Tag: bala mohammed

  • Bauchi gov, Bala Mohammed scraps ministry of local government

    Bauchi gov, Bala Mohammed scraps ministry of local government

    Bauchi State Governor Bala Mohammed has announced the scrapping of the state’s Ministry of Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs.

    He stated this during  the swearing-in of three newly appointed commissioners and the Chief Security Adviser to the governor, on Monday in Bauchi.

    Mohammed said the measure was sequel to the Supreme Court judgment’s granting autonomy to local government areas in the country.

    The governor also sacked the Commissioner for Health, Dr Adamu Umar, saying that the decision was to rejig the machinery of governance for more results.

    “We have to rejig the cabinet in order to achieve the set objectives of the administration.

    “We need to bring in fresh blood, brains with fresh ideas of how to move the state ahead positively.

    “The former commissioner for health was not dropped because of any infractions, it was just part of reorganisation of governance.

    “Very soon, we will find a way to fix him in government where he will be most relevant and more active,” he said.

    Mohammed tasked the commissioners to immediately settle down to business by studying handover notes in their respective ministries.

    This, he said, would enable them to catch up with the speed of the administration.

    The new commissioners are: Zainab Baba Takko – Women Affairs; Dr Sani Mohammed – Health and Mohammed AbdulKadir – Commerce and Industry.

    While Ahmed Abdulrahman has been sworn-in as the Chief Security Adviser.

    Speaking on behalf of the commissioners, Baba-Takko thanked Mohammed for giving them the opportunity to serve and contribute to the development of the state.

    She promised to deploy mechanisms to take their ministries to great heights.

  • Bauchi governor appoints Haruna Danyaya as 17th Emir of Ningi

    Bauchi governor appoints Haruna Danyaya as 17th Emir of Ningi

    Bauchi State Governor, Sen Bala Abdülkadir Mohammed has approved the appointment of Alhaji Haruna Yunusa Danyaya, the eldest son of the late Emir as the 17th Emir of Ningi with a first class status.

    The announcement was contained in a statement signed and issued by the Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to the Governor, Comrade Mukhtar Gidado.

    According to the statement “This decision is in exercising the powers conferred on him by Cap. 24 Item 3 (1 ) of the laws of Bauchi State of Nigeria ( Appointment of Emirs / Chiefs and Deposition 1991 ) and the recommendation of the kingmakers.”

    “The appointment was conveyed in a letter signed by the Secretary to the Bauchi State Government, Barr İbrahim Mohammed Kashim.”

    Bauchi State Government expressed its confidence in the new Emir’s ability to continue the legacy of his late father in fostering unity, peace, and development in the Ningi Emirate and Bauchi State as a whole.

    “Bauchi State Government under the inspirational leadership of Governor Bala Mohammed remains committed to supporting the traditional institutions in the state as they play a crucial role in maintaining peace and progress in our communities,” It further contained.

    The new Emir of Ningi, Alh Haruna Yunusa Danyaya was born in Ningi in 1956 and was the immediate past Chiroman Ningi.

     

  • Bauchi governor reveals why he criticised Tinubu

    Bauchi governor reveals why he criticised Tinubu

    Bauchi State Governor,  Bala Mohammed has defended his recent criticism of President Bola Tinubu, saying it was done in good faith and as a constructive opposition to the government’s policies. The governor made the statement before the commencement of the Bauchi State Executive Council (SEC) meeting on Wednesday.

    Mohammed said his criticism was not meant to cause any disaffection or insult, but rather to draw attention to the plight of Nigerians and the need for the government to listen to their concerns. He noted that the president’s call for protesters to suspend their demonstrations and engage in dialogue was “very empty”, and that more concrete actions were needed to address the issues.

    The governor’s comments had sparked controversy, with some political leaders in the state, including former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, and Senator Shehu Buba, criticizing his stance. However, Mohammed maintained that his outburst was a wake-up call to the federal government and sub-national governments to heed the cries of citizens and address the issues of bad governance.

