By Chinelo Obogo

Governor of Jigawa State, Alhaji Abubakar Muhammad Badaru, in this interview, explains that Nigeria’s greatness lies in her leadership which must be purely based on merit and politics devoid of tribal and religious sentiments.
Two years down the line, would you with all sense of sincerity say the APC-led federal government has lived up to the expectations of the masses?
I would emphatically say yes, and I am glad you mentioned the masses, because for some elites their only expectation is that the government of the day should fail and nothing short of that will satisfy them. Buhari’s campaign promises can be summarized into three, provision of security, economic diversification and a zero tolerance for corruption. Since assuming power the nation’s biggest security challenge has been tackled, the siege situation in three states has been lifted and 17 local governments areas have effectively been liberated, 12,000 hostages including 107 of the Chibok girls have been rescued, and you no longer have to endure a 10 hour journey encountering 11 military checkpoints to travel from Kano to Abuja, there are several flights a day into Maiduguri and Yola airports and we have had several Christmas and Sallah celebrations without a single terrorist incident, the dignity of our armed forces has been restored as they are no longer scampering to neighbouring countries to take refuge. I shudder to think where this country would have been if the insurgents had
maintained their rampage at the pace they were progressing under the previous administration.
Apart from the decimation of the capacity of the Boko Haram insurgents, what other concrete visible work or achievements of the federal government in more than two years can you point at?
Well, I hope you realize that President Buhari inherited a comatose economy, characterized by a depleted treasury and oil prices that had crashed up to 70 percent in eight months. As I talk to you our foreign reserves stand at about $32 billion, a build up of $7 Billion in 24 months of a recessed economy and unprecedented speculative pressure on the naira. You can extrapolate and imagine where we would be if the same sense of prudence and fiscal responsibility had been applied in a $140 a barrel Oil price regime. $500 million has been paid into the sovereign wealth fund, the first inflow since it was set up in 2012, Over N5 trillion has been captured by TSA with a saving of N4.7 B in MDA bank charges monthly.
Critical infrastructure projects some of which have been at a standstill for eight years due to lack of funding have been remobilized, over N1 trillion was released for capital projects in the 2016 budget, the highest ever in the history of this country, dead construction companies have been brought back to life, thousands of jobs created and the trickledown effect has reflated the economy and helped end a recession.
The SIP initiative is another campaign promise fulfilled with over 1million beneficiaries spread out across the various programmess, N-power, School feeding, GEEP and the conditional cash transfer programme. Agriculture has seen the largest and most focused national attention in the nation’s history with billions of naira in various programmes- ANCHOR, CACS, NIRSAL and others being availed to farmers with dramatic results.
Our rice import has fallen from about 600,000 MT per annum to just 58,000 MT by end of 2016 and a presidential committee on fertilizer which I chair has eliminated N260 billion per annum in fertilizer subsidy and foreign exchange. We have brought back to life over 12 dead fertilizer blending plants and plan to revive another eight by end of 2017 and created over 60,000 jobs in the process, while providing excellent quality fertilizer at N5,500 a bag with zero subsidy instead of almost N10,000 .Fuel importation has been liberalized and subsidies withdrawn, and the government is supporting the establishment of the largest single refinery in the world, freeing up about $8 Billion in forex by the time it becomes operational in 2019. I could on and on.
Corruption was a major campaign issue in the run off to the election to which the Buhari/APC said it would fight to finish, however, the government appears been bogged down by the same virus, what is your take?
Corruption was institutionalized and ingrained into our national psyche to a point where a public servant that refuses to partake is regarded as a fool by the very citizens he’s supposed to be stealing from. You can’t erase it overnight, there is no magic wand especial under a democratic dispensation with a judicial system that presupposes innocence until proven otherwise. The first and most important step is leadership by example and a strict adherence to the rule of law. Even Buhari’s worst critic can never accuse him of being a ‘do as I say and not as I do’ leader. He exemplifies integrity and incorruptibility, but the man can only do as much as the system allows within the ambit of the law. When you hear of conviction statistics being reeled out by the EFCC, get the number of cases under investigation and those in the judicial system and work out the conviction ratio, some cases have been at pre-trial level for 10 years. There are attempts to speed up the process through judicial reform and international treaties, but bear in mind that corruption fights back and it doesn’t fight fair. As I am sure you are aware, amount recovered from one case can fund the budget of the judiciary for two electoral terms.
