Tag: kwankwaso

  • Reconciling with Kwankwaso is through divine intervention – Ganduje

    Reconciling with Kwankwaso is through divine intervention – Ganduje

    The National Chairman of the All Progressive Congress, APC, Abdullahi Ganduje, has said reconciling with, the presidential candidate of the New Nigeria Peoples Party, NNPP, in the 2023 general election, Rabiu Kwankwaso could happen through divine intervention.

    Speaking with BBC Hausa, the APC national chairman said he was out to unify his Kano base because more people would join the party.

    On having a good working relationship with Kwankwaso, Ganduje said, “Certainly, we share roots and lineage. A division occurred, and now (there is) a potential for reunification through divine intervention. What could be better?”

    Ganduje and Kwankwaso have had a long-standing rivalry over who leads the political space in Kano State.

    But there are indications that President Bola Tinubu is working to reconcile both politicians, and bring Kwankwaso back to the APC.

    Confirming the reports, former media aide to ex-President Muhammadu Buhari, Bahir Ahmad, had said it would be “game over” for the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, should Tinubu reconcile Ganduje and Kwankwaso.

  • Kwankwaso after the Supreme Court – By Azu Ishiekwene

    Kwankwaso after the Supreme Court – By Azu Ishiekwene

    In the last one and a half decades, Rabiu Kwankwaso has been the most charismatic politician out of Kano after the passing of Abubakar Rimi. Kwankwaso is not just charismatic; he is consequential, with a cult-like following that responds twice, even when he calls once.

    He is facing yet another defining moment in his political career. The outcome of the ruling of the Supreme Court in the case between the Kano State Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf of the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) and his rival, Nasiru Gawuna, of the All Progressives Congress (APC), could well determine if the sun has finally set on Kwankwaso’s reign or whether he would get a new lease of life.

    Kwankwaso’s protegee, Yusuf, lost at the election petition tribunal and also at the court of appeal, where Gawuna had challenged his election on three main grounds: 1) That Yusuf is not a registered member of the NNPP; 2) That 165,663 out of the 1,019,602 votes scored by the NNPP were invalid because the ballots were neither stamped nor signed, therefore reducing his total valid votes to 853,939, and 3) That he, Gawuna having scored 890,705 votes with margin of nearly 36k, won the governorship election and should be declared governor.

    The lower courts agreed with his submissions in rulings – one from an undisclosed location and the other from cyberspace – that sparked widespread protests in the state, not to mention accusations of compromise. Even though a member of the tribunal raised the alarm that some persons were trying to lean on her by offering financial gifts through a proxy, all allegations of wrongdoing have been denied by the judiciary. All eyes are now on the Supreme Court.

    Nigeria’s courts have been swamped with election petitions, making election litigation one of the fastest growing industries. Voters vote, but judges choose the winners.

    In spite of the large number of decided election petition cases in the last over 20 years, however, there have been only a few where the two lower courts ruled in one way, only to have their rulings overturned by the Supreme Court. Governorship election petitions used to end at the Court of Appeal. Even after the law was amended to take governorship election disputes up to the Supreme Court, the norm was a split decision between the lower courts, before the final ruling by the Supreme Court.

    From the case involving Rotimi Amaechi and Celestine Omehia in 2007, to the ruling in 2016 where the Supreme Court set aside the ruling of the two lower courts and declared Nyesom Wike as the validly elected governor of Rivers State (without giving reasons for its decision), perhaps the most dramatic of the three or four exceptional cases was the one in 2019 involving the Imo State Governor, Hope Uzodimma.

    Apart from Reverend Ejike Mbaka whose extraordinary gift enabled him to foretell the outcome of the Uzodimma case in his famous “I see hope” speech, most normal, reasonable people could not fathom how a man who came fourth place in an election could become first. Yet, in a landmark decision wonderful beyond understanding, the Supreme Court overturned the decision of the two lower courts and ruled that Uzodimma won the election.

