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My Last Contact With Abba Kyari, By Femi Adesina

He told us he would be back at his desk soon. I believed it. But now, it would never happen. Not tomorrow, not next week, not forever. Chief of Staff to the President, Mallam Abba Kyari, has gone the way of all flesh.

Our last contact was on Friday, March 20, 2020.President Muhammadu Buhari was scheduled to meet with the Chairman of ECOWAS Commission, Jean-Claude Kassi Brou, by 3 p.m. Such meetings hold in the diplomatic room of the presidential office complex.

The protocol is that aides invited to attend any meeting must be seated 15 clear minutes before the President walked in. I was in the diplomatic room at the required time. A seat had been designated for me, next to that of the Chief of Staff.

Few minutes later, Mallam Abba (as he was often called by us) walked in. I rose to greet him.

“Femi, how are you? They have said we should not shake hands again,” he responded. Rather jocularly, he extended his right foot. I touched his foot with my own, and we both laughed. Leg-shake, instead of handshake.

At the dot of 3 p.m (he does it like clockwork, the grand old soldier) the President walked in. We all rose to welcome him, as we would normally do.

The ECOWAS Commission boss had come to discuss the ensuing constitutional crisis in Guinea Conakry, which was to hold election that weekend. After 10 years in office, and at 82 years of age, President Alpha Conde, had insisted on running for another term in office, and he tinkered with the country’s Constitution to make himself eligible. The opposition was having none of it, and there was civil disobedience, in which some lives had been lost.

President Buhari is the immediate past Chairman of ECOWAS Authority of Heads of State and Government, and a highly respected figure in the sub-region. The ECOWAS Commission boss had come to consult him on the way forward for Guinea Conakry.

The meeting lasted for about 30 minutes, during which the situation in Guinea-Bissau had also come up briefly.

When we rose, I had my opinion on what to do about the matters discussed. I consulted with Mallam Abba, and he agreed completely with me. I took my leave, headed back to my office.

Walking right behind me was the Chief of Staff, flanked by Director General of the National Intelligence Agency, and my colleague in the media office, Mallam Garba Shehu. They were chatting.

After I passed through the security screening point that would see me turn off to my office, I looked back instinctively. Why did I do it? I didn’t know, still don’t know. But it turned out to be my last view of Kyari. He was laughing as he talked with the two people beside him.

That glance I took turned out to be the very final. About 72 hours later, Mallam Abba was diagnosed with the deadly Coronavirus, which sent him sadly on a journey of no return.

Catching COVID-19 (as the inelegant virus has been elegantly codenamed by World Health Organization) is not supposed to be a death sentence. I had no doubt that Mallam Abba would beat the infection, and be back at his desk soon, as he had promised. I prayed for him a number of times in the following three weeks.

On Tuesday, April 15, the President was billed to receive a delegation from the European Union by noon. As I walked into the Presidential Villa, I met a personal staff of the Chief of Staff.

“How’s Chief?” I asked.

He told me he was doing well. And that was what we believed.

I’m not much of a dreamer. At least, not dreams with significance. Dreams come from a multitude of business, as the Good Book says, so if a man drinks a bowl of garri before going to bed, and he dreams of swimming in a pond or river, he actually started swimming right from inside that bowl of garri.

On Thursday night inward Friday, I dreamt. The President and myself were in a corridor in the Presidential Villa, and he was talking with me. Suddenly, by my right, I saw a figure waiting for me to finish with the President. It was Mallam Abba, clad in his usual white native attire, with the trademark red cap. But this time, there was no flowing Agbada, which I found rather odd. He never (or rarely) appeared without the flowing robe. He was heavily bearded, another surprise, and the beard was all white. I rounded off discussion with the President, and yielded space for the Chief.

I made nothing of the dream, but after he died, I shared my experience with my friend, Mallam Garba Deen Mohammed.

“He came to say goodbye to you, and you didn’t know it,” my friend said. I didn’t know till then that Garba Deen had the uncommon gift of interpretation of dreams. Well, I now know where to go the next time I dream.

On Friday, April 17, I uncharacteristically went to bed after listening to the 8 p.m news. And off I went, for “He giveth his beloved sleep.” No dream, no kakiri kakiri (wandering) in my sleep. Till my phone fetched me from a far distance, out of that deep sleep. It was 12. 05 a.m.

