Tag: Kano

  • Emirship Palaver: Sanusi’s son reacts as Court ‘fires’ his father

    Ashraf Sanusi, the son of the 16th emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II, has reacted after a Federal High Court, Kano division on Thursday, June 20, nullified the reinstatement of his father.

    The court, presided by Justice Abdullahi Muhammad Liman, set aside all the actions taken after Sanusi II’s reinstatement.

    While the judge did not invalidate the Kano Emirate Council (Repeal) Law, he held that actions taken so far on its basis were null and void due to the state government’s failure to maintain the status quo as he ordered.

    But in a swift reaction to the court’s judgement, the Kano prince shared a post on his X page, thanking Allah for the development.

    He prayed that Allah would protect everyone from jealousy and envy. He accompanied his cryptic post with pictures of his father, Sanusi II and the governor of Kano state, Abba Kabir Yusuf.

    Sanusi’s son tweeted: “Alhamdulillah . May Allah protect us from arrogance, jealousy/envy, hating others, and displaying bad adab (character) either in words or actions.”

  • Ado Bayero Mall gutted by fire in Kano

    Ado Bayero Mall gutted by fire in Kano

    A section of the Ado Bayero Mall, formally occupied by Game Stores, on Zoo Road in Kano has been gutted by fire.

    The fire incident happened on Wednesday.

    The lease manager of the mall, Elizabeth Adeyemo, who confirmed the outbreak to journalists, saying that the firemen are currently on the ground, making frantic efforts to quench the fire.

    It was  observed that customers were prevented from gaining entry into the mall.

    The manager explained the reason was to enable the fire service men free access to put off the fire as soon as possible.

    The cause of the fire could not be ascertained as of the time of filing this report.

  • Kwankwaso cries out, says FG is fueling Kano emirate crisis

    The 2023 presidential candidate of the New Nigeria’s People Party (NNPP), Senator Rabiu Kwankwaso, blamed the federal government for attempting to disrupt the peace in Kano state by listening to advice from the past administration.

    Kwankwaso who spoke in Hausa Language at the flag off of the 82-kilometer Madobi rural road project, was reacting to the ongoing emirate tussle crisis in Kano State.

    “We will not fold our arms and watch enemies of our state destroy the peace and harmonious coexistence of our people, as we shall do everything we can to support the governor. He will not be distracted from doing his work. There are people from Kano who are enemies of the state who are advising the federal government on how to plunge Kano into a state of emergency, but the good people of Kano will not allow this to happen,” he said.

    He further described some politicians as desperate.

    ‘’Some desperate politicians want to destabilise the state, but we will rather prefer that the two of us lose than to let them crush us unnecessarily. We dare anyone who imagines victimise us politically, to be rest assured we are ready to fight. We are not afraid, but if the federal government continues to listen to these unpatriotic politicians from Kano, they will fail. The people of Kano will resist any attempt to undermine the constitutional responsibility of the governor by any individual or group.’’

    The senator, however, added that they are open for dialogue and reconciliation.

  • Kano Police reacts to booing of Emir Sanusi during Eid

    Kano Police reacts to booing of Emir Sanusi during Eid

    The Police Command in Kano State has expressed displeasure  over the booing  entourage of Emir Muhammadu Sanusi II by some individuals while he was returning to his palace after Eid prayers.

    This is contained in a Statement issued by the command’s spokesman, SP Abdullahi Kiyawa, in Kano on Monday.

    He said that, the incident occurred when the Emir took a different route, as part of his religious obligation.

    He said unfortunately, he was booed within the vicinity of Festival Primary School and Zage/Zango areas by some unidentified persons.

    “Currently, the police command is monitoring the entire Sallah events to ensure law and order are maintained, adequate security measures are in place to tackle any form of security threats.

    “Accordingly, the police command is warning individuals intending to cause chaos or breach the peace during the Sallah celebration to stay clear of the state’’, he said.

    The spokesman further stated that at the moment adequate security personnel had been deployed to arrest anyone attempting to cause a breakdown of law and order.

    The police warned members of the public to desist from carrying weapons during and after the celebration, saying that anyone found would meet stiff penalties.

    “Rigorous stop-and-search operations and patrols are ongoing in all Local Government Areas (LGAs) in the metropolitan area to ensure a peaceful celebration”, Kiyawa said.