    Kwankwaso and his supporters obviously hope to beat the odds, which in any case, are perhaps not as formidable as those of Uzodimma. But Gawuna’s backers appear to have gone even one step further to secure their current juridical advantage. On the state’s Wikipedia page, for example, some folks terminated the tenure of Yusuf in November when the Court of Appeal gave its ruling. Gawuna is described on that page as “incumbent governor” from November!

    Kwankwaso has fought many wars but this battle may redefine the rest of his political days, and those of the Kwankwasiyya movement. His first significant defeat was 20 years ago, when he failed his second term bid for governorship. In the wave of political sharia sweeping the North at the time, Kwankwaso had positioned himself as a moderate. 

    His opponent, Ibrahim Shekarau, did two things: he latched onto the Muhammadu Buhari bandwagon, under the flag of the All Nigeria Peoples Party (ANPP); and more important, played the sharia card. He succeeded big, not only in dislodging Kwankwaso, but also becoming the first two-term governor in Kano.

    Shekarau defeated Kwankwaso again in the contest for a senatorial seat in 2019, after latter’s first tenure as senator. The leader of the Kwankwasiyya 

    movement was caught in the maelstrom of the APC presidential primaries, but in the run-up to the 2019 elections, he decamped back to the PDP. To be fair, during APC’s 2015 presidential primaries, Kwankwaso was the preferred candidate of the APC National Leader, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, at the time, before a strong Northern lobby pressed Buhari into the race.

    Shekarau exploited the accumulated rage of the pro-Buhari crowd, kindled against the leader of the Kwankwasiyya movement for daring to challenge Buhari’s talismanic hold on Kano.

    But Kwankwaso has matured since, especially after his eventful second term as governor, during which he was widely acclaimed for paying serious attention to education, health and infrastructure. Also, leveraging the crucial place of Kano as the Nigeria’s largest political vote bank, he played a decisive role, along with four other governors of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in 2015, that led to the fall of President Goodluck Jonathan’s government. 

    Perhaps the most significant marker of his political maturity was the formation of the NNPP only months to the last general elections and yet carrying one state – the most politically significant in the North West – and coming fourth in an election contested by 18 political parties. This legacy is now threatened.

    If Shekarau was his nemesis in the past, his nemesis for the last eight years has been his former deputy and Chairman of the APC, Abdullahi Ganduje. In the battle at the Supreme Court, Yusuf and Gawuna are, in a manner of speaking, pawns. The chess masters are Kwankwaso and Ganduje.

    After the last general elections, Kwankwaso seemed to have the aces. He had literally secured a third term in Kano and President Tinubu, the winner of the presidential election, needed to court him. Not just because he proved himself in present reckoning, but also because anyone in charge of Kano would be indispensable in future political calculations.

    After the elections, while Ganduje was still looking for a second address, Kwankwaso was already on Tinubu’s speed dial. He held several exploratory meetings with the President both in the country and in Paris for a potential role in the new government. I’m told that he was, in fact, considered for either the Ministry of Education or FCT.

    Ganduje and a few other influential politicians close to Tinubu panicked. But Ganduje, a man who looks incapable of hurting a fly, but doesn’t mind hunting a lion for game, waited for his time to pounce. Once he was appointed APC chairman, in spite of Kwankwaso, he slowly clawed himself back and swung the wrecking ball in cahoots with a few insiders who were also uncomfortable with Kwankwaso.

    Ganduje also consolidated his hold on the President after Gawuna won the first round of victory at the tribunal. Then Kwankwaso, whether out of frustration or defiance, made what was potentially a serious mistake. He held a closed-door meeting with Atiku in Abuja and left the press and politicians to pour petrol into the fire by making wild guesses about the motive for the meeting.

    The battle has now entered its final phase. If the Supreme Court bucks the trend and rules in favour of Yusuf, Kwankwaso would have used one judicial stone to vanquish Shekarau and Ganduje, two of his most potent longstanding enemies. If, on the other hand, the Supreme Court upholds the ruling of the lower courts, Kwankwaso’s decline will start in earnest, sucking his cult and scattering his sheepfold.

    Inconclusive is an unlikely outcome. But who knows?