At the other end of the line was a senior aide of the President. He told me he was there with two other very prominent personalities, whom he named. Then he dropped the bomb.

“Mallam Abba is dead, and we need you to issue a statement informing the public.”

I sprang from the bed, with my head almost touching the ceiling. Sleep fled completely from my eyes. Abba Kyari dead? How? When? Where? But he promised us he would soon be back at his desk. This was sad, sad, sad.

I put the statement together. And in the process, I had a feeling of deja vu. I remembered that day in September 2014, as I had typed the press statement announcing the death of Dimgba Igwe, my boss, my friend and brother, who had got knocked down by a hit and run driver, as he jogged on the road in Okota area of Lagos. I had worked under Igwe as a reporter for years, and as editor of The Sun Newspaper, while he was Deputy Managing Director/Deputy-Editor-in-Chief, before retirement.

As I typed the announcement of Kyari’s death, I remembered that day in August 2015, when I’d been directed to announce his appointment as Chief of Staff. Ironically, the lot to announce his death also fell on me. The job of a spokesman!

From the time I issued the statement about 12.30 a.m Friday, my phone never stopped ringing for hours. In this era of fake news, people want to reconfirm everything from source. Despite signing the statement, and putting it in different platforms of traditional and digital media, everybody who had access to me must call. My two phones rang simultaneously and ceaselessly, just as there was no let up on email, Facebook Messenger, Skype, and many other platforms. It was a burden I had to bear. Not a wink of sleep till the very next night.

I was home, planted in front of the television as Kyari was being buried at Gudu Cemetery. It all looked surreal. Yes, the man had a frail health at the best of times. But death? It didn’t sound probable, though nobody actually knows when the Grim Reaper could come calling.

As I watched Mallam Abba being consigned to Mother Earth, my childhood thoughts came roaring back. What if he had only lost consciousness, and he regained it after sand had been heaped on him? What if he felt so much heat, and he could not move or shout? Oh, the lot of mortal man. Doomed to die, whether he liked it or not.

I thought of Mr President. I knew his pain, his torture, but which he would bear stoically, with equanimity. I’d seen him respond to the news of death of his allies, one of the most recent being that of Professor Tam David-West last November. I saw the silent pain, the grief, the total submission to the perfect will of God. That of Mallam Abba was not different, if not more poignant. A friend of about 42 years, and Chief of Staff for about five years. Now gone!

Mallam Abba headed the bureaucracy of the Presidential Villa, and we constantly had things to do together. Almost daily. He had his strengths, and his weaknesses. We all do. But my greatest plus for him was his loyalty to our principal. It was never in doubt. And for me, if you love Buhari, all your sins are forgiven. If they are like scarlet, they become white as snow. If they are red like crimson, they become white as wool. That is me, no apologies.

I have read majority of the things written about Kyari. Positive and negative. I love the balanced one by Works and Housing Minister, Babatunde Raji Fashola: “I bear testimony to his dedicated execution of the Presidential Infrastructure Development Fund (PIDF) initiative, which guaranteed funds to cash-strapped projects like the Second Niger Bridge, the Abuja-Kano Highway, the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, the Mambilla Hydro Project, and the East-West Road…

“Like all of us, Abba was flawed but he was not conceited. We disagreed but I never found Abba disagreeable.”

Infrastructure would be one of the strongest achievements of the Buhari government by the time it exits in 2023. There’s no way those great projects would be counted, without the name of Kyari being mentioned. Or the rice and fertilizer revolution, and agriculture generally. He was the moving force behind most of them, translating the vision of the President into action. The good he did will live after him. The weaknesses have been interred with his bones.

Some people, particularly on social media, have rejoiced about the passage of the Chief of Staff. They are of all men most miserable. Really to be pitied. I recommend to them the poem, The Glories of Our Blood and State, by James Shirley:

“There is no armor against Fate;

Death lays its icy hands on kings;

Sceptre and Crown

Must tumble down,

And in the dust be equal made

With the poor crooked scythe and spade.”

Those gloating are mere mortals. We all have our different appointments with death. May it only be in the fullness of time is our prayer. But nobody has control over it.