    He urged governors to take responsibility for their actions and implement national policies effectively, rather than blaming others for their failures. The governor also stressed that his criticism was not about partisan politics, but rather about accountability and responsibility.

     

  • Gov Mohammed fires Chief Security Adviser

    Gov Mohammed fires Chief Security Adviser

    Gov. Bala Mohammed of Bauchi State on Tuesday sacked his Chief Security Adviser, Dr Ahmed Chiroma.

    Alhaji Mukthar Gidado, Special Adviser, Media and Publicity to the Governor, announced this to newsmen in Bauchi.

    “The termination of his appointment was conveyed to him through a letter signed by the Secretary to the Bauchi State Government, Mr Ibrahim Kashim.

    “He was directed to hand over the affairs of his office to the Chief Security Officer (CSO) to the Governor,” Gidado said.

  • BREAKING: Bauchi Commissioner dies in auto crash

    BREAKING: Bauchi Commissioner dies in auto crash

    Bauchi State Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Affairs, Ahmad Aliyu Jalam has lost his life in an auto crash.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports Jalam died in the ghastly motor accident that occurred on the busy Misau-Darazo highway on Saturday.

    Meanwhile, Governor Bala Mohammed has expressed his condolence to the members of his immediate family and the entire people of the State

    In a statement issued in the early hours of Sunday, Mohammed described the deceased as a dedicated public servant, whose commitment to the development and well-being of his local communities was unwavering.

    The Governor said: “During his lifetime, he championed numerous initiatives aimed at improving good governance and community relations.

    “Late Ahmed Jalam was known for his tireless work, integrity, and compassion for the people he served and his service will be remembered and cherished by all.

    “His demise is deeply felt by all and the countless individuals whose lives he touched during his lifetime.”

    Mohammed, on behalf of his family, government and the good people of the state, extended his deepest condolences to the members of the late commissioner’s family and the entire people of the state.

    He also prayed that the Almighty Allah forgive his shortcomings and grant him eternal rest.

    The Governor said that the late commissioner, who left behind wives and many children, would be buried on Sunday in his hometown in Dambam Local Government Area according to Islamic rites.

  • First Lady, Oluremi Tinubu finally breaks silence over threat to her life

    First Lady, Oluremi Tinubu finally breaks silence over threat to her life

    Nigerian First Lady, Mrs Oluremi Tinubu has said that she wasn’t afraid of death as she was more than 60 years old now.

    She stated this on Tuesday while reacting to Gov. Bala Mohammed’s comment regarding recent threats to her life.

    “I want to thank the Bauchi State governor for assuring me that I am safe, but I want to say that I am too old to be afraid.

    “If God has granted me more than 60 years on earth, I shouldn’t be afraid of death.

    “I thank God that you encouraged me to come and I want to say that Nigeria belongs to all of us. This is the time for us to unite more than ever before,” she said.

    Earlier, Mohammed had condemned the recent threats to the life of the First Lady and described it as a “national embarrassment”.

    “I am particularly disappointed and frustrated that the death threats came from someone from Bauchi State.

    “It is a national embarrassment that someone from Bauchi State would threaten the wife of the President.

    “I want to apologise to the First Lady over the incident and assure her that the person will not be spared,” he said.

    Mohammed pointed out that the President’s wife had distinguished her self “not only as a distinguished Senator, but as a politician that has opened the new frontier of politics and politicking”.

    “Your renewed hope programme is being genuinely embraced because you have set aside all differences related to politics and partisanship.

    “I am aware of some of the challenges and threats to your life and person by somebody from this State. I was so disappointed and frustrated, but you made my day as a courageous mother by deciding to come to Bauchi.

    “This distinguished lady has shown that Nigeria is really working and that Nigeria is one and nobody can play politics with our lives.

    “We are very grateful; your life is more important to us than our own lives. Nothing will happen to you,” he said.

