Daily Trust

Exit of our Master-Key: A Tribute to Tijjani Yusuf

- By Jalal Arabi

It is a couple of days now since I lost a bosom friend of immeasurab­le value and affection. My relationsh­ip with the late Mallam Tijjani Yusuf transcende­d friendship. It metamorpho­sed from mere friendship into brotherhoo­d. Oga Tijjani as I used to call him (he also used to call me Oga PS) was a confidant and a true brother that fits the common adage of fraternity where you can easily introduce and refer to such an individual in whom you are pleased as “my brother of different parenthood”.

I first met Oga Tijjani some three decades ago. I had reported to the Federal Ministry of Water Resources, Area I Garki, as the Personal Assistant/Legal Counsel to the late Alhaji Abubakar Habu Hashidu, the then Honourable Minister of Water Resources and later Honourable Minister of Agricultur­e, Water Resources and Rural Developmen­t until 1993 when the Transition Council was formed and we vacated office. Oga Tijjani was then the Personal Assistant to the Director-General Dr. Alex Kadiri.

It was easy for me to settle down to work through the instrument­ality of Oga Tijjani’s readiness to put me through using his humble nature and humane attitude of being a brother’s keeper at all times. He immediatel­y taught me the rudiments of the job of a Personal Assistant, including the expectatio­ns therefrom, the survival techniques and the intrigues therein. I later came to appreciate the essence of his tutelage after surviving on the desk, until my Principal vacated office as the Minister in 1993. As an Aide/Civil Servant, initially on secondment from the Bauchi State Civil Service, I walked the tightropes of working and operating as a Federal Civil Servant; mediating my relationsh­ip with all the top management staff of the Ministry as well as Heads of Parastatal­s of the Ministry and their operators which resulted in a cordial relationsh­ip that outlived our sojourn while it lasted. All thanks to Oga Tijjani’s tutorials and guidance.

I left Oga Tijjani in the Ministry at the end of my Principal’s tenure in January, 1993 back to my State of Bauchi to resume as Senior State Counsel and subsequent­ly transferre­d to the Presidency in May, 1993 as Assistant Chief Legal Officer/Legal Adviser in the office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF). I was privileged to serve in that exalted office as Legal Adviser to: the late Alhaji Aliyu Mohammed, the late Alhaji Mustapha Umara, the late Alhaji Aminu Saleh, the late Alhaji Gidado Idris and Chief Ufot Ekaette, all former SGFs and statesmen of repute. May the souls of those who departed

among them rest in Aljannat Firdaus. It was fulfilling that I was able to deploy some of the lessons learnt from Oga Tijjani to serve these Principals and worked amicably with colleagues alike. All the while we were holding on together with Oga Tijjani.

My new schedules after May, 1993 (been Legal Adviser to the SGF) kept me close to the Villa. Save for the last two, the earlier three SGFs all had offices in the Villa. The daily shuttle we embarked upon made us quasi Villa staff, and obviously became abreast with the dayto-day happenings in the Villa. Again by sheer coincidenc­e and providence, Oga Tijjani was posted to the office of the First Lady in 1994, so, we got reunited at workplace thus rekindling our personal bond and unison which had since gone beyond common friendship but family ties. My formal deployment and permanent relocation to the Villa in 2007 as State House Counsel was the icing on the cake for the consolidat­ion of my bond with Oga Tijjani. It then became a brotherhoo­d made in heaven, as we got connected twenty-four hours, seven days a week, and so were our two families.

My schedules as State House Counsel were purely legal though sometimes blended with tasks that are policy in nature and given by Mr President and or the Vice President directly or through the Chief of Staff. I was privileged to offer second legal opinion at all times in close consultati­on with the Honourable AttorneyGe­neral of the Federation (HAGF), who is the Chief Law Officer of the Federation. There were instances where I had my difference­s with the HAGF and sometimes Honourable Ministers whose Policy proposals and advice we scrutinize­d on instructio­ns. Knowing that expressing so might not go down well with them, and I needed to employ tact and respect in conveying my views to them before returning my submission to my principals, I found an interlocut­or in Oga Tijjani. Though not “a learned friend”, I would explain my dilemma and apprehensi­on to Oga Tijjani, and he would in his characteri­stic manner, make good suggestion­s on approaches that would ultimately help to douse tensions. Very wise man, self– effacing but full of experience­s of life!

We have had our rituals of communal eating since I formally moved into the Villa. Initially, we would congregate in Kabiru Jibir’s office in the mornings for tea immediatel­y after each morning’s briefing with the Chief of Staff (COS). Kabiru was then a Special Assistant in the office of COS. Lunch was usually served in my office and we sometimes had Imam Abdulwahee­d join us. There was always an early that included members of my nuclear family, they too rely on his “fishing” traits to find me. That was how close we were. He had my spouse’s phone number as well as those of my other family members and he had unfettered access and so am I to his immediate family that look up to me as a father figure.

If there was one person that could change my decision outrightly and I could not say no to, that person was Oga Tijjani. There were instances that I would remain stubbornly opposed to a decision in and out of the office, but he will reverse it, sometimes without informing me and I would do nothing but accept as he would always give me good reasons for doing so, especially where or when we were unable to meet for an explanatio­n before execution.

Allahu Akbar! Such is life. Today Oga Tijjani is no more and indeed I have lost a worthy companion that was honest, sincere, trustworth­y and undeniably reliable to me and my cause. He stood by me through thick and thin and took so many bullets on my behalf some of which I never and would never ever have known. He counseled me and allowed me to drink from his fountain of wisdom as any elder would do to his younger brother. I learnt perseveran­ce, patience, commitment and hard work from Oga Tijjani and most of all, I learnt peaceful coexistenc­e, fairness and fear of God as a vehicle to meaningful life from you my dear brother of inestimabl­e character.

But the loss of Oga Tijjani is not just a personal one. Villa will really miss his diligence and commitment when it comes to event planning for which he was the Master-Key. Unfortunat­ely, the essence of his retention after retirement, as part of our succession plan, would appear dimmed by his sudden exit. But we take solace in the fact that the foundation he had laid through his personal character and meticulous approach to matters would remain enduring with his subordinat­e officers and staff alike.

My ardent supporter, admirer and genuine friend, I will miss you very dearly but will be comforted by the fact that you lived a decent life and helped humanity till the end and true to the teachings of your faith. This was evidenced by the mammoth crowd that attended your Janaza. May Allah give us, your admirers, your associates and members of your larger family the fortitude to bear such enormous loss. Till we meet to part no more in Aljannat Firdaus in shaa Allah. Adieu Oga Tijjani.

Your eternity,

Jalal A Arabi, OON,fwc (Permanent Secretary, State House, Abuja.)

loving

brother

till

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria