Governor Nasiru El-Rufai

El-Rufa’i: A politician without political ambition?

By Safiyanu Ladan

While speaking on Channels TV program Politics Today, the governor of Kaduna state, Malam Nasiru Ahmad El-Rufa’i, said he’s currently not vying for any office come 2023. The governor, whose tenure is elapsing in the next fourteen months, insisted that he’s not interested in any political position.

“I have said it over and over, but I guess the trust in politicians is very low. Nobody believes me. I have said over and over that, I’m not a contestant for any office. I’m not an aspirant for anything,” he said.

“Rotimi Amaechi is interested in running for president. He has the right to do so, but I’m not running for anything. I’m not going to be on his ticket.”

He gave an impression that he had never wanted to run for the office of the governor of Kaduna state in 2015, but President Buhari prevailed over him. Because he has so much respect for the President, he reluctantly accepted to run.

The essence of being in politics is to have political ambition, which includes aspiring for a higher political position. Political ambition dictates the activities of every politician and can go to any extent in fulfilling their aspirations.

Yet, Mr El-Rufa’i remains the only politician in the history of this country without any political ambition that came out on national TV endorsing the removal of the National Chairman of the APC caretaker committee. Therefore, one can’t help but ask what the governor’s motive is?

It’s high time for this politician to stop deceiving us. We already know that the ambition of every politician is fixed and well defined. It’s nothing other than being in a political position.

Safiyanu Ladan wrote from Kaduna. He can be reached via uncledoctor24@gmail.com.

Water supply dilemma in Kaduna metropolis

By Sumayyah Auwal Ishaq

Potable water scarcity has been one of the major problems facing residents of the Kanuda metropolis for a long time. Stories of potable water scarcity in places like Rigasa, Kawo, Barnawa, Tudun Wada, Kabala West, Unguwar Kanawa, Unguwar Rimi, and others have, in the past years, remained a recurring issue with most of the past administrations failing to arrest the situation till date.

Although the past administrations failed at finding a lasting solution to the water scarcity, nearly all of them committed a large chunk of money to the rehabilitation of water facilities in the state. 

As of now, an investigation by The Daily Reality reveals that water scarcity across the metropolis becomes worst during the dry season when the majority of those that could not afford sachet water, borehole water resolve into patronising a series of questionable water sources available to them. 

It has been discovered that most of the administrations put up measures at making the corporation effective and efficient, the Kaduna State Water Corporation (KSWC). Still, the efforts were not all needed to tackle the chains of problems facing the corporation.

Most of the residents that spoke to The Daily Reality (TDR) in the affected areas expressed displeasure. However, they are pleading with the administration of Governor Nasir Ahmad El-Rufa’i to pay attention to the issue before the expiration of its term.

On transitioning to a four-day working week of teachers in Kaduna

By Safiyanu Ladan

The Kaduna state government has directed teachers in public schools to transit to four days working in a week, which the state adopted last year.

In line with the new arrangement, the teachers will now work from Monday to Thursday instead of Monday to Friday regular routine.

This development has generated a lot of condemnation across the state, as many people fear that it will further cripple the already fragile education system.

According to these critics, Governor El-Rufai had come up with stringent education policies ranging from competency tests for primary school teachers, which saw the sacking of thousands of primary school teachers, to the closure of schools due to the covid-19 pandemic and insecurity.

These aforementioned measures have invariably affected the impartation of knowledge and created a considerable gap that requires concerted effort to fill.

Staying at home during this period created an overwhelming experience for children and parents. It has also affected the way they learn. Having learnt that the future of their children’s education is at stake, parents were left with no other option than to hire private tutors for their wards, as the resumption date was still sketchy.

Noted for being a hub of intellectual activities in Northern Nigeria, the state has recently grappled with reduced access to classroom education due to those challenges.

And now, with this government’s directives of transiting the teacher’s working days to four in a week in place of the regular working days is tantamount to reducing the access to classrooms that has a far reached negative impacts on students.

Given the foregoing, the decision of the government to make teachers in public schools resort to four days working is ill-fated.

Safiyanu Ibrahim wrote from Kaduna via uncledoctor24@gmail.com.

387 persons killed in 2 years of Kaduna communal crisis – Gov. El-Rufai

By Muhammad Sabiu

Three hundred eighty-seven (387) people were murdered in the communal clashes in Kauru and Zangon Kataf, according to Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai.

