Shekarau, Kwankwaso,        and the N4 Billion Hotel Bill Question
       By
       Suleiman Uba Gaya
       Last Monday, Daily Trust        carried on its front page, a story told by the Transition Committee        appointed by Engr. Rabi’u Musa Kwankwaso, Kano Governor-Elect, to the        effect that the outgoing administration of Malam Ibrahim Shekarau has        spent a whopping N4 billion on hotel bills in the course of eight years of        its stewardship.  Sadly, some readers just swallowed hook, line and        sinker, the story without even according the accused, the benefit of        doubt. With the hatred Kwankwaso openly exhibits against Shekarau, which        led him in 2001 to demote the latter from the position of permanent        secretary to classroom teacher, worse allegations shall be expected.  What        is surprising is that Daily Trust did not treat with equal prominence, the        more-national story of the N1 billion that is going to be spent by the        Jonathan Presidency in just the single event of his inauguration, nor did        it find it fit to report about the four billion naira cornered by some        individual governors, in the name of rent allowance, for choosing to stay        in their own personal residences, instead of government houses, during        their tenure of office. 
       Normally, a transition        committee is set up to facilitate smooth handing and taking over of power        from outgoing to incoming administrations, as well as formulate policies        for the incoming government. But the one appointed by Kwankwaso has since        turned itself into a commission of inquiry, auditing books of the outgoing        government with intent to picking holes or creating same to deny it any        glorious ending.
       When the Shekarau        administration came into being in 2003, it organized an executive retreat        involving all commissioners and advisers, and a major component of the        resolutions reached was that no expenditure was going to be made outside        the budget in operation.  There was no expenditure of the Protocol        Directorate, like other MDA’s,   that was not captured in the budget for        every year.  It is commonly known that the approving authority for any        budget is the legislature, an independent arm of government which in Kano,        for the last eight years, has never been a rubber-stamp of the executive.        Its membership was almost equal in size between Shekarau’s ANPP and        Kwankwaso’s PDP. The records are there, and definitely no newspaper has        ever published that any PDP member of the House of Assembly of Kano State        has ever cried foul about the budgetary provision, as it concerned the        Protocol Directorate, and this includes the issue of hotel accommodation        for honoured guests of state, many of who are senior PDP members.
       I am not sure if the four        billion figure alleged by Kwankwaso’s transition committee is correct.  It        may merely have been concocted to sensationalize issues and pursue the        agenda of humiliating Shekarau and top members of his administration at        all costs. Yet, it may also be true.  This rejoinder is going to base its        arguments on the assumption that the N4 billion figure is correct.
       How could so much money        be spent on hotel accommodation in just eight years?  This is the question        on the lips of many Nigerians. First of all, Kano is a mini-Nigeria.  The        state has very rich cultural heritage, spanning centuries.  It occupies a        very special place in the comity of Nigeria’s states.  These and other        attributes attract countless number of important dignitaries visiting Kano        from different parts of the world.  For example, there is hardly any        ambassador or visiting head of state that has not been to Kano on state        visit. At times, durbars are staged for these VIPs, to further showcase        the country.  To ensure maximum security for these visitors, they are        always accommodated in major hotels by the government of Kano State, and        their entourage could be as much as twenty people per dignitary per trip.         These things happen virtually everyday.
       There is also the example        of the FIFA World Cup hosted by Nigeria in 2009.  Kano was one of the        sub-seats.  The Shekarau Administration shouldered the burden of        accommodating and feeding of hundreds of players and officials from        different countries, and this alone should consume a large chunk of the        alleged four billion.  World Cups are hardly hosted by governments to make        profits, but to expose the host nations or cities to international        visitors with a view to attracting them socially and economically.  In        this case, the gainers are surely not the government, but Kano people,        many of who became millionaires by selling their wares during the World        Cup.  
       There is also the matter        of state visits by the president, vice president, former presidents and        their deputies, serving and former governors, emirs and chiefs, ministers,        federal legislators, etc, almost all of who are always accommodated in        major hotels, adding to the expenditure now being questioned. Most of        these people belong to the PDP, but protocol demands that they must be        accommodated in a safe and secure environment, such as the major hotels        being talked about. These classes of VIPs visit Kano almost on daily        basis, given its strategic place in the comity of Nigerian states.
       In 2008, I was also        privileged to serve the people of Kano State through a committee appointed        by the Government of Kano State to receive complaints and petitions from        the 44 local governments, in respect of the 2006 National Population and        Housing Census.  That committee had the arduous task of preparing the        grounds for the defence of Kano’s position as the most populous state in        the Nigerian federation at the Census Tribunal, a position that was hotly        contested by Lagos, which felt it had more people.  This committee is a        direct product of Shekarau’s foresight, and I bear witness to the fact        that it carried out its work so diligently that after the final population        results were announced by the National Population Commission in 2009, Kano        not only retained its position as the most populous state in Nigeria, it        also extended its lead against Lagos by well over two hundred thousand.         Now, while this committee was handling its all-important work, I know that        officials of various organizations, both local and international, private        and governmental as well as leaders of some strategic groups were hosted        for months in major hotels by the government, to help the committee        achieve its set targets, which it has very successfully done.        
       As is commonly known, one        major component of revenue sharing from the statutory allocation is        population.  The more people you have, the more allocation that accrues to        you.  Now, if one takes into consideration the billions of naira that will        continue to accrue to Kano State through this assignment alone, one could        dispassionately justify the whole expenditure on hotels, even if the whole        thing turns out to be true.  Kwankwaso and his successors are going to be        the greatest beneficiary of this long-term investment.
       For eight years, the        Kwankwaso’s have been engaged in campaigns of calumny against Shekarau and        his government.  Those of us who support the outgoing Governor do so        because we have no doubt he means the best for Kano and its people. In        many key areas of development, he is on record to have achieved more than        all his predecessors put together. As human, he is bound to make        mistakes.  But the Shekarau I know is capable of learning from these        mistakes to become a greater person sooner than later. 
       Suleiman, author        and publisher, runs the Insight column in Leadership and Triumph        newspapers.
 
 
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