  • BREAKING: Appeal Court sacks APC’s Kwankwaso, reinstates Yusuf Datti

    BREAKING: Appeal Court sacks APC’s Kwankwaso, reinstates Yusuf Datti

    The Court of Appeal in Abuja has sacked Musa Ilyasu Kwankwaso of the All Progressives Congress and reinstated Yusuf Umar Datti of the New Nigeria People’s Party in the Kura/Madobi/Garun Malam Federal Constituency Election.

    The three-panel led by Justice Tunde Oyebamiji Awotoye allowed an Appeal by Yusuf Datti and averred that the tribunal was wrong to have counted the date of the Appellant’s resignation on the date of his party’s primary election and that Section 77 of the Electoral Act was misapplied, saying no court has jurisdiction on the issue of membership of the party.

    Details to follow…

  • Kano Mass Wedding: Don’t check your husband’s phones – Kwankwaso tells couples

    Kano Mass Wedding: Don’t check your husband’s phones – Kwankwaso tells couples

    Sen. Rabi’u Kwankwaso, the NNPP National leader, has advised the 1,800 couples under the mass wedding scheme against checking their spouses’ phones.

    This is to avoid anything that could lead to the marriage break up, he counselled.

    Kwankwaso spoke at the reception organised for the couples by the State Government at the Open Theatre in Kano Government House on Saturday.

    He said checking spouses’ phones by married couples is one of the major causes of marriage breakups, hence the need for couple to shun anything that could lead to crisis.

    “You have been advised by all and sundry. I believe you have been advised a thousand times. Ulamas, parents, relatives and even business people have advised you on how to live peacefully with one another.

    “But, I have one single advice for you; that is checking spouses’ phones. Don’t peep your spouses’ phones as that is the major cause of marriage breakup these days,” he said.

    Kwankwaso lauded the political commitment demonstrated by Gov. Abba Yusuf for making the exercise a reality.

    He also commended the administration for committing over N700 million to sponsor over 600 students to various universities outside the country.

    “We have made the right choice by electing Governor Abba Yusuf as our governor. He is a good leader who had continued with our legacies. One of such of legacies is this mass wedding.

    “Apart from this, he is delivering mass oriented projects. We call on the good people of Kano state to support his administration,” he said.

    Earlier, Yusuf said the beneficiaries of the mass wedding were selected from across the 44 local government areas and the 484 wards of the state.

    According to him, not less than 30 couples were selected from each of the 44 local government areas of the state.

    He explained that the state government took full responsibility of the marriage, including payment of dowry, provision of furniture, wedding food stuff and N20,000 grant for the brides to start up small scale businesses at the comfort of their matrimonial houses.

    He therefore urged the couples to live peacefully in accordance with the teaching of Islam.

    Welcoming guests earlier, the Commander General, Kano Hisbah Board, Sheikh Aminu Daurawa, said no fewer than 1,500 couples tied the knot on Friday.

    However, Daurawa disclosed that out of the 1,800 couples, the wedding of 264 had been suspended as they tested positive with some ailments and were  undergoing medical treatment.

    He said after taking the medication, a new date would be announced for the wedding of the remaining 264 couples.

    The Islamic cleric pointed out that the wedding scheme had followed due and transparent process, commending the state government for the kind gesture.

    While praying for the couples to have long-lasting marital bliss, Daurawa admonished them to fear God in dealing with one another.

    NAN

  • Why Kwankwaso will remain presidential elections serial loser – Ganduje

    Why Kwankwaso will remain presidential elections serial loser – Ganduje

    The national chairman of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Abduallahi Ganduje has predicted that the presidential candidate of the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP), Rabiu Kwankwaso would remain a serial loser at presidential elections.

    He made this prediction while hosting the Bauchi state NNPP governorship candidate in the 2023 election, Haliru Dauda Jika, who formally returned back the APC at the national secretariat of the party in Abuja

    Ganduje said that the pursuit of selfish interest as against national interest would continue to hinder the realisation of Kwankwaso’s presidential ambition.

    He also blamed Kwankwaso’s inability to maintain a principled stand in party politics over the years as another factor that made the former minister of defence a perpetual loser.