On Wednesday, he stated this at Agwatyap’s palace in Atak Njei, Zangon Kataf.

The Commissioner of Internal Security and Home Affairs, Mr Samuel Aruwan, who represented El-Rufa’i at a meeting with traditional, religious and community leaders at the palace of Agwatyap, urged the communities in Kauru and Zangon Kataf to stick to the law and avoid generalizations that exacerbate the security situation in the areas.

He further called on the communities in Kauru and Zangon Kataf to keep recourse to the law.

During an emergency meeting with traditional rulers, Aruwan, who was escorted to the conference by security chiefs, also stated that the counter-killings were unacceptable.

Troops neutralize bandits in Kaduna village

By Uzair Adam Imam

Troops in Kaduna State have reportedly neutralized bandits and foiled a planned attack on Fatika town of the state.

A release issued Monday, 10-1-2022 by the Commissioner for Internal Security and Home Affairs, Samuel Aruwan, disclosed that five members of the militant group were killed in the process.

Aruwan Said that the troops who conducted clearance patrols in Giwa local government area received credible intelligence of terrorists’ movement.

However, he added that, “the troops then mobilised to Marke and Ruheya in response.”

“The outlaws were sighted and attempted to escape the advancing forces. The troops however cut off their escape route at Kwanan Bataro, and engaged them in a firefight, during which five of the terrorists were neutralized. The troops returned to base after clearing the area,” he stated.

The statement stated that governor Nasir El-Rufai expressed satisfaction at the operational feedback.

El-Rufai has also commended the troops for their proactive and sharp response to the intelligence received, encouraging them to keep up the intensity in the ongoing offensives against terrorists in the area.

BREAKING: Ban on motorcycles still in force – Kaduna gov’t

By Sumayyah Auwal Usman


The Kaduna State government said Tuesday that the ban on motorcycles (popularly known as “Okada”) for commercial or personal purposes is still in force.


The state’s Commissioner, Ministry of Internal Security and Home Affairs, Kaduna State, Samuel Aruwan, disclosed that “the Kaduna State Government wishes to inform citizens that the ban on use of motorcycles (popularly known as “Okada”), for commercial or personal purposes, remains in place until further notice”.


He further stated, “the Kaduna State Government continues to empathize with citizens over difficulties which these measures may engender, and implores all residents to comply fully with these measures in the wider interest of general security”.

El-Rufa’i names new Governing Council for KASU, other state institutions

By Sumayyah Auwal Ishaq

The Governor of Kaduna State, Mallam Nasiru El-Rufa’i, has approved the appointment of new governing councils for the Kaduna State University (KASU), Nuhu Bamalli Polytechnic, College of Education, Gidan Waya, College of Nursing and Midwifery, and a board for the Barau Dikko Teaching Hospital.

The Special Adviser to the Governor on Media and Communication, Muyiwa Adekeye, said on Tuesday in a statement that “Hussaini Adamu Dikko is appointed chairman of the Governing Council of KASU, with Ismail Sanusi Afieza representing the organized private sector, and Dr Tanimu Muazu Meyere, Habiba Sani and Charity Shekari.”

“Other members of the KASU Governing Council include the Vice-Chancellor, the Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Executive Secretary of the National Universities Commission, two representatives of the KASU Senate, one person appointed by the Congregation, one person appointed by Convocation, the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Health, the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Finance, and the Registrar as secretary of the Council” the statement added.

He further stated that “Dr. Ishaya Dare Akawu will chair the Governing Council of Nuhu Bamali Polytechnic, Professor Binta Abdulrahman was named the chairman of the council of the College of Education, Gidan Waya, and the council of the College of Nursing and Midwifery has Prof. Andrew Suku as chairman.”

You may recall that The Daily Reality had exclusively reported how the absence of Governing Council in KASU was creating ripples in the selection of the new Vice Chancellor for the university. However, the latest development is believed to ease the tension at the university.

KASU VC: The battle for Prof. Tanko’s successor thickens

By Sumayyah Auwal Usman

With time racing down to the end of the administration of the incumbent Vice-Chancellor of the Kaduna State University, Professor Muhammad Tanko, schemings have begun by many academics who have indicated an interest in clinching the highest executive but challenging position in the university.

Indications emerged recently that there are strong contenders within the university who are out to slug it out to succeed Prof. Tanko, as the 6th Vice-Chancellor of the University. Even though the names of the candidates have remained top secret up to the time of filing this report, there are contestants that are believed to have applied.