I also point those misguided minds to the Good Book, in Psalms 62:9: “Surely men of low degree are vanity, and men of high degree are a lie. In the balances they will go up; they are together lighter than vanity.”

Rejoice not at any man’s death, because all men, whether of low or high degree, are vanity and a lie.

Abba Kyari sleeps, till the great day of awakening, after what Shakespeare calls “life’s fitful fever.” He contracted the deadly virus on an official trip abroad. So, he died in the line of duty. He has done his own. You too, do your own. For God, for country, and for humanity.

.Adesina is Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to President Buhari

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Some Coronavirus Patients In Abuja Are Refusing To Go To Treatment Centres – Report

FCT MInister, Muhammad Musa Bello

The minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Malam Muhammad Musa Bello is not happy with the report that some people tested positive for coronavirus are refusing to go to isolation and treatment centres but prefer to remain in their houses, threatening to invoke the relevant laws that enables it to mandatorily for such people to be evacuated to designed centres.

A statement today, April 23, by the Chief Press Secretary in the FCTA, Anthony Ogunleye, said: “following the submission by the Response Team that some Covid-19 positive individuals were refusing to go to treatment centers and instead preferred to treat themselves in their homes, the FCT Minister expressed dissatisfaction with this development and said existing laws will be used to force such persons to go to treatment centers explaining that their staying at home posed great risks not just to their families but also immediate communities.”

He quoted the minister as saying:”since we have begun to witness community transmission of the virus, it is imperative that we must do everything within our power to stop the spread even if we have to compel such persons to go to treatment centers.”

The statement said that it was resolved at a meeting of the FCT COVID-19 Emergency Response Team and the FCTA Management, that in order to prevent further spread of the virus within the communities, massive testing will be carried out in areas where community transmission has been established, including Mabushi, Gishiri and Utako.

It said that the Response Team also encouraged all residents to wear face masks when outside in the public and also encouraged them to make their own face masks from cloth and wear them always.

The meeting, the statement said,  also reviewed the current situation of the COVID-19 pandemic in the FCT and the measures taken to contain it. So far, a total of 263 staff made up of 66 doctors, 103 nurses, 9 pharmacists, 15 laboratory scientists and 70 other staff have been trained while 337 others are slated for training which is on-going in batches.

The meeting was attended by the Minister of State, Dr. Ramatu Tijjani Aliyu, the Permanent Secretary, Sir Chinyeaka Ohaa the Ag Secretary of the Health and Human Services Secretariat, Dr Mohammed Kawu, the Director of Public Health, Dr Josephine Okechukwu, heads of the various sub committees of the Response Team and other senior Staff of the Administration.

Buhari Congratulates Muslims As Fasting Begins, Regrets It Comes In Difficult Time

President Muhammadu Buhari has congratulated Muslims in Nigeria and all over the world as they begin this year’s 30-day fast, following the sighting of the moon, but regretted that it has come at a very difficult time for the world.

In a statement today, April 23 by the senior special assistant to the President on media and publicity, Malam Garba Shehu, the President described this year’s Ramadan as challenging, falling as it is, in the period of the global pandemic, which has spread to more than 200 nations, with virtually all countries advising citizens to avoid large gatherings and have their prayers and meals (suhoor and iftar) individually or with family at home.

“In this Ramadan period, the kind of socializing you are used to now risks spreading the Coronavirus,” the President cautions Muslims, while enjoining them to refrain from those Ramadan rituals and traditions such as group meals and congregational prayers that have been put on hold by Muslim religious authorities all over the world.”

President Buhari advised Muslims to endure and not to use the Coronavirus as an excuse not to participate in the Ramadan fast, unless such abstention is warranted by the excuses clearly outlined by health and religious authorities.

“I congratulate all Muslims as they commence this year’s Ramadan fast which is depicted by self-denial, universal brotherhood, austerity and helping relatives and needy people,” says the President.”

He wished Muslims in the country and the world over all the blessings of the holy month.

Coronavirus: 4U Supermarket Donates Food Items To FCT Administration

Barr Hadiza Aliyu handing over donated food items to FCT Minister of State.

