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Opinion

Who is afraid of Saraki’s visit to Ilorin?

Since the November 14 visit of immediate past Senate President, Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki to his home town for the twin occasions of the eighth anniversary memorial prayer in honour of his late father, Dr Abubakar Olusola Saraki who was Senate Leader in the Second Republic, and the 25th anniversary of the ascension to the throne of the Emir of Ilorin, Alhaji Ibrahim Sulu-Gambari, the Kwara State government and its agents have gone over-drive with propaganda,  lies and fabrications targeted at downplaying the impact and success of the visit and its political implications.

In fact, for the past one week, governance has been relegated to the second position in the priority of the state officials led by Governor Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq. Their number one pre-occupation has been how to portray the Saraki’s visit to Ilorin as a non-event. Television programmes have been sponsored targeted at Saraki. A sponsored article with the same intention was syndicated in many national newspapers on Sunday (Nov. 22).

The article titled: “Dissecting Senator Bukola Saraki’s Homecoming in Kwara” written by one Alabi Olayemi Abdulrazak was filled with a lot of inaccuracies, outright falsehood and misinterpretations. The aim was to give the impression that the massive turn-out and open display of love and affection by the people to Saraki does not translate to any political rejuvenation and reinvigoration.

The question is, why is the Kwara State government and its agents so incensed about Saraki and his visit to Ilorin? The answers to this question will become apparent as I address in the following paragraphs the issues raised in the article under reference.

Abdulrazak, ‘the writer’ claimed that the expression of support by a crowd amounts to nothing in politics. It will be good to know from Mr Abdulrazak which politician will like a situation that he comes out on the street and people ignore him. What will this same writer have written if during Saraki’s visit to Ilorin, the former Senate president did not have appreciable crowd to welcome him. The same government and its agents would have been advertising the political demise of Saraki.

Abdulrazaq, the governor, and his handlers should know that his non-performance is what is inspiring the crowd to cheer Saraki. The incumbent governor has continued to show that he is not a man of his words. He lacked compassion and care for the people. That is why the common chant during Saraki’s visit was “O su wa”,  (we are tired), “Idera de” (Comfort has come). The governor should check himself and be sure he is truly serving the people.

Saraki who had served as governor of Kwara State for eight years and senator for another eight years representing Kwara Central decided to stay away from the state after he left office in June last year to avoid creating any distraction for the present administration. Saraki made it clear that it was good for the people of Kwara State to experience life under another political party. That was why he and his supporters decided not to challenge the results of the election in courts, despite knowing that more than half of the candidates fielded by the opposition party lack the required educational qualifications or submitted fraudulent certificates. The verdict delivered by the courts in the two cases filed by PDP members challenging the certificates submitted by their APC opponents which have resulted in the nullification of the election of the affected candidates showed why Saraki’s magnanimity should be appreciated.

How does a politician standing up from his vehicle to greet his supporters and well wishers translate to ‘sense of entitlement’ and being a godfather? Some political neophytes and ignorant analysts now feel that the best way to blackmail a popular politician and paint him black is to label such a politician ‘Godfather’.

Every political structure has a hierarchy and certain people whose voice matter in the decision making process. If you like call them Godfather or whatever.  From the US, Britain to Israel and even, South Africa, there are influential decision makers in every political process. So, what is this fixation with labelling people Godfather just to make them look bad?

It should be noted that while people like Alabi Olayemi Abdulrazak continued to fuel the narrative on Saraki dictating who got what in the State between 2003 and 2019,  and raising the futile question of whether the Sarakis are the only ones in the state, they conveniently evade the more logical question of how many members of the Saraki family had been governor, senators, House of Representatives member, House of Assembly member, minister, commissioner, special advise special assistant, and the numerous other political positions that had been filled in the state in those years.

Apart from Bukola who has served as governor and senator, and Gbemisola, who has served as Senator -are the occupants of the numerous other positions not from some other Kwaran families not related remotely or directly with the Sarakis?

Is it not an empty lie to claim that one man sitting in Ilorin determined and decided on the issue of who contested for various offices across the 16 LGAs on the platform of the party to which he belongs and yet those candidates won every elections for 16 years? The continuous attempt to make Saraki look bad sometimes inadvertently present him as a Superman.

Abdulrazak the writer and Abdulrazaq the governor should know that today, Kwara State has two ministers because of Bukola Saraki. The nominators in Abuja gave Kwara two ministers because they wanted to settle scores with Saraki. In doing so, they appointed Gbemisola as minister to spite Bukola. They forgot that blood is thicker than water. Today, Mr Abdulrazak should go and ask his sponsors why was it that when APC wanted to appoint two ministers, they ensured a Saraki was one of them.

If Saraki had left Kwara State for Abdulrahman since May 29, 2019 to govern without distraction, and after one and a half years, he paid one visit, only for the whole state to ignore the incumbent governor in other to welcome the former governor, does that not show that they have tasted another administration and experienced the ugly outcome?

Is it the fault of Saraki that Abdulrazaq assembled a cabinet of fourth-rate commissioners and inexperienced aides? Is it the fault of the former Senate President that those who conspired to deny him and his supporters electoral victory in 2019 failed to select competent people as replacements? If the Kwara Governor feels that because of his own deficient educational qualification and inexperience in management, he decided to also choose people who are not better than him, who is to be blamed?

Throughout the article under reference, the writer struggled without success to play down what he continuously referred to as “internal schism within the ruling party”. Any reasonable watcher of politics in Kwara State who is also familiar with the antecedent of the incumbent governor as a lone introvert, should know that he cannot efficiently operate in an organised system.

The writer lied that the Jonathan administration appointed Prof. Oba Abdulrahman as Chairman of the Federal Character Commission (FCC) against Saraki’s wish. Prof Oba Abu as he is fondly called was nominated into the FCC position to replace the incumbent from Kebbi State who died before the end of his tenure. Kebbi State had lobbied to make then President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua allow them nominate a replacement for the late chairman. With his closeness to Yar’Adua, then Governor Saraki moved to get the position zoned to Kwara State and he nominated Prof. Abdulrahman to the position.

It is obvious that there is a deliberate, dodgy tradition by Abdulrazaq to always heap all the problems bedeviling his administration on Saraki who left Kwara government nine and a half years ago. Saraki is said to be the only reason why the present Kwara Administration under him could not embark on any tangible project but has only been content with patching roads. What a fallacy!

Alabi writes from Adewole Estate, Ilorin.

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