CITATION ON SIR AHMADU BELLO: -
SARDAUNA OF SOKOTO
By Professor Iya Abubakar
Former
Vice-Chancellor, ABU Zaria
Chairman National
Mathematical Center Abuja
Sir,
Ahmadu Bello the Sardauna of Sokoto, was the son of Ibrahim
Mai Rabah, grandson of Sultan Atiku, great grandson of Sultan Bello,
and great grandson of that Famous Islamic Scholar and reformer Shehu
Usman ibn Fodiyo, the Mujaddadi, the Amirul Muminin and founder
of the Sokoto Caliphate.
According to
official Records the Sardauna was born in Rabah town in Sokoto State
in 1910 (some sources say 12 June, 1909). He received both Islamic and
western Education. From 1915-1917 he attended the Qur’anic School at
home, where he learnt the Qur,an, Fikh and Sunna of the Prophet (SAW),
between 1917 and 1926 he attended the Sokoto Middle School. From
1926-1931 he was at the famous Katsina Training College, the precursor
to Barewa College. In those days traveling from Rabah to Katsina, a
distance of about 170miles, took seven days to trek. At the college,
he was the Prefect and Captain of Fives and he was an excellent
batsman and bowler in the Cricket team. He completed his course with
Flying Colours.
Upon return to
Sokoto in 1931, he was posted to teach at his Alma Mata, the Sokoto
Middle School, where he remained until 1934. In 1938 he was conferred
with the Prestigious Title of Sardauna of Sokoto and deployed to Gusau
with responsibility for Eastern Division of Sokoto Province and
Comprising Fourteen of the Forty-Seven Districts in the Province. In
1944, he returned to Sokoto as the Chief Secretary to the Sokoto
Native Authority and chief Advisor to the Sultan. Opportunity for him
to visit overseas came in 1948 when he attended a course in local
Government in United Kingdom (UK).
In 1949, he made
his debut in the Political arena and was elected a member of the
Northern region House of Assembly. In quick Succession, he was a
member of a constitutional Drafting Committee as one of the
representatives of the North; a member of the Northern Regional Loans
Board. In 1951, he joined the Northern Regional Government Executive
Council as Minister of works and in a cabinet reshuffle in 1953, he
became the Minister of Local Government and Community Development and
was designated the leader of Government Business of the Northern
Region. At the Nigeria Constitutional Conference held in London in
1953, he was the leader of the Northern delegation. In 1954, at the
Party Convention in Jos, he was elected the President-General of the
Northern Peoples Congress (NPC), the Political Party that was at the
helm of affairs of the Government of the Government of the Federation
up to the time our Independence. In the same year he assumed the Post
of Premier of the Northern region. It was in 1955 that he first went
on pilgrimage to Mecca, and thereafter the pilgrimage and the Umrah to
the Holy Land became an unbroken annual event in the life of Sir
Ahmadu Bello until his death. In 1957, there was another
constitutional Conference in London and he led Northern Delegation.
With the Achievement of self-Government in March 1959 he became the
President of the Executive Council in the North. In the same year, he
was knighted of the British Empire (KBE).
In 1960, he was
elected Vice-President of the Ahmadu Bello University, the institution
that he founded, nurtured and cherished. On 15th January,
1966 he suffered martyrdom at the hands of a gang of dissident Army
Officers, in a senseless and treacherous coup d’etat that sowed the
seeds of Political instability and retrogression in Nigeria, and led
the nation into bloody Civil war.
With the death of
Sir Ahmadu Bello, Nigeria lost a great patriot, a great statesman
national hero and the North lost what no adequate words can describe.
Suffice to say that it lost a legend, it lost its beacon of light and
has left wandering in the wilderness for thirty years now without
pilot or guide or shepherd. But Sir Ahmadu Bello left outstanding
legacies which if we the inheritors of those legacies can apply or
mite only a small fraction, our Peoples and our nation can make giant
strides forward.
The Sardauna had
Sterling Qualities far too many to mention. But it will be height of
injustice and disservice to talk about his life and not to mention
anything about his qualities, his dreams, his policies and some of his
achievements.