  • Boko Haram terrorists Kidnap passengers along Maiduguri-Kano highway

    Boko Haram terrorists Kidnap passengers along Maiduguri-Kano highway

    Some passengers travelling along the Maiduguri/Kano highway have been kidnapped by suspected Boko Haram insurgents.

     It was learnt that the insurgents carried out the abduction between Garin Kuturu and Mannanari village near Auno, which is located along the Damaturu highway, at approximately 5:50 pm on Monday.

    Daily Trust quoted a source to have disclosed that the terrorists barricaded the highway and forcibly took away several passengers.

    As a result of this incident, numerous travellers and commuters found themselves stranded on both ends of the usually bustling road.

    Consequently, many of the commuters were left with no choice but to return to Benishek and Auno, respectively.

    “There was an incident between Mannanari and Garin Kuturu where some Boko Haram fighters came out to block the upcoming vehicles and some passengers were abducted.

    “We are not sure of the number as we speak but certainly there was an abduction on Monday evening,” the source noted.

    Some residents who spoke to journalists on the development narrated how many commercial drivers took refuge in their community momentarily when the insurgents were operating between Garin Kuturu and Mannanari villages.

    “They came out with three wheelbarrow, and I believe they were looking for food stuff. We don’t know how many people abducted but some commercial drivers came back and later returned to Maiduguri before reinforcement of military arrived,” the residents noted.

    A passenger, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told reporters that he, alongside others were stranded for hours.

    “We were heading for Kano from Maiduguri when the driver got hinted about the attack and took a detour.

    “We have been waiting for the military to clear the road but we don’t know when. We are stranded here,” he said.

  • Enemies of Kano distracted Gov Yusuf for one year – Kwankwaso

    Enemies of Kano distracted Gov Yusuf for one year – Kwankwaso

    The 2023 Presidential candidate of the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP), Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso, has accused opposition in Kano of distracting government for one year.

    Kwankwaso  during the occasion of the declaration of the State of Emergency on education in Kano State said enemies of Kano distracted Gov Abba Kabir Yusuf for one year.

    He said, “Let me start by congratulating him on this historic day, the day the governor is declaring a State of Emergency on education. For those who are aware that the governor has been working from day one you can see his footprints everywhere across the state.

    “Despite the fact that the governor was distracted for about one year. Immediately after election, enemies of the State took him to Court – Tribunal, Appeal Court to Supreme Court. We have seen what happened even when they knew that there is no need to go to any Court or tribunal. Everybody knew that he won his election.

    “Even the enemies were saying that they wanted to take it by force because they believe they have a government. Despite all that, the governor has been working and obstacles after obstacles, we don’t know what is happening and what has happened in this state but the governor is moving.

    “In fact that reminds me of our situation during my second term when two months after my swearing in as governor, we had Boko Haram attacks in mosques, attacks in markets, police stations, schools and everywhere we were focused and ensured that we were not distracted.”

  • Court Fixes date for Judgement on Kano Emirate tussle

    Court Fixes date for Judgement on Kano Emirate tussle

    A Federal High Court sitting in Kano has fixed June 13 for ruling on the issue of jurisdiction in the case of the Kano emirate tussle between Muhammadu Sanusi II and Alhaji Aminu Ado Bayero.

    The decision was made by Justice Abdullahi Muhammad Liman on Thursday.

    He adjourned the sitting following a heated argument between counsel.

    The applicant, Aminu Babba Dan Agundi, Sarkin Dawaki Babba of the Kano Emirate, had approached the court, asking it to restrain the respondents from enforcing, implementing, and operationalizing the repealed law.

    The respondents in the suit include Kano State Government, Kano State House of Assembly, Speaker, Kano State House of Assembly, Attorney General of Kano State, Kano Commissioner of Police, IGP, NSCDC, and DSS.

    At the resumed hearing on Thursday, counsel for the applicant, M.S Waziri, told the court that they had filed a written address dated June 6, maintaining that the court has jurisdiction to entertain the matter because it borders on fundamental human rights.

    However, counsel for the first and fourth respondents, Mahmoud Abubakar Magaji (SAN), urged the court to decline jurisdiction, arguing that the law had gone through legislative processes and the order was made after the action was done.

    Counsel for the second and third respondents, Ibrahim Isah Wangida, aligned himself with the submission of the first and second respondents, arguing that the applicant cannot claim his right was breached as the 2024 law was repealed and accented to before the applicant filed action.