    The APC chairman, who hailed and described the decision of Jika to return back to the ruling party as a step in the right direction, noted that the former NNPP flag bearer in Bauchi state by now must have realised that the ‘Kwankwasiyya backed’ NNPP as “deceitful and exploitative.”

    Receiving Jika with the entire NNPP structure in Bauchi state, Ganduje said: “When I got the news that you were coming to see me in my house to discuss the way forward, I knew I was meeting a very formidable politician in the person of Senator Jika who is a household name in Bauchi state.

    “He is returning to a party that is very progressive and focused when we look at where he was coming from. He is coming from a party that used to be a decent party and highly respected but was later hijacked and polluted by the kwankwasiya group.

    “We are happy that the original NNPP is taking back its proper position and leaving the kwankwasiya group deserted and thrown out completely.

    “The Kwankwasiyya group headed by the former kano state governor was forced to go into a sabbatical leave for eight years before it found its way back to Government House in Kano.

    “The Kwankwasiya head who wears a red cap is the person who prefers to be a king in hell than be a servant in paradise. He specializes in decieving people. He was first in PDP, came back to APC when it was formed. That was when the nPDP merged with the legacy parties to form the APC.

    “Instead of staying in APC because of his ambition, he decided to leave APC after failing to pick the presidential ticket to go back to the PDP. He could not stay there again when he failed to pick the ticket.

    “He still went on his own to contest the presidential poll and was defeated twice. He is a professional contestant for presidential elections and would remain a professional failure. He loves himself so much. I am happy you have dumped the red cap . It is a very sensible action that you have taken.”

    The chairman then promised the returnees of inclusiveness in the running of the party in the state as part of ongoing effort to reposition the party ahead of the 2027 poll, stressing that the party regretted its performance at the just concluded general elections in the state.

    The national chairman then carried out a symbolic change by removing the red cap, usual worn by the Kwankwasiya group and replaced it with the unbroken chain insignia cap of President Bola Tinubu to receive Jika and his group to APC fold.

    Addressing newsmen after the ceremony, the former NNPP candidate said his decision to return to APC was informed by the wishes of his teeming supporters in Bauchi state.

    He said: “My dumping NNPP for APC has nothing to do with the presidential candidate of NNPP. I have no issue with Kwankwaso. The interest of Bauchi State informed my returning back to APC.”

     

  • NNPP writes INEC, Kwankwaso over logo, MoU

    NNPP writes INEC, Kwankwaso over logo, MoU

    The New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) has written to INEC, intimating the commission of alleged plans by some groups to change the party’s logo.

    The party has also written to Sen. Rabiu Kwankwaso, its 2023 presidential candidate, to end the MoU it entered with the Kwankwasia group for the 2023 general elections.

    The letters written to INEC and Kwankwaso were signed by Mr Peter Ogah, the party’s Solicitor, and made available to newsmen on Wednesday in Lagos.

    The letter to INEC is with the title: “Unauthorized and fraudulent plans to change the NNPP  logo and amend the party’s constitution.”

    Recall that a faction of the party on Sept. 5, under the leadership of Major Agbo expelled its presidential candidate, Kwankwaso, over his alleged anti-party activities and misappropriation of party campaign funds.

    Ogah informed INEC in the letter that its client had informed the firm of a news item that some individuals were taking steps to change the party’s logo and amend its constitution.

    “We act as solicitors to the New Nigeria Peoples Party,  represented by Dr Boniface Okechukwu Aniebonam, the Founder, and Dr Temitope Aluko, the Chairman. Board of Trustees and we write upon their instruction.

    “Our client,  however,  informed us that while the board is preparing for the said meeting. their attention was drawn to a news item in the media.

    ‘Our client informed us that some individuals are taking steps to change the NNPP’s logo, and to also amend the party’s Constitution, hence the need to place this caveat immediately.

    “The commission is hereby formally notified of the unauthorised and fraudulent plans by some individuals to change the NNPP  logo and amend its constitution.

    “So that same must not be countenanced or registered by the commission as the alterations and amendments sort to be smuggled did not emanate from the party,” he said.

    The solicitor thanked the commission, commending it for always ensuring the supremacy of the rule of law and justice.