    The Emir of Bauchi, Alhaji Biliyamin, in a remark, dispelled insinuations that Bauchi was not a peaceful State.

    “The First Lady’s visit is a powerful symbol of the peace and progress of Bauchi State,” he declared.

  • Why Bauchi is one of Nigeria’s safest states – Bala Mohammed

    Why Bauchi is one of Nigeria’s safest states – Bala Mohammed

    Bauchi State Governor, Bala Mohammed has attributed the stable security in the state to good governance and strategic leadership.

    Mohammed said this while delivering a lecture titled, “Strategic Leadership: My Political Experience” to participants of the National Defence College (NDC) Course 32, on Thursday in Abuja.

    He said his government from the onset, took a sector scan of the state to identify problems and challenges taking into congnisance the state’s geographic set up.

    According to him, Bauchi state has rivers, mountains, unmanned spaces and one of largest forests and games reserve in the country, which could serve as hideout for bandits.

    “So, we knew our problems and challenges. We came into partnership with the security architecture and the military.

    “There is a joint operation that we have and we are funding them with so many bases for them and we are holding security meetings almost fortnightly or monthly.

    “We are deploying resources where it matters. We also got in the hunters and the people who have some prowess and powers,” he said.

    The governor said the state also engaged the traditional institution, civil society groups and local governments in ensuring the security of the state.

    He said that as part of strategy to tackle the security challenges in the country, governors should settle down in their states, maintain open communication with the people and work with all segments of the society in order to understand and respond to the security dynamics in their states.

    The governor also recommended regular peer review meetings among all state governors to sharpen the thrust of strategic leadership and ensure good governance.

    He suggested the formation of alumni of former leaders at all levels who should meet at least biannually to review the state of the nation and propose the way forward.

    The governor also recommended the setting up of a committee of former military and other security chiefs to proffer lasting solutions to the alarming state of insecurity in the country.

    The Bauchi state governor also made suggestions on how to stabilise the political system and engender peace and harmony among Nigerians.

    “A deliberate effort should be made to end the winner takes-all nature of Nigerian politics that creates permanent enmity and thwarts every effort at national consensus.

    “There should be the establishment of a National Truth and Reconciliation Commission where every component group would vent, remonstrate with each other, and chart the process of true healing.

    “The convocation of a national constitutional conference to deliberate on and produce a new constitution for the country.

    “Granted that the success of a constitution depends on the operators, the misgivings associated with the present constitution cannot guarantee the stability, national cohesion and strategic leap into a new world of seamless development that we envisage,” he added.

    The Commandant of NDC,  Rear Adm. Olumiyiwa Olotu, thanked the governor for the insightful lecture, urging the participants to draw lessons as strategic leaders in training.

    Olotu said the various issues and challenges identified by Mohammed would go along way to shape the ideal of leadership and support development in Nigeria.

    He commended the governor for providing focused strategic leadership and making positive progress in Bauchi state.

  • The Road to Thanksgiving – By Azu Ishiekwene

    The Road to Thanksgiving – By Azu Ishiekwene

    I hope Bauchi State Governor, Bala Mohammed, can finally get some sleep. He deserves it. After the ruling of the Supreme Court on Friday, upholding his election, the governor told a crowd of his supporters who came to rejoice with him at the State Government Lodge in Abuja, that he had not slept for seven days, in spite of the comfort of his waterbed.

    Mohammed, a member of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), said he had been awake, seven days and seven nights, “fighting former leaders” to secure the mandate of voters.

    I can imagine. This was an election that took place nearly one year ago. And yet, the governor, like his colleagues in seven other states or nearly one quarter of Nigeria’s 36 states, has spent one quarter of his tenure in court, waiting for what has now become the most important vote of all – the ballot of the court.

    If it were in my place to do so, I would have asked the governor what he spent seven days and seven nights doing in Abuja. Was he involved in a nonstop nocturnal spiritual wrestling match with the principalities and powers who wanted to steal his votes? 

