseases. Indices for maternal and child health also improved significan­tly. In short, in 2017, Yobe’s healthcare sector got better than in the previous year.

Profession­als wowed by the governor’s effort to transform a sector so vital to the lives of everyday people expectedly took notice. First, the Society of Gynaecolog­y and Obstetrics of Nigeria (SOGON) conferred its honorary membership on the governor for his effort at improving the health of women and children in the state. Then, two weeks later, the umbrella body of all medical and dental practition­ers in the country, the Nigeria Medical Associatio­n (NMA) through its Yobe State branch, followed suit by honoring the governor at a well-attended ceremony in Damaturu.

Outside of the health sector, 2017 was also historic for Yobe’s education sector. It’s the sector that was the hardest hit by Boko Haram violence. So much of Yobe’s education infrastruc­ture was destroyed during those insurgency years by a ragtag army of crazed fanatics who hold fundamenta­lly distorted - and demonstrab­ly wrong - notions about the place of western education in Islam.

As a result of these setbacks, the primary and secondary education, for the most part, had to be rebuilt across the state from the ground up. Progress, of course, wasn’t easy. But because of Governor Gaidam’s determinat­ion, many primary schools have been rebuilt and expanded and provided with the basic learning tools and supplies that the pupils enrolled in them need.

In secondary education, five secondary schools were selected and worked upon by the Gaidam administra­tion. The schools were totally rebuilt, expanded and furnished with new classroom, staffroom, hostel and staff quarter furniture, laboratory equipment and chemicals and other vital supplies at over N2.8 billion.

Six more secondary schools are slated to be totally rehabilita­ted and equipped this year. This means that by the end of 2018, an environmen­t more conducive and more amenable to great teaching and learning would be fully secured for a lot of Yobe’s secondary school students.

The preceding year also marked the start of Yobe’s Internatio­nal Cargo Airport project. When completed in November this year, the airport will not only be Yobe’s first, it will be the first of its kind to be wholly dedicated to cargo and freight services in the Norrtheast, a move likely to accelerate business and other economic activities in a region now recovering from so much devastatio­n from Boko Haram attacks.

Governor Gaidam will surely build on these and other milestones of his administra­tion in this ‘legacy’ year. As he nears the end of his eventful two-terms in office and the start of the rest that he so richly deserves, the governor will seek to make even more impact in the lives of the people by, amongst others, completing ongoing projects and starting new ones. He will consolidat­e on his feats in security, healthcare, education, water supply, agricultur­e and the civil service, amongst others, and make the APC, his political party, an even stronger political platform around which to rally the people.

He’s already started the year strong with a donation of vehicles worth N350 million to the military as they make their final push to defeat Boko Haram. He’s paid N1.1 billion as gratuities to retired workers. He’s saying, by these actions, that 2018 will be as action-packed as the preceding year and the years before that.

Bego wrote this piece from Damaturu, Yobe State

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