SUNDAY, DECEMBER 24 2006

   
     

A vote for Sule Lamido
By Muhammad A. Bello, Assistant editor
Humble and politically combative, Sule Lamido, as Olawale Oshun vividly recounted in his book Clapping With One Hand is an honest person. Long ago, I knew him when I was a kid roaming the streets of Birnin-Kudu. Every Friday, or a day before, he would drive his brown Mercedes 200 with registration number KN 2000 BK all the way from Kano. When he gets to Birnin-Kudu, he would go into the town and freely associate with all manners of people without discrimination.
After his asr prayers, still wearing his gentle smile, he would drive off to his birth place-Bamaina to meet with his family. His father of blessed memory was the community leader. Till date that position is still held by his kins. His late brother, Adamu Lamido, also of blessed memory, took over when their revered father passed on. Adamu, also tall, jovial and confident was a year a head of me in Government College, Birnin-Kudu.
No doubt, the pedigree of the family is impeccable. However it seems that Sule, took the shine off all of them. Instead of this to make them envious, and perhaps set them against him, his mercurial brightness endeared them to him. This is because he carried them along. He was and is still selfless. As a matter of fact, when their father departed, instead of Sule to add the old man’s cap to his own Shagari-style type of yore days, he supported late Adamu to become the community leader.
Although brutally blunt and focused in his politics, Sule plays the delicate game with decorum. Like his attitude of selflessness at the family level, he is also magnanimous when it comes to fierce power contest. This came to play in 1991, when as a gubernatorial candidate of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) in the old Kano state he gave his blessings to Barrister Ali Sa’adu B/Kudu to contest in the newly created Jigawa state.
God amply rewarded him with the position of the national secretary of the SDP-where he cut his teeth as an astute national politician who became transformed into a nationalist and a patriot. Long before then, as a PRP/NPP representative of Birnin-Kudu in the Second Republic lower house in Lagos, he had added the crush for boli to his native culinary taste for fura da nono. No doubt, he has been a worthy, diplomatic ambassador of Jigawa everywhere he has been.
He shot to lime light as the national secretary of the SDP after the annulment of the June 12 election believed to have been won by late MKO Abiola. Together with his chairman then Chief Tony Anenih, Amos Idakula, Okechukwu Odunze and others, the SDP team negotiated with their NRC counterparts to soft-land the June 12 dead lock.
His loyalty to Muhammadu Abubakar Rimi and late General Shehu Musa Yar’adua was the most striking tool with which he weathered the storms of those days. Perhaps, this is why some politicians fault him today. All his political life he has been unreservedly loyal to his associates and leaders. So, if he demands similar gesture from anyone who wants to work with him it should not be seen as unusual. And, again, if he expresses his displeasure with treachery, confrontation, subterfuge and gang-up, he should not be labeled as a non-conformist.
Sule could have long ago fallen out with Rimi, when the latter concurred with late Yar’adua that the original guidelines on negotiation with the NRC concerning the formation of a government of national unity be set aside. Rimi never sought Lamido’s opinion before conceding to a change of plan at the instigation of General Yar’adua.
Instead of confronting Rimi, Lamido perfected a plan of his own. He called up Dr Rabi’u Musa Kwankwaso, the deputy speaker and three others to join the meeting. Few minutes after the meeting proceeded Sule had a heated argument with Anenih over the guidelines that SDP had given on the negotiation.
He insisted that the party’s position were to make the result of the June 12 presidential election the nexus of the negotiation. Other positions of the party he upheld were discussion on what type of government of national unity would be formed that would not contravene the constitution and the negotiation of the ministerial positions each side would be able to concede. He stood his ground that Abiola should head the government to be formed while kingibe, his running-mate should remain his vice. Rimi upturned his resistance by telling him that these positions were no longer tenable. Chief Nwodo, who was representing the NRC told him that he was holding the meeting to ransom. Again, to his surprise Odunze and Idakula accused Sule of selfishness.
