THISDAY

Sule: The Man Who Saw It All

- Mukhtar Jarmajo, Bauchi

Yusuf Maitama Sule was fortunate to have been in active politics and subsequent­ly in government at a youthful age and so was one of those Nigerians who have seen it all. He witnessed the struggles that saw Nigeria`s independen­ce just as he saw the events that characteri­sed Nigeria`s post-independen­ce period and what followed thereafter. Thus Danmasani was an encyclopae­dia of a sort who, to put it simply, knew Nigeria`s history in virtually every respect.

At different fora and discussion­s, he told of how the late Awolowo, Balewa, Zik, Sardauna and several other pioneer nationalis­ts struggled for independen­ce. He also have mentioned of how, after attaining the independen­ce, these gentlemen ran the affairs of government with distinct patriotism and unusual commitment.

Danmasani was at several times a member of the legislativ­e assembly in Lagos, twice a minister of the federal republic, Nigeria’s representa­tive at the United Nations and Commission­er of the Public Complaints Commission.

Few years ago, in a personalit­y programme on Freedom Radio, Kano, Maitama Sule recalled how he defeated Malam Aminu Kano in a race to the legislativ­e assembly. And that marked the beginning of a national career that was to catapult him to as far as internatio­nal prominence.

Thereafter, providence smiled on him and made him a minister in the Balewa administra­tion. At virtually 29 years, he was the youngest minister in the Balewa administra­tion. Danmasani acknowledg­ed this in a foreword to the biography of the late Musa Daggash written by now Prof. Yakubu Mukhtar of the University of Maiduguri. “It pleased God to place me as the youngest minister in the Tafawa administra­tion,” he began the foreword with humility. He was asked to write the foreword having worked with the late Musa Daggash when the latter was Permanent Secretary in the Federal Ministry of Mines and Power. Danmasani had been minister till the fall of the Balewa administra­tion that saw the abrupt end of the first republic. He witnessed the bloody coup that saw the demise of the late Balewa, Sardauna and many others, which eventually led to the July 1966 counter coup and the Nigerian civil war.

With the January 1966 military interventi­on, politician­s disappeare­d only to resurface ahead of the 1979 return to civil rule. Within that period, General Murtala Ramat Mohammed, who usurped power from General Yakubu Gowon using the barrel of the gun in 1975, appointed Yusuf Maitama Sule as the commission­er of the newly constitute­d Public Complaints Commission in 1976. With that appointmen­t, Danmasani became the nation’s first ombudsman.

And when the political drum of 1979 was beaten, Danmasani contested the presidenti­al ticket of the defunct National Party of Nigeria (NPN) but lost to former President Shehu Shagari. By way of political consolatio­n, Shagari sent Maitama to the United Nations as Nigeria’s permanent representa­tive. And at the UN, he made the nation proud when Danmasani successful­ly led the United Nations Special Committee Against Apartheid to record tremendous success in South Africa.

Danmasani’s last call to national duty was in 1983 when then President Shagari appointed him minister of National Guidance. After succeeding in a reelection bid, Shehu Shagari thought of the need to establish a ministry which would put in efforts at ethical reorientat­ion of the Nigerian citizenry. He picked Danmasani to do the job. Perhaps the decision was partly because of the latter’s earlier experience at the Public Complaints Commission. However, because of another military interventi­on that eventually interrupte­d Nigeria’s second attempt at democracy, the import of such initiative couldn’t be realised.

 ??  ?? Victory at last...
Victory at last...
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