A Devout Muslim
and a Champion of Religious Tolerance
Witness: The
motto he chooses for the North was “work and worship”. In his
Christmas message broadcast in 1959 he stated inter alias: “Here in
the Northern Nigeria we have People of Many different races, tribes
and religious who are knit together to common history, common interest
and common ideas, the things that unite us are stronger than the
things that divide us. I always remind people of our firmly rooted
policy of religious tolerance. We have no intention of
favouring one religion at the expense of another. Subject to the
overriding need to preserve law and order, it is our determination
that everyone should have absolute liberty to practice his belief
according to the dictates of his conscience…”
Michael Audu Buba,
Jolly Tanko Yusuf, George Uru Ohikere, Pastor David Obadiah lot, Peter
Simon Achimugu, Ignatius Durlong, Sunday Awoniyi among others who were
in his Government or in the public Service and work closely with him
had the same treatment from him if not better then their Moslem
counterparts. With Sardauna, what earned you more favours was your
hard work, dedication to duty and honesty.
In the Process of
undertaking the legal reforms of 1959 that involve the Sharia law,
delegations were sent to Sudan, Libya and Pakistan. Peter Achimugu, a
Christian, was included in the delegation that went to Libya and
Pakistan..
A Progressive
Reformist
Witness:
The reforms and the democratization of the Native Authorities which
were carried out during his time; a giant stride from Emirs-in-Council
to Emirs-and Council; with outer Councils having as members, elected
representatives of the people.
Witness:
The launching of the Crash training programme at the Kano Medical
Corps mooted in 1952-53 to produce doctors at a time when the North
did not have more then a few indigenous doctors like Dr. Ahmadu
Rimi who rose to become a Major-General and Director-general of the
Nigeria Army Medical Corps; the mounting of crash programmes in law
and accountancy and the assistant District Officers (ADO’s) training
programmes at the Institute of Administration Zaria.
The founding of
Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria the creation of the Northern Regional
Development Corporation (NRDC) that later evolved into the Northern
Nigeria Development Corporation (NNDC) which has grown today into
giant industrial and business conglomerate. The setting up of the Bank
of the North, the Broadcasting Company of Northern Nigeria (BCNN), the
Nigeria Citizen Newspapers. His proposal, as far back as 1952, for
Mobil Oil Company to prospect for oil in the north; establishment of
various Textile industries such as NORTEX and Zamfara Mills; the
building of Hamdalah hotel in Kaduna and the Central Hotel in Kano;
the infrastructures foundations for industrial, economic and
agricultural development that he put in place, namely roads, rail,
telecommunications, electricity and other facilities.
He had in mind the
development of a river port at Lokoja which would be connected by rail
links throughout the North and which would give the north direct
access to the sea. He explored the Trans-Sahara highway idea that
would link Kano to Algiers.
A Promoter,
Defender and Champion of the North
Witness:
when there was concerted campaign to excise a part of the then Ilorin
province and merge it with Western region, he made the famous
declaration that the North would not concede an inch of its soil, and
that any part of it would go over his dead body.
Witness:
the Northernasation Policy which was the cornerstone or center-piece
of his programme, and which he pursuit vigorously, Its aims, as
stated in April 1960 were: to nothernise the Northern Region public
Service as possible; to ensure for Northerners a remarkable proportion
of post in the federal Public service; to secure for northerners a
reasonable proportion of post in all Statutory Corporations; to
increase the number of Northerners in Commercial, industrial, banking
and trading concerns in the Region; to expand as necessary the
educational, training and scholarship schemes of the Region in order
to provide the qualified personal required for the Northernisation
policy.
The
Northernisation policy was intended to unite Nigeria not to divide it,
and by uplifting the North, it was a guarantee for healthy united
Nigeria. The same policy of regionalisation was pursuit in the other
region without being spelt out. But the Sardauna had pride in whatever
he represented and an unwavering belief in the justice of his cause,
he was fearless whether facing new challengers or political foes, he
was blunt to a fault and never afraid of calling a spade a spade.
He had clear sense
of direction and purpose, and his openness, forthrightness, candour
and honesty in pursuing his objectives were legendary. He did not
compromise his pursuit of balance of growth in the Country. He
believes that the long term unity of Nigeria required a policy of
catch-up development in the north, and that pill of
northernisation was essential for the long-term health of Nigeria.