    Was he in strategy sessions with ecclesiastical hosts? Was he combining these with visits to some renowned marabouts who may have been obliged to camp outside the Supreme Court, as part of the ritual of success?

    If it were in my place, I would have asked what exactly he was doing in Abuja, the domain of their Lordships, without sleeping for seven days and seven nights.

    Thanks offering 

    From what Mohammed said, however, it was not only the court that deserved the credit for the favourable outcome of the matter. Two of the other seven governors specifically thanked President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and his deputy, Kashim Shettima, for their non-interference. According to the Bauchi State governor, some people had gone to tell the president that he was a threat to him.

    “I’m grateful to the government of President Tinubu,” Mohammed said, “who believes in good governance – for allowing the rule of law to persist irrespective of lies and mischievous acts that have been perpetrated against me.” 

    If the governor commended his legal team at all, that part may have been omitted in the statement published in the press, which contained nothing but heartfelt praise for the Supreme Court and the president for not beating the justices.

    We die here

    Another point of interest was the physical presence of five of the eight governors at the Supreme Court when the judgment was delivered. Of course, they all have a right to be there, to receive firsthand, the much-expected good news, after days, weeks, and perhaps, even months of tension. Who wouldn’t? 

    There was once a time, though, when the drama, the intensity, the sheer uncertainty, and especially the fearsome reputation of the court in matters like these would have kept the main parties far away from the precincts of the court. 

    There was an exception, of course. In 1983, the federal election body, FEDECO (as it was then called), declared that Bola Ige of the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN), who had just completed his first term as governor, had lost his reelection to Omololu Olunloyo of the National Party of Nigeria (NPN).

    Ige petitioned the election tribunal and was in court as part of the UPN’s legal team, though not as the lead counsel. Not even during the equally bitter 1979 contest between the UPN and the NPN after the controversial presidential election, did either Obafemi Awolowo or Shehu Shagari appear in court, though at an earlier stage, Awolowo appeared at the tribunal in Ikoyi in his famous suit.

    One crooked step 

    Of course, that dispensation was different. The electoral act mandated the disposal of election cases before swearing in. But the law is just as good as those who make them and those who are supposed to implement them. Some aspects of the election law have improved in the last 24 years. In spite of the improvements, however, politicians, with plenty of help from lawyers, have also found a way to stay one crooked step ahead. And perhaps one of the most perverse outcomes of all of this is that there’s hardly any solid, reliable set of electoral jurisprudence. 

    Jurisprudential jiggery pokery has a very long history in Nigeria, even though it wasn’t always rampant or brazen. It was with a heavy, tormented heart, for example, that Justice Fatai Atanda-Williams said the judgment of the Supreme Court in the famous case of Awolowo v Shagari in 1979 was never to be cited as precedent.

    Today, the Supreme Court has made so many conflicting and confusing judgments that even if it were to make exemptions it would find itself too entangled in the knot of its own self-inflicted misery to know where or how to start. 

    How can the court which, four years ago, sacked the entire government in Zamfara in an election in which the winner, Mukhtar Shehu Idris, won 67.41 percent of the votes, on the grounds that the APC failed to conduct valid primaries (clearly a party matter), now give judgments, like that in Plateau State for example, that suggest that it is alright for courts to meddle in party pre-election matters?

    Or how can the same Supreme Court which affirmed the ruling of the tribunal and the Court of Appeal that the PDP had no business dabbling into whether Vice President Shettima had been doubly nominated by the APC because it was that party’s internal affair, reject the decisions of the lower courts that Senator Ahmed Lawan who didn’t participate in the party’s primary was the validly nominated candidate of the same party?

    And how, for sanity’s sake, did the Supreme Court, which set aside the ruling of the Court of Appeal that Senator Godswill Akpabio was not the validly nominated candidate of the APC for Akwa-Ibom North-West senatorial seat because it was a party affair, justify plunging into the arena of internal party politics and pre-election matters in Zamfara and Plateau?

