Mama Taraba and the APC crisis - Reuben Abati writes
  
Read his piece below...
Mama Taraba is Senator Aisha Alhassan, the current Minister of Women Affairs in the Muhammadu Buhari cabinet,
 and arguably the most influential female politician in Taraba state 
today. She did something shocking and unusual in Nigerian politics 
during the last Eid-el-Kabir holidays. While paying homage to former 
Vice President Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, she addressed him
 as follows: “Your Excellency, our father and our President by the grace
 of God, come 2019…” Members of the ruling All Progressives Congress 
(APC) have been on a war-path with her since then.
They have labeled Mama Taraba a traitor, and an ingrate and have even
 called for her immediate sack, disgrace, humiliation and outright 
dismissal for “anti-party activities”. What is not clear is how a 
serving Minister expressing an opinion amounts to “an anti-party 
activity.” Alhaji Atiku Abubakar whom she visited is a member and one of
 the leaders of the APC, and she has since made it clear, not only in 
private, but through the BBC, that she regards Atiku as her political 
godfather and mentor, and should he decide to run for President in 2019,
 she will support him, not Buhari.
She does not deserve the hate speeches she is getting from the Buhari apologists. If Kaduna Governor Nasir el-Rufai is
 to be believed, Mama Taraba has never regarded President Buhari as her 
political mentor. He was not even her choice as presidential candidate 
in the 2015 APC primaries. She voted for her mentor, Alhaji Atiku 
Abubakar who contested against the incumbent President at the time.
She deserves high marks for her consistency, honesty and courage. Any
 close watcher of Nigerian politics can easily appreciate the gravity of
 the risk that she has taken. It is that kind of risk that could attract
 a punishment worse than dismissal from the Cabinet. In the estimation 
of those who are asking for her to be punished by both the ruling party 
and the President, Mama Taraba has crossed certain “red lines”.
In the first place, she did not go to Daura to pay homage to the 
President, instead she went to Adamawa to visit former Vice President 
Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, a man who has declared interest in sending 
President Buhari out of Aso Villa. In Nigeria’s unwritten manual of 
politics and governance, political appointees are not to be seen with 
those who are considered enemies or rivals of the ruler. Mama Taraba not
 only crossed that line, she went many steps further.
It is also the rule in Nigerian politics that political appointees 
are expected to sing the praise of their bosses in public all the time, 
and should they have any misgivings they can only express those 
misgivings privately. The problem this has created is that most 
political appointees are as subservient as civil servants. They don’t 
express independent opinions as they should, not to talk of misgivings. 
They just act as directed. The President or the Governor is considered 
the wisest man exercising a divine mandate that no man should question. 
The corridor of power in Nigeria is littered with sycophants. In one 
state for example, the new Speaker of the State House of Assembly was 
asked if the legislature under his watch would avoid the temptation of 
becoming the Governor’s rubber stamp. The fellow reportedly responded: 
“I tell you, this House of Assembly will not only be the Governor’s 
rubber stamp, we will be his Seal!”
Mama Taraba has chosen to be different. Those who are criticising her
 are not stupid either, but it is just so convenient for them to play 
the role of sycophants and court jesters. They know when Mama Taraba 
says President Buhari should not run in 2019, what she is really saying 
is that she does not consider him fit enough for that office. She is 
more or less passing a vote of no confidence in the President. She is by
 the same token advertising Atiku Abubakar as a better person. The crabs
 in the corridor of power have amplified these suggestions to the level 
of blasphemy. But the truth is that there are many of them who probably 
hold the same opinion, who are secretly working against the Buhari 
Presidency, but they would never admit doing so publicly. These green 
snakes under the green grass, are the hidden saboteurs, the Judases 
President Buhari must beware of.
They are like the members of the Akintola group in the First Republic
 in the then Western Region. In the fight for political supremacy 
between Samuel Ladoke Akintola, who would later cross to the NNDP (or Der-mor as the people called it) and Chief Obafemi Awolowo of
 the Action Group, many supporters of the former openly supported 
Awolowo, but they were loyal to Akintola and the NNDP. There was even a 
famous song on this: “Bi o ri owo mi, o o ri inu mi, Demo ni mo wa.” The
 elevation of perfidy into a strategy started long ago in Nigerian 
politics. In this instance, Mama Taraba has boldly called the bluff of 
her adversaries: she says she is ready to quit the Cabinet if she is 
asked to leave. How many of her colleagues feel the same way but too 
scared to say so?
With Aisha Alhassan, President Buhari knows where he stands. It is 
better for him that this is so. Ordinarily, Mama Taraba should support 
him. In 2015, she contested for the Gubernatorial position in Taraba 
state on the platform of the All Progressives Congress, and lost. She 
petitioned the State Election Tribunal and won, but this victory at the 
Tribunal which would have made her the first elected female Governor in 
Nigeria was later upturned by the Appeal and Supreme Courts.