Different separatist groups are clamouring for independence of their own republic, as they all alleged that their interests are not been taken care of, are these agitations not legitimate?
Any thing done outside the ambit of or in contravention of the law is illegitimate, so the question I believe is whether there is any justification in these agitations. My counter question is why now? Where were the agitators before the advent of this administration? Was the previous govt so repressive and brutal that they couldn’t voice out their aspirations? Some of them were active players in the politics then, some contested elections and lost, I have seen some that were advocates of tenure elongation at some point in time, my take is that it’s all a case of sour grapes and bad sportsmanship. Instead of heating up the polity let them get their act together and participate in the political dispensation, then they can articulate their position within the ambit of the law and the constitution.
The PDP appears to be getting it’s bearing right, thereby opening the space for a more formidable opposition.  With many unfulfilled campaign promises, it does appear that the APC is in for an herculean task of returning to power in 2019. What do you think?
I just listed out our three pronged campaign agenda and what we have been able to achieve under an extremely difficult economic and political environment, which is unarguably the result of PDP’s misrule. As for getting their bearing right, I think the real test is yet to come, there are a few political surprises still in the offing, I am sure you’re already aware that their 2019 zoning arrangement has been thrown to the dogs.
Coming to Jigawa, in what areas would you say your government has lived up to your electoral promises?
My number one electoral pledge is to create a local economy using agriculture, and from the independent statistics available, we are on the right track. We have encouraged significant investment in agric industries by creating a conducive environment because we believe that the only way to impact the sector on a scale that will reflect on a state wide basis is to involve big business. We have established a comprehensive land acquisition and reform policy that seeks to ease large land acquisition for
Agribusiness while protecting the rights of small scale land holders and integrating them into agric processing investors as stakeholders. Small holder farmers have been clustered to achieve aggregation in input supply , extension service provision and market identification. We are actively encouraging out-grower schemes to establish a partnership between farmers and processors and we are extending this by developing a contract growing policy that will see longer term arrangements leading to price stability and access to funds for farm development. In Jigawa, Agriculture  is micro managed by a steering committee chaired by myself that meets unfailingly on a weekly basis.
From your vantage position, can you tell us what Nigerians can do as a nation to be great again?
We should focus on what we have in common rather than our differences. We should sanitize the political space and do away with politics of ethnicity and religion, and focus on issues not sentiment.
We must evolve a system that ensures quality leadership, which is appreciated and respected so that meritocracy takes root and we can begin to celebrate leaders with national outlook and exemplary vision and capacity. Today no matter how good you are, political and ethnic considerations will be used to denigrate you and pull you down. You can imagine a situation where a leaders’ illness is being celebrated in the name of politics. This is sad.
One would have expected you, as other governors do, to probe the financial activities of the previous govt, you chose not to. But some have said you were scared of the ripple effects his (Lamido) probe/prosecution would have on your government. How true?
What ripple effect? The former governor has been investigated by the relevant agencies and he is currently facing trial in court, what would I gain from duplicating the issue simply to follow precedence
and say I am probing him? We continued with the projects for two reasons. There were so many of them scattered all over the state to the tune of over N80billion, and abandoning them will simply mean a colossal waste of resources since they will simply deteriorate and in some cases even pose environmental hazards. Secondly they were initiated with public funds; they were not a philanthropic gesture from anybody’s endowment fund. You cannot imagine the political pressure we came under to draw the line and award our own contracts. I did not know any of the contractors, we simply asked them to give us a discount, assured them there was no commission or ‘on top’ to deliver to anybody’s agent or sibling and they went back to work.
To what extent has the austerity measure policy of the government helped governance in the state?
I believe without the measures we put in place we would probably have proved our skeptics right. There were elements in the previous govt who were betting that we would never be able to pay salaries from
month one, perhaps  because they knew the financial pitfalls that they placed before us including depleting the state’s account balances leaving behind only N16M.  It was not easy but because we started from my own office it was not too hard to convince the MDAs to make do with what was available, especially since we took time to discuss the measures with every MDA and mutually agreed on implementation.

 

Related News