    Thank the king? 

    It’s not too hard to see why politicians prefer to camp outside the court or to thank the president when cases favour them. They think that if, with the help of senior lawyers, you can purchase the courts and be in the president’s good books, your problems are nearly solved, regardless of what happened at the ballot.

    I’m still trying to figure out a situation where a politician in the UK, the US, or even in Ghana or South Africa, wins a case in court and immediately grants a press conference afterwards thanking the king, president or prime minister for not interfering. This must be a uniquely Nigerian contribution to jurisprudential courtesies. 

    Some progress has been made in our elections, no doubt. 

    Yet, if the point of elections is to make the voter’s ballot count, and also give all parties a fair chance of settling any disputes that may arise, two things need to happen immediately: we must return to the era where all election petitions are disposed of before swearing in; and limit all disputes to not more than two layers of adjudication. 

    The regrettable, perhaps unintended overall effect of last Friday’s ruling, is that it may have further undermined the judiciary as a whole, but particularly, thrown the Court of Appeal under the bus which has had, I’m told, only five percent of its cases overturned in the last two election cycles. That, quite frankly, is not only a sad but frightening thing. It is a trend capable of keeping the whole country awake at night.

  • I respect Tinubu for his dedication to Nigeria – Bala Mohammed

    I respect Tinubu for his dedication to Nigeria – Bala Mohammed

    Gov. Bala Mohammed of Bauchi State says he respects President Bola Tinubu for his sense of dedication to service and humanity.

    He stated this on Monday while speaking with newsmen in Makkah, Saudi Arabia.

    He said that the president has enjoyed the support of most Governors in spite of party differences, adding that Nigeria would come out better in the next few years.

    ”We have to appreciate the dedication of Mr President towards Nigeria and the reviving of the economy that is in dire need of reformation.

    “So far, we have seen from his various steps that we are going forward to a new Nigeria.

    ”As the president prayed for the wellbeing of the country in the Holiest place of Islam, it gives me the courage that he will deliver the hope that Nigerians desires.

    ”In spite of our party differences I still feel great respect for the president. As he prayed for Nigeria, I prayed for him because when you pray for your leaders, you are ultimately praying for yourself,” the governor said.

    Mohammed said that there were a lot of assurances from the president’s precedent as governor of Lagos State that the country would be better.

    ”He has done it before in Lagos and look at what Lagos has become in not only Nigeria but in Africa. This is the transformation Nigeria requires and we will see it in no distant time,” he said.

    Similarly, Amb. Yahaya Lawal, Nigerian envoy to Saudi Arabia, said that the visit of the president had yielded many blessings for the country.

    He said that the Saudi-Nigeria trade relations would receive a boost with the response of various stakeholders to the investment drive of the president.

    ”I am highly elated as the ambassador that this is happening at my time. The reception that the president also received was highly commendable.

    “It shows the respect and dignity they have for Nigeria and the president,” he said.

    Lawal said that the president’s visit for the summit would very soon start yielding results for the benefit Nigerians.

    He charged Nigerians to continue to pray for their leaders and country, adding that the support of citizens was crucial in the success of any government.

  • Gov Mohammed dissolves Bauchi LG caretaker committees

    Gov Mohammed dissolves Bauchi LG caretaker committees

    Gov. Bala Mohammed of Bauchi State has approved the dissolution of all the State’s 20 local government caretaker committees.

    This is contained in a statement by the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Mr Ibrahim Kashim on Tuesday in Bauchi.

    “The Chairmen of the Local Government Caretaker Committees are, therefore, directed to hand over the affairs of the Local Governments to their respective Heads of Administration pending the appointment of substantive Caretaker Committees.

    “The Government wishes all the dissolved Local Government Caretaker Committee members success in their future endeavours,” he said.