    On their part, counsel for the fifth and sixth respondents, Sunday Ekwe, told the court that they did not file any issue bordering on jurisdiction because the duty of the police is to maintain peace and wait to carry out the order of the court.

  • The pathologies of a throne – By Azu Ishiekwene

    The pathologies of a throne – By Azu Ishiekwene

    For the deposed Kano Emir, Aminu Bayero, it was not a matter of if but when. The moment the Supreme Court upheld Governor Abba Yusuf’s election in January, Bayero knew the governor would need the throne to pay his debt. 

    During the campaign, the governor promised that if he were elected, he would revoke the sharing of the Kano Municipal Emirate between two Bayeros among the four new emirs and restore the throne’s singular pre-eminence.

    Of course, he won. But before the ruling of the Supreme Court in January affirming his election, two lower courts had ruled in favour of the APC candidate, increasing the probability that Yusuf might not get it.

    But Yusuf defied the trend and got it. Since then, Aminu Ado Bayero has taken his case to virtually all notable traditional rulers in the country, begging them to beg President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to save him. His last visit was to the Awujale of Ijebuland, Oba Sikuru Adetona. Neither the Awujale, the Sultan, nor any other traditional rulers he had visited could help.

    The throne would be used to pay a debt foretold.

    Nearly there 

    But the re-instated Emir of Kano, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, is not sitting pretty yet. Not even one side of his royal buttocks is hugging the throne in the main palace yet. He’s currently in a holding room, besieged by orders and counter-court orders about what should happen next.

    A young man genuinely surprised by the drama in Kano asked what the fuss was about. Why should the country almost come to grief over who of two cousins – with ties and friendships that run deep – would become the emir? It’s a fair point. 

    There was a time in this country when the business of chiefs, obas, emirs—or any traditional rulers, by whatever description or name—was the concern of local governments.

    How they were appointed, kept or removed was local. Their relevance or longevity depended mainly on how their communities perceived their compliance with the customs and traditions. 

    Burden of a legacy 

    Colonial rule exploited and undermined the system. However, the more significant damage was inflicted by the long years of military rule, which emasculated the states and local governments through a centralised system of administration that left the units bereft. Successive politicians have only paid lip service to federalism.

    After the civil war and the national trauma that followed it, the military recruited traditional rulers, amongst others, to help heal the country and deepen their own legitimacy. They courted the institutions, propped them up, and invested them with responsibilities that made them more prestigious, prominent, and powerful.

    A number of soldiers, especially from the North, where the traditional institution had grown from colonial rule to become something of a vital centre of political and religious authority, soon took traditional titles to reinvent and perpetuate their control, complete with the feudal and anachronistic levers of power.

    Game of Thrones pro-max

    A young man born into a modern world of merit, innovation and competence is right to question the sense in a country that advertises itself as a republic but is still obsessing over a wayward, neo-medieval concept called monarchy. The only thing that imitates what is happening in Kano is the fantasy TV series, “Game of Thrones”, based on George R. R. Martin’s book, A Song of Ice and Fire.

    But that’s precisely the point about the pathology of the monarchy. Throne rule may be extinct in France and parts of Europe where monarchs paid for feudalism with their heads hoisted on spikes by wild mobs or it may be seriously challenged in a few remaining bastions like Britain, but the drama, the complex themes of power, loyalty and betrayal, remains a reality of our daily existence. That’s why Kano obsesses.

    Powers behind the throne 

    Sanusi and Bayero fancy themselves as the centre of the drama. They’re not. Both men and their supporters are grist in a vast and complex power mill grinding through the heart of the politics of 2027 and beyond in the North. Whoever wins now will still yield the throne to pay a future debt.

    It’s not Sanusi v Bayero. Or some karmic payback either way. It’s the leader of the NNPP Rabiu Kwankwaso v Abdullahi Ganduje and a few key members of President Ahmed Bola Tinubu’s cabinet who want to lead the North in 2027. 

    One insider described what is happening as a “skirmish”, insisting that the battle, which obviously consumed former Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai, is only just beginning.

    Coming war

    After President Muhammdu Buhari’s catastrophic tenure and former Vice President Atiku Abubakar’s serial futile attempts at taking the presidency, the North has been asking itself if this is indeed the best it can offer. That soul-searching is at the heart of the jostling to produce credible leadership that can rally the region, if not for the next four years, then certainly for the next general election cycle.