    Also, in the letter to Kwankwaso, Ogah said their clients had brought to its attention,  the MoU executed on Feb. 21, 2022, between the representatives of NNPP, and the representatives of the Kwankwasya and The National Movement (TNM) groups.

    The solicitor said the MoU with Kwankwasya group was for the purpose of using the NNPP as a platform for the 2023 general elections.

    According to him, it is our clients’ brief that the NNPP on its part was true to their word under the gentleman agreement by giving your groups the necessary facilities, support, and platform to contest in the 2023 general elections.

    The solicitor noted that the general elections as planned had come and gone, and although the plan to take over power at the national level was not actualised, it was, however, a remarkable attempt.

    “It is our clients’ further statement that the NNPP appreciates your groups for considering their party as a viable party to work within the just concluded general elections.

    “Also this is to formally notify you and your groups that the said MOU entered on Feb. 21, 2022 under reference has expired upon the completion of the 2023 general elections,” he said.

    Ogah said the party thanked them for their cooperation, and wished them and their groups the very best in their future political endeavours.

  • BREAKING: NNPP expels Rabiu Kwankwaso

    BREAKING: NNPP expels Rabiu Kwankwaso

    The National Executive Committee of the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) has expelled Sen. Rabiu Kwankwaso, following his alleged refusal to appear before the party’s Disciplinary Committee.

    Kwankwaso, the 2023 Presidential Candidate of NNPP, had been earlier suspended by the party’s leadership at the National Convention on Aug. 29 in Lagos.

    Recall that the National Executive Council (NEC) of the NNPP set up a Disciplinary Committee and directed it to invite Kwankwaso to defend allegations of gross anti-party activities and mismanagement of party/campaign funds within five days.

    The NEC had warned that, failure to appear before the Disciplinary Committee, Kwankwaso would be expelled from the party in line with the provisions of the party’s constitution 2022 (as amended).

    Consequently, Mr Abdulsalam Abdulrasaq, the Acting National Publicity Secretary of NNPP, said in a statement on Tuesday in Lagos, that the NEC had expelled Kwankwaso with immediate effect because of his refusal to honour the committee’s invitations.

    Abdulrasaq said: “The NEC met in an emergency session on Friday, Sept 1. and resolved as follows:

    “Following the refusal of Sen. Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso to appear before the disciplinary committee which sat on Thursday, Aug. 31 after being duly invited in writing,  he is hereby expelled from NNPP with immediate effect.

    “That the erstwhile presidential candidate, Sen. Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso will be reported to appropriate quarters to answer questions on financial impropriety relating to mismanagement of public funds.”

    The crisis within the NNPP started when the NWC of the party loyal to Kwankwaso,  announced the suspension of the NNPP founder, Dr Boniface Aniebonam and the National Publicity Secretary, Dr Agbo Major on Aug. 24.

  • NNPP denies purported suspension of Kwankwaso

    NNPP denies purported suspension of Kwankwaso

    The National Working Committee (NWC) of the New Nigeria People’s Party (NNPP) has refuted the purported suspension of Sen. Rabiu Kwankwaso, the 2023 Presidential Candidate from the party.

    Mr Ladipo Johnson, the NNPP National Auditor, stated this at a news conference on Wednesday the party’s National Headquarters in Abuja.

    Johnson, a former spokesperson for Kwankwanso presidential Campaign Council, said that the suspension was null and void.

    A faction of the party headed by a former Board of Trustees (BoT) Chairman, Mr Boniface Aniebonan had on Tuesday suspended Kwankwaso for six months over alleged anti-party activities, after a parallel National Executive Committee (NEC) in Lagos.

    It also appointed the former National Publicity Secretary of the party, Mr Major Agbo as the acting National Chairman.

    But, Johnson said that Aniebonam and Agbo were on Aug. 24 suspended for three months for engaging in unwholesome acts before they were later expelled from the party.

    He added that the party NEC at its meeting on Tuesday in Abuja monitored by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) took certain decisions including the election of new national officials, change of the party logo and expulsion of Aniebonam and Agbo.
    “Is it not funny that all those people either suspended or expelled would gather somewhere and claim to have suspended Kwankwaso and also dissolve the NWC?