In 1956, there
were only four Northerners on group seven and upwards in the Public
Service- Dikko, Umaru Gwandu, Mr ,Olajide and Ahmadu Commassie. On 31
December 1960 in the senior Northern professional and administrative
service position of the Civil Service there were only Fifty-one
Northerners.
At the federal
level, the situation was worse. In March, 1961 only about 1% of the
employees in the Federal Public service were northerners and fewer
than thirty were in senior position post. The Department of Custom And
Excise had only two northerners in service and there were only ten
commissioned officers in the Nigerian Army.
So the Sardauna
embarked on the Northernisation policy in order to redress this
problem and he decide to draft some of the Northern civil servants to
Lagos much against their will, and some of them set on the journey to
Lagos with tears in their eyes because of anticipated hostility
waiting them there. And many of the Generals still in active service
and many of those retired are living witnesses of the good work and
foresight of the Sardauna of Sokoto
An Avowed
Federalist
Witness:
his Independence Day message to the nation in October 1960 in which he
said inter alias: “The Government of which I am the head is solemnly
pledged to support the independence Constitution of Nigeria and to
protect the federation against all divisionalistic forces within and
outside the Country”
A strong
Nationalist and a Hard Core Pan-Africanist
Witness:
he championed the fight for a genuine and durable independence for
Nigeria, insisting that it must be founded and built not on a fragile
but solid foundation, based on parity of level of development of the
components of the federation. A tripod cannot stand upright and
balance with one leg shorter then the two legs.
He took a strong
stand against France following the nuclear test by France in the
Sahara and France never repeated those test in that region. He stood
firmly against apartheid in South Africa.
AN ASTUTE
ACCOMLISHED STATESMAN.
Witness:
the high esteem with which he was held by political opponents Aminu
Kano and Joseph Sarwuan Tarka who never attacked him in their
political campaigns.
Witness:
the conclusion drawn by that great administrator, Chief Simon Adebo,
one-time Nigeria Permanent Representative to the United Nations, that
had the Sardauna opted to be at the federal level, with the whole
country as his constituency, Nigeria would have risen to greater
heights, and that he would have united the country into one Nigeria,
one people, one destiny as he did with the north.
Witness:
in December, 1961, when the Sardauna was awarded an honorary doctorate
degree of law at Nsukka. Dr Azikiwe described him as a spiritual and
political leader, a stateman, an educator and a distinguished
administrator. There can not be a stronger testimony than this coming
from a political rival. He was a man of enormous charisma and personal
magnetism, and was easily approachable, and he wielded tremendous
influence on all those who came into contact with him.
Witness:
the strong influence which he had on foreign head of State in spite of
the fact that himself was not a Head of state of Nigeria, President
David Jawara of the Gambia became Dauda Jawara, President Hamani Diori
of Niger, Ahmadu Ahidjo of Cameroun, Leopold of Senghor of
Senegal,Gamal Abdul Nasser of Egypt, Tombalbaye of Chad,Ayub Khan of
Pakistan and King Faisal of Saudi Arabia all became very close
personal friends of Sardauna.
A Master of
Blending and Harmonizing Contrasting Forces.
The old and the
young, the new and the old, the past and the present, Muslims and
Christains. Indeed, he was a strong believer in consensus. He paid
attention and took into account the views born of the dynamism and
radicalism of the youths and he respected the wisdom of the mature old
–breed, and he blended the two.
Witness:
the mix in the NPC cabinets. At the federal level, the Ministers
ranged from the mature Muhammadu Ribadu in his mid-Fifties to the
Youthful Maitama Sule, Shehu Shagari and Waziri Ibrahim in their early
thirties. At the Regional level, they ranged from mature Makaman Bida
to the then Wamban Daura Muhammadu Bashir, Mamman Nasir and Walin Muri
Umaru Abba Karim, barely in their early thirties.
He had enormous
Self-Confidence and was forceful in asserting himself, and in almost
every situation he emerges as a natural leader. He developed toughness
in politics and remarkable skills. He was quick to anger but quickly
to-forgive and forget-approach to his political opponents was to try
to win them over. He would send them gift as he would to his friends
and maintained an open door policy towards them.
He was an upright
and incorruptible Man, whose guiding principle in public service was
honesty, probity, accountability, efficiency, dedication and hard
work; and in the pursuit of these principles he did not care whose ox
was goaded.