By bringing her into his Cabinet, President Buhari rehabilitated her.
 He was advised against offering her the position then because she was a
 known Atiku person. President Buhari needs not regret the choice he has
 made. His appointment of non-Buhari persons into his Cabinet, including
 persons who refused to leave the PDP and join the APC, and are still in
 the PDP or other parties, is an indication of his own largeness of 
heart and statesmanship.
He should be glad that this particular Minister has spoken honestly. 
At least, he now knows that he cannot rely on her political structures 
in Taraba state and wherever else she wields influence. In case he plans
 to run in 2019, Mama Taraba has already served him an early notice – he
 would have to build his political machinery in that state around 
someone else. Her critics insist that she should on her own resign and 
go back to her Atiku.
This raises the question of the nature of loyalty in politics. What 
determines loyalty? There is a lot of obsession with loyalty or 
disloyalty in Nigerian politics. Did Aisha Alhassan take an oath of 
office to serve Buhari or the Federal Republic of Nigeria? What we know 
is that political leaders in Africa place loyalty to themselves above 
loyalty to the state. Which is why our security and law enforcement 
agencies are so mercurial; they are ever so busy protecting the 
political interests of the incumbent, and will change should the 
incumbent change, rather than focusing on their core mandates. If Mama 
Taraba is efficient in the discharge of her duties as Minister, 
President Buhari should ignore those who are asking him to sack her.
What cannot be ignored though, is that the ruling APC is truly and 
terribly in crisis. The subsequent attacks on Alhaji Atiku Abubakar by 
the pro-Buhari wing of the APC, following his declaration that he was 
used and dumped by the President further confirms the depth of this 
internal turmoil. But was Atiku really used and dumped, or to use his 
word, “sidelined?” He says: “I was sidelined, I have no relationship 
with the government. I’ve not been contacted even once to comment on 
anything and in turn, I maintained my distance. They used our money and 
influence to get to where they are but three years down the lane, this 
is where we are.” These are strong words.
The bitterness in Alhaji Atiku Abubakar’s tone touches the heart. But
 can he really claim that he has been sidelined when Mama Taraba, his 
loyalist and at least one or two others from his political camp are 
playing key roles in the Buhari government? Could they have gone to work
 for Buhari without his “permission” or knowledge? The side-talk that 
they got the job on their own merit is opaque given the clientelist 
character of political proximity in African democracies.
With Mama Taraba’s statement, Atiku’s protest, and the epigrammatic 
statement by Senator Shehu Sani about Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, that 
was thrown in, the support base for President Buhari’s likely shot at a 
second term in office appears shaky. Senator Sani confirms this when he 
says: “The Lion Monarch should reach out to the aggrieved but silent 
Lagoon Lion so that he doesn’t explode like the Hippo. The Lagoon Lion 
controls waters that can drown… The disloyal Cobra who spat venom before
 you and the friendly Viper who sprayed venom behind you are all snakes.
 In comparison the former is of lesser evil than the latter.” In 
straightforward English, Shehu Sani is saying President Buhari is likely
 to drown politically if he does not pay homage to “the silent Lagoon 
Lion.”
The tragedy of the APC is that a party that came to power as a party 
of change-agents has in all of two years and four months become a party 
of lions, hyenas, jackals, snakes and rats. Those who have been using 
these animal kingdom references so freely are party insiders who 
obviously know the circumstances of their own party. What is seen is an 
increasingly atomistic political party, looking hubristically, like the 
dominant party it displaced. It is worse that the party leaders are now 
speaking in tongues.
In a statement issued on September 25, 2016, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu 
sounded a note of warning asking for an urgent reform of the party. He 
was ignored. As at this moment, the APC is yet to hold a national 
convention; it has no Board of Trustees. Internal party processes have 
broken down. It should also be recalled that when Senator Bukola Saraki 
made the moves that saw him emerge as Senate President of the 8th 
National Assembly in 2015, the first and the only prominent party leader
 he visited was Alhaji Atiku Abubakar.
It was a very sensitive move in the APC chess game – the anti-Saraki 
and anti-Atiku groups within the party are still fuming two years later!
 In the 2015 election, President Buhari got close to 2 million votes 
from Kano state. Today, Kano is divided against his Presidency. During 
the last Sallah, supporters of the incumbent Governor, Abdullahi 
Ganduje, and loyalists of the former Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso turned the
 prayer ground into a battle-field, using machetes freely on a Holy day!
 Ganduje is pro-Buhari. Kwankwaso nurses a Presidential ambition.
The big threat to the Buhari Presidency is not the likes of Aisha 
Alhassan, who speak their minds, but the possible union of the lions, 
snakes, the hyenas and the rats, hiding in dark corners, waiting to take
 their pounds of flesh from the party and the Buhari Presidency.
 
 
 
          
      
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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