One of the leading contenders in the race, who many believe should have naturally been the successor to Professor Tanko is the incumbent Deputy Vice-Chancellor in charge of Academic matters, Professor Abdullahi Musa Ashafa. Before his appointment as the DVC, Academic, Professor Ashafa served as Head, Department of History, Dean, Faculty of Arts, a member of the 2nd Governing Council of the university led by Professor Idris Abdulkadir, and also Dean, School of Postgraduate Studies on two occasions. Ashafa and the outgoing VC were the first set of KASU to become Professors by promotion over ten years ago.

Another contender is Professor Yusha’u Ango, the Dean School of Postgraduate Studies. Although he was only promoted to the rank of professor last year, Ango is seen as a force to reckon with based on his political standing. He is believed to be supported by the one commissioner in Governor Nasiru El-Rufa’i cabinet, and he also held some administrative positions in the university as a Head of Department and Director.

It has also been gathered that Professor Bala Dogo, Department of Geography who was the first to be appointed a Professor from NDA Kaduna where he was an Associate Professor, is seriously in the race. Dogo has been a regular customer in applying for the post even outside KASU, but his low rating may likely see his ambition fly to anywhere. Others who are said to be in the race include Prof. John Laah, Department of Geography, Prof. Ahmed Kofa Babajo, Department of English and Drama, Prof. Hauwa Evelyn Yusuf, Department of Sociology, Prof Zainab Dabo of the Department of Business Administration & current Director of KASU Global Consult among others.

However, a source in the university said there are many Professors outside the university that have also indicated an interest in becoming the next VC. Other academics within KASU eyeing the position but are not from Kaduna State include Professor Ibrahim Malumfashi, Department of Nigerian Languages.

The major controversy in the process were the two contradictory advertisements made for the position. The first advertisement, signed by the then Commissioner of Education, Hon. Dr Shehu Usman Makarfi, instead of the University Registrar, stipulated the major criteria as a candidate must be a Professor of at least ten standing. But the second advertisement came out a week to the expiration of the deadline. In the new advertisement, the ten years standing for a professorship was removed. Contradictorily, it was signed by the same Commissioner Makarfi who had by then been redeployed to the Ministry for Local Government. This was said to have been made neither with the knowledge of the current Hon. Commissioner of Education nor her input.

The most controversial aspect of the second advert is that it did not indicate if it supersedes the previous one or not. The question interested parties thus asked is which of the advertisements would be used for the selection process of the new VC for KASU?

Another issue is that there is no Governing Council currently in the University to take charge of the process as stipulated in the University laws. It was reliably gathered that the academic union, ASUU, Kaduna State University Chapter have written to the Visitor of its opposition to the process outside the Council mandate. Though the Visitor was said to have directed for the collation of names for the constitution of a Council, how soon would it come out? If the Council is eventually constituted, observers expressed the likelihood of doing another advertisement without controversy. This, they also observed, will further delay the process. If this should happen until the incumbent Vice-Chancellor vacates office in January 2022, this will mean leaving the University with an Acting VC.

What pundits argue on this matter is why should a serious government like that of Governor El-Rufai who has another excellent and brilliant personality like Emir Muhammad Sanusi II as Chancellor allowed KASU’s excellent academic and administrative reputation tainted. The tenure of the current VC, Prof. Tanko is expiring on January 22, 2022.

Kaduna to dismiss 233 teachers, vow to conduct competency test

By Sumayyah Auwal Ishaq

The Kaduna State Universal Basic Education Board (KADSUBEB) will dismiss 233 teachers who presented fake certificates. According to the board chairman, Mr Tijjani Abdullahi, “the Board has verified 451 certificates by contacting the institutions that awarded the certificates.”

“The responses from the institutions show that 233 teachers presented fake certificates. This represents 51% of the 451 certificates on which responses have been received from the awarding institutions. One institution disowned 212 of these 233 fake certificates,” Abdullahi said.

A statement by the Board further added that it “will follow up the competency test with series of training programmes, organized in batches for teachers. This will begin in January 2022 for 12,254 teachers.

The Board has signed MoUs with the National Teachers Institute, the College of Education, Gidan Waya, and the Federal College of Education, Zaria, to conduct the training exercise.”