Witness:
after several years as the Premier of Northern Nigeria, and
undoubtedly the most powerful man in Nigeria during his time, when he
died he left virtually nothing except the two local housing in Sokoto
town and Rabah which he had build before becoming Premier.
Witness: The 1963
Episode involving the Kano NA during the reign of Emir Muhammadu
Sanausi. Emir Sanausi and Sardauna were very close and long standing
friends, Sanusi’s Son married Sardauna’s daughter and they have
Children. Yet when there was financial misadministration on the Part
of the Kano NA, the Sardauna did not hesitate to order an inquiry
which led to resignation of the Emir.
Witness:
In January, 1961 in an address to Emirs and Chiefs at the institute of
Administration, Zaria, the Sardauna unequivocally declared that “My
Government will not tolerate Chiefs who show financial
irresponsibility or oppress the people”
Witness:
the Sardauna once asked Mr. Desmond Wilson, a British officer who had
worked in Sokoto and Gwandu as ADO, to purge the Sokoto NA of lazy and
corrupt people, Wilson said he did not have the heart for it. The
Sardauna replied to Wilson “Neither do I. Most of these people are my
relatives. But it has to be done. ”When the exercise was over, one
third of the NA was sacked, one third reprimanded and the remaining
third kept on but put on warning. On completing the job to show his
appreciation, the Sardauna gave Wilson a gift – a Bible.
Witness:
the terse statement of Sardauna in December, 1952 “That the NA should
retain the confidence of the great mass of their people, that they
should discharge adequately the duties and responsibilities assigned
to them, that they should conduct their financial affairs in a prudent
and responsible fashion, and that they should maintain the standards
of honesty and impartiality required in a country approaching
independence”.
The simplest of
Men and the Most Princely of the Princes
He was simple
among his people who respected simplicity, but he was arrogant,
pompous and contemptuous of those who arrogate to themselves-acclaimed
wisdom just because they have read some textbooks. He was equally at
home in the company he was a man of the people. He always sat on the
floor in his house, to eat food with his bare hands, from the same
bowl with his drivers and ministers alike.
His happiest
moments were always when he was in the company of people. He
constantly toured the length and breadth of the Northern Region, from
Sokoto to Oturpko; from Offa across to Lake Chad, always on the move
persuading, cajoling, mobilizing, urging, inspiring people to be
disciplined and law abiding, to work hard for common goals, to measure
up to their potential and to unite and catch up with the South in the
various spheres of human endeavours that Nigeria could march in
unison. He hardly ever spent up to a week in Kaduna except perhaps
during the month of Ramadan. He literally stopped in Kaduna only to
pick another suite case of clean dresses and move on. Files were
delivered to him on tour and he never held back a file for more than a
couple of days.
He visited his
ministers in their homes and gave presents to the wives and Children.
He maintained an Open house, and anybody who wanted to see him got
audience .He listened to people’s problems and helped both the high
and the lowly. He always walked to the mosque from his house.
A Man Whose
Generosity was Legendary
He loved to give
out presents and gifts. He never had material accumulation instincts
and gave out whatever came into his possession. He was scrupulous with
public finance but generous with personal finance.
He was a
workaholic and a stickler for details. Three to four hours sleep was
his life-time pattern of sleeping. When once he was asked whether he
was not working too hard and not getting adequate sleep, he replied
that his progenitor Abdullahi Ibn Fodio spent eight years after the
death of his brother the Shehu praying, reading, writing, and
teaching, with hardly any sleep. He was punctilious on formalities and
parades would be time to a second, and he was never late for a
function.
He was a keen and
enthusiastic sportman. In Katsina College he played Cricket and was
the Captain of Fives, a game that he played regularly with passion, up
to the end of his life.
This is a brief
about Ahmadu Bello, the scion of the Sokoto Caliphate, Grand commander
of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Knight Commander of the British
Empire, the Founder and First Chancellor of the Ahmadu Bello
University, the recipient of the honorary degrees of several
Universities across the globe, the recipient of the highest honours
bestowed by various countries, the benefactor and guarding of Northern
Nigeria and one of the architects of modern Nigeria, The SARDAUNA OF
SOKOTO. And a colossus and a legendry whose memory will never be
erased and will forever remain aglow in the annals of our history.