Although, he was roundly arm-twisted by his loyal friend Rimi, Gen. Yar’adua, Anenih and others, Sule by his fearless demonstration of loyalty to Abiola, boldly wrote his name on the rock of Nigerian history. His loyalty to Rimi and not his love of money or power was what made him to sign the agreement that brought Chief Ernest Shonekan to power.
Until a couple of months ago, when Rimi openly told the Triumph newspapers that Lamido was no longer his friend, the latter has silently beared the pains of what his loyalty to the former has caused him. At the March 1993, SDP presidential primaries in Jos, Lamido behaved maturedly when Ali Sa’adu B/Kudu, his protégé and beneficiary of his political goodwill worked against his choice-MKO Abiola.
His presence, in his more than thirty years of politics, in PRP, NPP, PSP and SDP not only enhanced Rimi’s credibility but gave formidable focus to all the parties. Indeed, his (Lamido’s) political sagacity and bold craftiness gave PRP –santsi and PSP their opening gambit in all the negotiation that later resulted in their respective mergers with NPP and SDP. Never a money-bag with megalomaniac craving for number one position, Lamido does not lack in foresight, which has paid off well for him.
This could be why he has never lost out in any political contest. He did not floor Turaki in 1999 because he refused to kow-tow to the demand of a cabal who feel that it is their birthright to decide who rules Jigawa state. He lost that election because he did not have the kind of money that was put in the till for Baba na Aujara. He was not voted for by the civil servants because they feared that he would instill discipline in the rather too-mobile workforce, which gulps salaries and allowance without doing anything. His campaign efforts were rubbished by some bigwigs in the state’s traditional institution. He lost the governorship position, but he was resilient. And God spoke as President Olusegun Obasanjo appointed him as the minister of foreign affairs.
As he got busy carving a niche for his country, those who worked against his modest ambition licked their wounds as Governor Neo subdued Jigawa elite, mesmerized the traditional rulers and bestrode the globe like Christopher Columbus.
Neo created more jobs, wealth and goodwill in far-away Sao Paolo, than he did in the little state where he was given mandate. When the final whistle was about to blow, he ran to Lamido, with whom he has been fighting, and to PDP, from which he eloped earlier. Being the gentleman he is, Lamido welcomed him back and worked his connection to save him from Ribadu owls.
In that position, for four years, he had another luminous rendezvous with history. He became part of the global effort to launder the dirty image of Nigeria. He re-invigorated, re-assimilated and re-positioned Nigeria’s foreign policy. He re-located it from Aso-Rock where it was ‘crocodily’ domiciled to the centers of global diplomacy in Washington, London, Paris, Beijing and Moscow. Under his ministration, President Obasanjo molded the African Union (AU). The president foiled potential conflicts and rampaging civil wars in many parts of Africa.
All through his tenure in the ‘foreign pitch’, as his hardworking press secretary-Adagbo Onoja will call it, Sule Lamido stood tall, like Henry Kissinger. Perhaps his talks with China encouraged the Reds to contemplate coming to Africa. Under him Clinton passed a night at Transcorp Hilton with his daughter. He was severally the guest of No. 10 Downing street and 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
To me, he made Jigawa proud. Unlike Neo whose multi-million dollar investment are in Malaysia, Brazil and other coca-friendly republics, Lamido have no investment anywhere outside Nigeria. In fact, at a time when Kano factories are folding up at the rate of 4 monthly, Sule Lamido chose to float an industry right inside the city. His only house is in Kano. He has only one house in Bamaina. When he is in Birnin Kudu, Hajiya Bilki and her brother Nasidi together with Nakudu family are his hosts.
The man is so down to earth. I am convinced that, after those years of profligacy and rudderlessness, Jigawa state should, and I pray with God’s blessing must have Sule Lamido as its governor in 2007. your excellency, I give you my vote, that of my wife and those of AbdulRahman and Khadija, had it been they are eighteen. I would have promised you the vote of my aged mother but for her disability and worrisome illness. How I wish it was in those days when you used to ‘dash’ her N20 and she would dance the entire evening away being happy. Nonetheless, may the winds of good fortunes sai I gently behind you in your journey towards Government House, Dutse.



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