    “The jokers also appointed a CTC made up of those people who have ceased to be members of the party by virtue of our constitution.

    “Was INEC at the meeting? Did they write INEC? Who and who signed the letter?

    “Is it not laughable that Major Agbo, who announced the suspension of the former chairmen, the expulsion of two of them, and the dissolution of some of the states is now purportedly “heading” their caretaker committee,” Johnson said.

    He said it was unfortunate that some people had reduced politics and party administration to huge jokes.

    “The news that one person will sit somewhere and arrogate certain powers to himself is not permissible in a democracy.

    “We are using this medium to assure our supporters all over the country that there is no substance in the story.

    “Kwankwaso remains the face of the party, has not been suspended, and the NWC under Ali remains intact,’’ he said.

    Johnson however, admitted that Kwankwaso was invited to meetings by President Bola Tinubu on some issues saying that the meetings were far from being an anti-party activities.

    He said that while Kwankwaso always took permission before attending such meetings, no conclusion had so far being reached from the meetings.

    He also denied the allegation that Kwankwaso hijacked the party from members who were in the party before he joined with his movement in February 2022.

    Johnson, however, said that the party leadership would do its best for possible reconciliation.

    Also speaking, Mr Oluwatosin Odeyemi, the Chairman, forum of NNPP state chairmen, said the purported suspension of Kwankwaso was politics of bitterness.

    “Let me remind you that the present secretary of that group was expelled from this party and Agbo was the one who read it out that he had been expelled. Agbo attended all the meetings of that committee.

    “So you can see that it’s politics of bitterness. Something you read is something you agreed with. It was not as if you were pressure to read a release as the national publicity secretary.

    “So now an expelled person that you confirm his explosion is whom you are now regarding so as yours, secretary,’’ Odeyemi said.

  • Rabiu Kwankwaso wins Kano with 997,279 votes

    Rabiu Kwankwaso wins Kano with 997,279 votes

    Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso of the New Nigeria Peoples Party, NNPP, has won the just concluded Presidential Elections in Kano State with the highest votes of 997,279.

    Bola Ahmad Tinubu of the All Progressives Congress, APC, came second with 517,341, while Atiku Abubakar of the Peoples Democratic Party PDP, polled 131,716 votes.

    The INEC Returning Officer, Professor Lawan Suleiman Bilbis, who announced the results, said they were collated from the 44 Local Government areas of Kano.

    He commended politicians in the State for largely maintaining decency and maturity during the conduct of the elections, though he acknowledged violence in Takai and a few other places.

  • By their choices, you shall know them – Evaristus Bassey

    By their choices, you shall know them – Evaristus Bassey

    By Evaristus Bassey

    This article is about the choice of vice-presidential candidates that principals of major parties have made, and how a review of those choices could give us a glimpse of the decision making ability of the presidential candidates. We shall limit our focus on the three leading candidates: Peter Obi, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and His Excellency Atiku Abubakar. Kwankwaso’s NNPP is much like the 2011 appearance of Buhari’s Congress for Peoples’ Change, which though impactful, was a provincial effort. Kwankwaso’s NNPP may stand a chance to be rated in 2031 when power should shift once more to the north.

    Let us begin with the People’s Democratic Party (PDP). Atiku’s running mate, Gov Okowa, is a well-known south-south governor. I encountered him personally in the runup to the National Health Act when he was chairman of the Senate Committee for Health. He visited the Catholic Secretariat severally. He was quite dynamic, engaging, and levelheaded. He seemed to know when to stoop to conquer. His emergence as Atiku’s choice did not come as a surprise to some of us. The expectation that Atiku would pick Gov Wike wasn’t a realistic one, because from the onset, it was obvious that Wike would be too strong a character to be dealt with. Atiku may have wanted someone malleable, and someone with enough resources and willing to contribute heavily to the campaign, and he found his man in Okowa. Atiku may have learnt his lessons in 2019 when he overspent on the presidential campaign and ended up being trounced. Apparently, the joint ticket owner who is a well-resourced governor is carrying the great burden well. The ‘misfortune’ of Okowa is that being from the Aniocha part of the state, he is assessed through highly prejudicial eyes. Okowa has done a lot in many communities in Delta State especially his area which has never produced a governor since the foundation of Delta State but he is not well appreciated. In the presidential ticket he is seen as a mere spare tire, which is really the function of the Vice President anyway. The recent revelations about the billions taken as loans ostensibly for development, (whereas so much money had been released to Delta State by the Federal Government as revealed by Gov Wike) but allegedly contributed towards the presidential campaign, gives truth to the impression that the south-south is just there for self-enabled exploitation. Garnering resources and making inroads into the South-south and Southeast may have driven Atiku’s choice of Okowa. It however shows Atiku as someone always ready to exploit situations to his advantage and projecting his personal interests as national interest.

