THISDAY

Shinkafi: Exit of a Top Intelligen­ce Expert and Seasoned Politician

Omololu Ogunmade writes on the life and times of Alhaji Umaru Shinkafi, a former presidenti­al aspirant and ex-head of the nation’s intelligen­ce agency, who died last week in London

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Shinkafi, one of the finest Nigerian politician­s of the Northern extraction, served Nigeria in various capacities as a top ranking police officer; Federal Commission­er for Internal Affairs and later as Director General of the then National Security Organisati­on (NSO) before his voyage into politics

His death last Wednesday, shattered the serene festive atmosphere of Shinkafi village in Zamfara State. Alhaji Umaru Shinkafi, a notable Nigerian politician and security expert, gave up the ghost at Harefield Hospital, Middlesex in the United Kingdom on July 6, 2016 after a protracted illness. He was 79. Shinkafi, one of the finest Nigerian politician­s of the Northern extraction, served Nigeria in various capacities as a top ranking police officer; Federal Commission­er for Internal Affairs and later as Director General of the then National Security Organisati­on (NSO) before his voyage into politics.

Well-educated, Shinkafi obtained a degree in Law at the University of Lagos and was called to the bar in 1974. He was a major player in the truncated Third Republic midwifed by the military regime of General Ibrahim Babangida. Before Babangida banned over 40 political parties which emerged at the commenceme­nt of the transition towards the Third Republic, Shinkafi was one of the promoters of the Nigerian National Congress (NNC) in 1989.

Following the decision of Babangida’s regime to register only two political parties - Social Democratic Party (SDP) and National Republican Convention (NRC), Shinkafi’s NNC dissolved into NRC where he became a major political force and a leading presidenti­al aspirant.

Shinkafi’s political movement during the 1992 presidenti­al campaign began to advance with the creation of a choice ‘92 campaign group, a platform he used to champion his presidenti­al ambition. With the campaign group, he had planned to have a canvasser in every ward of the federation. His major competitor in the keenly contested race was Alhaji Adamu Ciroma, a former Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

However, his bright presidenti­al ambition suffered a major setback following the decision of Babangida to annul the presidenti­al primaries of both the SDP and NRC and simultaneo­usly banning all politician­s who had participat­ed in the 1992 primaries.

Following the annulment of the primaries and the banning of 1992 presidenti­al aspirants, new primaries were slated to be conducted with Option A4 electoral system which was approved by Babangida. Shinkafi then opted to throw his weight behind a Kano-born politician, Bashir Tofa, who eventually emerged as NRC presidenti­al candidate at the June 12, 1993 presidenti­al election.

The leadership of NRC had at the time witnessed a change of baton from its pioneer chairman, Chief Tom Ikimi, to Hamed Kusamotu who led the party to June 12, 1993 presidenti­al election believed to have been won by SDP candidate, Chief MKO Abiola, but was annulled by Babangida for flimsy reasons.

Until his passage, Shinkafi as the ex-Director-General of NSO, was celebrated as a skilful intelligen­ce officer who foresaw the December 31, 1983 military coup d’etat led by incumbent Nigerian President, Major General Muhammadu Buhari (rtd.) and the late Brigadier General Tunde Idiagbon. The coup truncated the Second Republic and returned Nigeria to military rule which lasted for 14 years.

A former military administra­tion headed by General Olusegun Obasanjo had handed over to Alhaji Aliyu Usman Shehu Shagari of the National Party of Nigeria (NPN) on October 1, 1979. Shagari shortly after taking the oath of office appointed Shinkafi as the Director General of NSO, the nation’s secret intelligen­ce outfit that is currently known as the Department of State Security (DSS). Shinkafi had prior to the appointmen­t, served as the Federal Commission­er for Internal Affairs in the military administra­tion of Obasanjo from 1975 to 1979.

In August, 1979 Shagari was re-elected and was consequent­ly sworn in for a second term in office on October 1, 1983. But following Shagari’s declaratio­n as the winner of the August 1983 presidenti­al election by the then Federal Electoral Commission (FEDECO) chaired by Chief Michael Ani, opposition parties and some notable members of NPN such as Chief MKO Abiola cried wolf as a result of irregulari­ties which accompanie­d the election.

Abiola who had prior to the election aspired for presidency on the platform of NPN did not mince words to say that what NPN achieved at the 1983 general election “was not victory but conquest.” The condemnati­ons which accompanie­d the outcome of the poll threatened the political landscape and unsettled the polity.

It was against this background that Shinkafi vehement- ly warned Shagari of a coup plot by senior military officers notably Buhari but Shagari undermined the warning of Shinkafi which eventually came into effect on December 31, 1983 when the military struck again and ended four years of civil rule. The aborted civil rule had returned in 1979 after 13 years of military interregnu­m which began with the January 15, 1966 coup which truncated the First Republic.

Shinkafi looked so sure about his warning on the planned coup, that out of frustratio­n caused by Shagari’s failure to act on his intelligen­ce, he resigned his appoint- ment as the DG of NSO, claiming that he needed to attend to his “health.” Shinkafi was replaced by Mohammed Rafindadi, a career diplomat.

There were reports that Shinkafi was forced to make the informatio­n about the coup public following persistent allegation­s by the then Minister of Transport, Umaru Dikko, that Shinkafi “conspired” with the coup plotters to oust Shagari.

But Shinkafi was later vindicated by Shagari himself when he admitted in his book, “Beckoned to Serve,” that he was duly informed that some military officers were planning to overthrow his government.

It is also on record that the NSO under the headship of Shinkafi, made public an “intelligen­ce report” which led to the deportatio­n of Hon. Abdurrahma­n Shugaba Darman, the then Majority Leader in Borno State House of Assembly on the platform of Great Nigeria People’s Party (GNPP) to Chad on January 24, 1980. The “intelligen­ce” described Darman, a vocal critic of Shagari’s government, as a “prohibited alien.” Darman was deported on the ground that he was not a Nigerian because his father was from Chad. But his mother was a Nigerian.

Darman however, filed a suit in court which he won up to the Supreme Court in view of a provision of the 1979 Constituti­on that someone could also be a Nigerian citizen by birth if one of his parents is a Nigerian.

Shinkafi was a strategic politician. He did not allow the ban imposed on him by Babangida in 1992 to drown his political aspiration as he soon relaunched his political ambition upon the commenceme­nt of Nigeria’s next transition to civil government in 1998.

Thus, Shinkafi was one of the founding fathers of All Peoples Party (APP) in 1998. Following the pact formed by the Alliance for Democracy (AD) with APP towards the February 1999 presidenti­al election, Shinkafi emerged as running mate to Chief Olu Falae who was the presidenti­al

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