    In this coming battle, any potential contender who shows his hand early on may not be politically alive to tell the story. But that will not stop politicians from trying to succeed where El-Rufai was ambushed.

    Kwankwaso is one such politician. With the victory at the governorship polls, he regained his political footing in Kano, the largest vote bank in the North-West, where his successor betrayed him. He has been trying, without much success, so far, to trash Ganduje, the chairman of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC). 

    What Kwankwaso may need to reinforce his grip as the potential pre-eminent political leader in the North, is to secure control of the Kano emirate. Whether given Sanusi’s own volatile history Kwankwaso would find him serviceable in this task is another matter. What is clear is that of the two devils, one is preferred.

    Once the emirate is settled, Kwankwaso will return to the immediate task of worming his way into the ruling party. Why would he prefer the ruling party to the prospects of a mega-merger of PDP, LP and others? Because it’s a joke that offers no serious pathway to power, and those mooting the idea know it. Kwankwaso, too, knows it.

    Why this skirmish matters 

    But he also knows that the only thing more combustible than having FCT Minister Nyesom Wike and Rivers State Governor Simi Fubara in one room is having Kwankwaso and Ganduje in one room. The combatants, with the referee and spectators, are guaranteed a bloody ending. That’s why, after lining his political and monarchical ducks in a row, Kwankwaso’s next stop is Abuja.

    Ganduje knows that this is a fight for his political life. And even though forces around the president detest Ganduje, they are united on the matter of blocking any potential leader from the North who is currently outside Tinubu’s inner circle. There’s no guarantee they would succeed but they won’t fail for lack of effort.

    As it was in the “Game of Thrones”, expect more surprises, more twists and turns, more convenient alliances, treachery and betrayals. The monarchy may be damaging itself either from within or from outside pressure, but the lessons it teaches about power, about its absolutism and ephemerality, remain for all who have eyes to see.

  • Calm in Kano as Sanusi, Bayero hold parallel Friday prayers

    Calm in Kano as Sanusi, Bayero hold parallel Friday prayers

    The Kano State Police Command has commended residents for their peaceful behaviour as Emirs Muhammad Sanusi II and Aminu Bayero presided over Friday prayers simultaneously in Kano.

    Both Emirs are laying claim to the throne. While Sanisu was reinstated by Gov. Abba Yusuf, Bayero is contesting his dethronement in the court.

    The city of Kano was predicted to witness clashes between the supporters of the two parties with the police warning potential trouble makers to stay away from Kano.

    While Sanusi led at the Central Mosque, Bayero, observed his prayers at the Nasarawa Palace.

    The Commissioner of Police, Mr Usaini Gumel, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in an interview on Friday, that prayers conducted in a peaceful atmosphere across the 44 LGAs of the state.

    “I am very pleased with the orderly manner faithful residents conducted themselves before, during and after the prayer’s without rancour in all parts of the state.

    The Commissioner praised residents for their cooperation with police personnel deployed in and outside the metropolis, which resulted in zero crime being recorded.

    He appealed to residents to continue cooperating with the police to ensure peaceful coexistence in the state.

    “This is a testament to the effective collaboration between law enforcement and the community.

    “The police command looks forward to continued partnership in maintaining peace and order in the state”, he said.

  • Kano police gives update on deposed Emir Bayero leading Friday prayers

    Kano police gives update on deposed Emir Bayero leading Friday prayers

    The Kano State Police Command has urged residents to ignore false information circulating on social media that Alhaji Aminu Bayero, the 15th Emir would lead  the Friday prayers at the Central Mosque.

    The Commissioner of Police, Usaini Gumel, said on Friday, that Bayero will observe his Friday prayers in the mosque within the Nasarawa Palace, where he currently resides.

    The commissioner said the police and other state security agencies will provide robust security at the Emir’s Palace, where Emir Muhammad Sanusi II is expected to lead the Jummah prayers.

    ”The police urges the general public to disregard the false reports and misinformation circulating on social media and go about their activities without fear of molestation or intimidation.

    ”The police will continue to provide necessary security to ensure that will enable residents observe their Friday congressional prayers peacefully  without threats to their lives and property,” he said.

    He urged the people to volunteer credible information on the movement of dubious characters for prompt security action in the state .