    Shettima is Vice Presidential candidate to Bola Ahmed Tinubu. The only time I met Gov Shettima was in Abuja when Bishop Kukah held a meeting with some governors of the north concerning an initiative a Catholic Spaniard billionaire was going to make in schools in the north. Bishop Kukah invited me based on my position then in the Catholic Secretariat of Nigeria. Shettima came off as down to earth. It is on record that he gave funds for the rebuilding of the churches destroyed by Boko Haram in Borno although he never allowed them make any improvements or expansion or redesigning. It just had to be the way it was before it was destroyed. The fact that he was governor when the Chibok girls were kidnapped has given much to speculation, especially when there was a directive that schools should transfer pupils to safer places. And that Kabiru Sokoto the Christmas day bomber was found in the Bornu State government lodge in Abuja, throws some shade over Shettima even though he is generally perceived as a good man even by the Christian community in Bornu. Tinubu’s choice of Shettima, a fellow Muslim, indicates his political astuteness but insensitivity towards Nigeria’s diversity. As it is, the external image about Nigeria is that it is a Muslim country. As a Nigerian I was shocked when I realized that some of the core northern states like Bauchi, Gombe, Borno, Adamawa had almost an equal number of Christians, if not more. It was just that the Muslims concentrated in the capitals and had demonstrated political astuteness early enough to take control of the institutions of government. When we had a meeting in Rome and we had representatives from Niger Republic, I was surprised they claimed the Christian population in Niger Republic was more than 40%, and yet the external image is that Niger is a purely Muslim country. These kinds of optics will increase exponentially if the Mu-Mu ticket succeeds, and many will be seeing Nigeria in the likes of Afghanistan, or Iran where Christians are a minority, whereas if a proper census was allowed in Nigeria by the powers that be, it might be discovered that the 60/40 projection they like making in favour of Islam might actually be the reverse. Tinubu’s choice of a Muslim vice-presidential candidate simply shows he would not care about diversity as much as securing the interests of the powerful; it wouldn’t matter to him how the vulnerable fare.

    The choice of Datti Ahmed by Peter Obi is perhaps the best choice of the three presidential candidates. Datti complements Peter Obi in a way that none of the other vice-presidential candidates complements their principals. Obi-Datti is like getting two valuable items for the price of one. Datti is obviously not a pushover. Obi did not go for someone who will be telling him “Yes Sir” without “But Sir…” Datti is not embroiled in any known controversy and so is not coming into the ticket with any known baggage. The ticket looks truly joint, unlike the Atiku/Okowa ticket which looks more like a Master servant relationship or the Tinubu/Shettima ticket which projects a feeble principal with an ambitious and ‘dreaded’ deputy. Obi’s choice of Datti shows more his interest in the common good rather than his personal preservation, and Datti looks ready to step in at any moment it is required of him. If Nigeria were not saddled with ethnic and religious jingoists, no clear man or woman of conscience would see the duo of Obi and Datti and prefer to vote for other candidates seeing that Nigeria is really in the woods and needs not just rescue but great transformation.

    And so we turn to the Lord of the universe and pray that may Saturday 25th February 2023 be a day that Nigeria breaks free from the shackles of those who have held her in bondage; and may the shame the name Nigeria carries all over the world and the disrespect her citizens suffer be reversed with the choice the majority of us make on that day. Amen.