May Allah,
Subhanahu wa Ta’ala.grant him eternal peace and a Special place in
the al-jannal al-firdausi, Amin
Culled from the
book: Leadership Accountability and Future of Nigeria. During Annual
Lecture in Honour of Alhaji (Sir) Ahmadu Bello Sardauna of Sokoto and
Premier of the Northern Region of Nigeria. Edited by Abdullahi Mahadi
and George Kwanashie
Complied by
Abdullahi Ahmed Imam, Nigeria Coordinator of
www.arewa-online.com
www.ahmadubello.com |
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The Greatest Nigerian
Leader
Sir Ahmadu Bello thirty seven years after
By Usman Garba Santuraki, P. O. Box 747, Jimeta – Yola, Adamawa State.
It is a good 38 years now that Sir Ahmadu Bello, Sardauna of Sokoto
left this world and this remembrance tribute is my little effort to
recreate in the minds of the people of the entire North especially the
up coming leaders to adopt Sir Ahmadu Bello Gamji Dan Kwarai as
a role model.
It is also to
help our people remain very conscious of Sir Ahmadu Bello’s place in
the political evolution of the North and the country he had served
dedicatedly until his gruesome murder with his beloved wife on 15th
January 1966 by rebellious soldiers led by Major Chukwuma Kaduna who
wanted to effect a change of the political leadership of that time.
The story of
Ahmadu Bello is a story of struggle, achievement and contentment.
Hardly does an occasion that would attract the crème la de crème
of the North pass without the mention of the name Ahmadu Bello. This
was made possible by the tremendous achievement he made for the North
which is unparalleled as it is under the leadership of this icon that
the backbone for the development of the Northern Region was laid and
the legacies he bequeathed to the North still stand the test of time.
He did this by initiating and laying basic programmes for the eventual
development of the North through a programme to train the required
man-power that really formed the basic network for the political and
administrative life of the then Northern Region and later the country
as a whole.
It is to the
credit of Sardauna Ahmadu Bello that numerous parastatals such as the
New Nigerian Newspaper Company, publishers of the New Nigerian
and the Hausa newspaper Gaskiya Tafi Kwabo were set up to
sensitise the people and bridge the gap between the people and the
then regional government. Also Radio Television Kaduna then called
Northern Broadcasting Ser-vice was primarily set up to propagate the
gospel of the regional government and blow its own trumpet because
some remote areas in the region were unable to get access to
newspapers.
The creation of
the NNDC which is now owned and controlled by the Northern states is
the foresight of the Sardauna of Sokoto Sir Ahmadu Bello towards
industrialising the North. More importantly, Sardauna Ahmadu
encouraged agricultural production especially the great staple product
of the North groundnuts which was the main source of revenue for the
region and supplied nearly 85 percent of exports with four-fifths of
the working population in the north engaged in its production.
Sardauna as a
nationalist apart from being the premier of the north perceived the
North in the context of Nigeria, and felt that federalism should
develop in such a way that northern interest was not defeated. This
can aptly be perceived by the way he undertook tours to the few
schools then in the North and campaigned for young northern school
leavers to enlist in the federal civil service and the armed forces
which yielded dividends as six northerners - Yakubu Gowon, Shehu
Shagari, Muhammadu Buhari, Ibrahim Babangida, Sani Abacha and Abubakar
Abdulsalami were to become heads of government of Nigeria at different
times.
Sardauna Ahmadu
as a shrewd politician knew the art of politics better than our
present politicians as he sensitised the people of the North on the
mode of operation of modern politics and played it without acrimony or
rancour. He believed his a primary responsibility as the premier of
the Northern Region then was to weld it together into a cohesive
force. His blend of political and administrative skills was so
pragmatic.
Sardauna can
also be credited with a very important role in the integration of the
Northern Cameroon into Nigeria after the 1959 and 1961 plebiscites.
Sardauna Ahmadu
Bello made a very interesting statement when the British conceded self
government for the North on 15th March, 1959 which is still valid. He
said: "Here in the North, from whatever part of it we may come, we
have always prided ourselves that we conduct ourselves with dignity,
tolerance, and understanding". That is Sardauna Ahmadu Bello who is
worth remembering every 15th day of January of every year. Allah ya
jikan Sardauna Ahmadu Bello, Gamji Dan Kwarai, Namiji Uban yan Boko.
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