Saminu Turaki’s Weird Kites
Saminu Turaki, former governor of Jigawa State who now sits among the
109 wise men and women in the senate of the Federal Republic of Nigeria,
is a man that exudes a certain allure. I have never met him. But as a
young man who was sworn in as governor at 36 in 1999, served for two
terms and presently sits as a senator, he parades an impressive CV. From
records, Turaki attended Federal Government College , Kaduna and is an
alumnus of Ahmadu Bello University (ABU) Zaria . But my fascination with
the man is not for any intellectual accomplishment: my enthralment
derives from his penchant for weird ideas.
As governor of Jigawa State , Turaki came up with a stunning plan to
import frogs and snakes (of all things!) from China to breed for export
so that the state could earn foreign exchange from Asian delicacies.
When that kite failed to fly, he came up with another creepy idea: to
transform his state from an agro based economy to a modern economy
powered by information and communication technology. His target,
ostensibly, was to make the state capital, Dutse, the regional hub for
software development and for the assembly of hardware. In a state
weighed down by high levels of illiteracy and poverty, poor
infrastructure, low school enrolment, pandemic levels of VVF and
HIV/AIDS, critics wondered if Turaki’s was acting out of foresight or
short-sight and warned that the governor may be suffering from delusions
of grandeur.
At the expiration of his second term, Turaki was one of the former
governors hauled before the Federal High Court by the Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for alleged money laundering.
Arraigned before Justice Binta Nyako on a charge of laundering over
N30b, he did the unthinkable: he burst into tears. It was a novel kite.
While many wondered how a man of Turaki’s status could take recourse to
such infantile display, others pointed out that it was Turaki's way of
underscoring the axiom in the popular TV serial: The Rich Also Cry. Lest
the sentimental outburst assumes the place of a robust defence, critics
with a sardonic sense of humour argued that the tears were not real but
were of the variety better known as crocodile tears.
Undaunted, the clever politician continued the display of his brilliant
talent for comedy by claiming that a third of the money that he was
alleged to have dry-cleaned was actually used to fund the infamous third
term agenda of former president Olusegun Obasanjo! For a man who was
elected on the platform of the All Nigerian Peoples Party (ANPP), a
rival party to Obasanjo’s Peoples’ Democratic Party (PDP), it was the
height of inventiveness. With the transfer of Justice Nyako and the
recent re-arraignment of Senator Turaki before Justice Adamu Bello, he
may yet be gearing up to open a new compartment in his box of incredible
kites.
Now, as a member of the National Assembly Joint Committee on
Constitution Review, Senator Turaki has hoisted another kite to add to
his rising profile as a master of slapstick: he has made a highly
bizarre call for tenure extension to enable the administration of
President Yar’Adua complete its development programmes. By the
proposal, legislative fiat would be used to secure for Yar’Adua two
terms of 14 years to terminate in 2021. The ‘Turaki Tenure Extension
Act’ would take retroactive effect from May 29, 2007.
But Senator Turaki swore to protect the constitution. What is he doing
now? Is he flying another kite? Was he inadvertently exposing a plot to
ensure that the new constitutional review initiative is still-birthed?
Is he planning to use the Yar’Adua tenure extension project to prop up
his status as a tenure extension guru? Or is he taking liberties with
his constitutional right to freedom of speech?
No one should be deceived by Senator Turaki’s gambit. Not even the
president should welcome such a Greek Gift. Whatever may have fired his
fertile imagination, Nigeria is only just emerging from the throes of
political discombobulation to which the country was dragooned by the
activities of Turaki and his ilk in the last dispensation. A great
opportunity to fine–tune the constitution was lost and enormous
resources wasted. The new pet project of the senator is, to say the
least, condemnable. It is reassuring that the senate has come out like
other concerned citizens and groups to distance itself from Turaki’s
pollution of the political atmosphere. But by his (mis)statement, Turaki
has shown that he holds a position prejudicial to his membership of the
Joint Committee on Constitution Review appointed to prepare the grounds
for the much desired review of the 1999 constitution. The senate,
therefore, has a duty to restore the integrity of the committee and to
reassure the public that the nation is not being taken on another wild goose chase. To
do so, Turaki should be made to apologise or, in the alternative, to
withdraw from the committee. That is only fair to Turaki – and to the
nation.
By Uche Ohia
uchebush@yahoo.com; 0805 1090 050