Nigeria: In need of El-Rufa’ism

By Tahir Ibrahim Tahir (Talban Bauchi)

Do you remember when Governor Nasiru El-Rufai chased bandits into the bush along the Kaduna/Abuja expressway as he encountered a bandit attack along the highway? He practically trailed the assailants into the bush, chasing the gunmen, along with his entourage of armed escorts. He wouldn’t stand aside and watch the security men put their lives on the line alone. They had no choice but to cover him as they pursued the bandits. Some were shot, and a few escaped with injuries.

El-Rufai is a hands-on man and practically chases the reality of things to the letter. If you were a Chief of Air staff, with El-Rufai as your C-in-C, you would probably be called to a scenario where El-Rufai is in one of your bases, manning a drone attack himself. I bet you, he could even be in one of the Tucanos, spitting fire on terrorists; and you would end up answering yes sir to him, over the mic, from the fighter jet. No garrison commander or head of any of the counter-terrorism operations would ever allow himself to be caught flat-footed by his irrepressible commander in chief. You can’t be in a command guest house somewhere while your Commander In Chief is in an MWRAP elsewhere on the battlefield, charging your soldiers on to carry the battle to the terrorists.

El-Rufai would not waste time naming the bandits as terrorists, so he wouldn’t be handicapped in annihilating their terror! If all the North-Western states’ governors had co-operated with El-Rufai’s plans long ago, they would have proactively put in place all the crunching measures — that would have ended the banditry plaguing the region today.

Do you know that Kaduna’s IGR of 13.6 billion in 2019 has grown to a whopping 51 billion in 2020? Anticipating a 60 billion IGR in 2021? This could mean that our monthly federation allocation of an average of 600 billion could be well over 1.5 trillion, to a probable 2 trillion naira monthly! Elrufai would find all those nooks and crannies of our economy that are not yielding fruits to the federation account — and make sure they matter to our economy. The Kaduna IGR example is a classic case of economic diversification, which is what Nigeria desperately needs. The President Muhammadu Buhari-led administration has laid the template for this, and what remains is the right lieutenant to take it to the next level.

States would be mandated to replicate the Federal template on revenue generation, and there would be less pressure on the federal purse. More viable states would be the elixir to the economic emancipation of Nigerians. Governance would be made to impact the local level, as revenue generated would reflect in the development of the rural areas. Under El-Rufai, revenue generation would not be a problem at all!

Have you seen how El-Rufai is developing a new generation of technocrats, entrepreneurs, and public servants? We have a Chief Executive in Kaduna state who is just 29 years old! Most of his commissioners are under 40 years of age. New metropolitan authorities have been constituted and are charged with the development of their base areas. All these executives are young indigenes who are representing the younger generation well.

El-Rufai is giving the youths a hands-on advantage of learning and gaining experience. He is grooming a new age of leadership in the state, which would never be bereft of ideas, and the zeal to implement those fantastic developmental ideas. This is aside from making youths SAs or SSAs only, as the highest offices they can attain. This is profiting from the abundance of technical knowledge that the youths can offer. This is harvesting youth IT knowledge and potential away from the yahoo-yahoo industry.

Nigerians aren’t so law-abiding and are fond of cutting corners and profiting from the lapses of our laws, as well as law enforcement. To date, no FCT Minister is missed, the way El-Rufai is yearned for in Abuja. The disarray and chaos in Abuja are unbecoming. It would take an El-Rufai to reset the city and make it a befitting nation’s capital. I’m sure the income that the FCTA would generate will be unprecedented — enough to manage itself, with or without any Federal interventions.

Kaduna has become one magnificent project site as projects run rampage across the state. A before and after picture of the Kawo bridge area is breathtaking. ‘Kasuwan Bacci’ is now a ‘Kasuwan Farke’ (a transformed and brand new metropolitan market).

I can only imagine the Mambila hydro project in the hands of El-Rufai or the Abuja/ Kano/ Maiduguri highway. The North-Eastern road networks’ deplorable situation would become history. I’m sure the South West and South East would be filled with light rail networks.

The industrialisation of our agro-allied processes would be in full swing, just the way agro-processing industries are springing up in Kaduna. We would then be ably competing with countries like Holland, in the production of milk. We could compete with Mexico in the export of tomatoes, where they make over 2 billion dollars. El-Rufai would make sure that Federal laws are respected and adhered to and would make real scapegoats to deter other goats from grazing on the wrong side of the law.

Nigeria desperately needs Elrufaism. If Nigerians can target their own national infrastructure and bring it down to a halt, who better to handle us?

Tahir is Talban Bauchi and can be contacted via talbanbauchi@yahoo.com.