A private enterprise, 4U Supermarket, has donated palliatives to the Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) to assist the poor and the vulnerable in Abuja, as the lock-down due to the coronavirus disease continued nationwide.

The donations by 4U Supermarket, formerly known as Amigo Supermarket, were made yesterday, April 22 by Barrister Hadiza Aliyu on behalf of the group and were received on behalf of the FCTA Minister, Mallam Musa Bello, at an event held at the FCTA head office, Area 11, Garki, Abuja.
The items donated included food stuffs such as rice, indomie noodles, spaghetti, sugar, milk, etc.
The super market representative, while speaking at the event, explained that it took the action as its own contribution towards mitigating the situation in the FCT communities caused by the lock-down due to the virus.
Receiving the donation, the Minister of State for the FCTA, Dr. Ramatu Tijani thanked the management of the supermarket for its kind gestures describing the action as patriotic and a commendable one.
Palliatives are being given to the public to cushion the effects of the coronavirus lock-down across the nation.
Dr. Tijjani  Aliyu had on behalf of the Minister, flagged-off the distribution of the palliatives materials in the six area councils early in April.
The first batch of the distribution, which started in Abaji and Kwali area councils, continued in Kuje and other area councils and is made up of foods stuff shared out to the less privileged in the society.
More and more private organizations and individuals have donated palliative items to the FCTA for distribution across the territory.
The distribution of the items is still on-going.

“Indigenes” Allegedly Excluding None Indigenes From Palliatives In Chibiri, Abuja

None indigenes living in Chibiri, suburb of Kuje in the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja, are complaining loudly, that they are being excluded from benefiting from the lockdown palliatives which kind spirited private companies and individuals have been giving to the community.

Information available to us at Greenbarge Reporters said that Premium Poultry Farms, a thriving private concern in the neigbourhood, recently gave out 450 crates of eggs for distribution amongst the residents of the community, but that the “indigenes” handed out only five crates to both Yoruba and Igbo communities in the area and shared the remaining 400 amongst themselves.it was gathered that the “indigenes” who got between three and four crates each, turned round to sell each crate at between N350 and N450 to the same none indigenes.

It was learnt that the same “indigenes shared amongst themselves, some cartons of indomie and cash given by the former Nigeria minister of Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbe, who has a farm in the community, with none of the none indigenes getting anything.

One of the aggrieved none indigenes, a Pastor, Mr. Fayigba said that it is unfair for the so-called indigenes to continue to corner the palliatives that are meant for all needy and vulnerable ones in the community.

“I’m not talking about myself, but hundreds of none indigenes that are currently reeling in abject poverty for no fault of theirs. I know how many of such people come to me everyday to beg me to give them garri to take with their families.

“Are the indigenes the only ones affected by the economic effect of the lockdown?” Pastor Fayigba, who is also the leader of Yoruba community in the area asked.

Other none indigenes, Malam Hamid and Malam Nasiru also complained that they have never benefited from all the palliatives which private companies and individuals have so far given to the people in the community.

These complains are coming just as two trailer load of rice arrived today, April 23 in Chibiri, from the FCT Administration, for distribution to the vulnerable and needy as part of the palliative measures against the lockdown policy of the government.

However, our reporter, who monitored the situation reported that the trailers, which arrived at the premises of LEA primary school at about 2pm, were later driven away to unknown location at about 7pm without offloading a single bag of rice to any of the many people that thronged the premises.

Governors Of 36 States Begin Lockdown For 14 Days From Tomorrow 

Kayode Fayemi

Governors of the 36 States of the federation have resolved to start implementing an inter-State lockdown in the country over the next two weeks to mitigate the spread of the pandemic coronavirus from State to State.

The governors, under the aegis of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum (NGF), reached the agreement today, April 22 after receiving briefing from the Governors of Lagos, Bauchi, Oyo and Ogun States who shared their experiences and lessons from the fight against coronavirus.
A communiqe issued by the NGF chairman and governor of Ekiti State, Kayode Fayemi, at the end of the sixth coronavirus teleconference meeting said that only essential services would be permitted.
State governors called for the decentralization of the coronavirus response as the best chance of nipping the spread of the virus in communities with over 25 States now affected by the spread of the virus and increasing evidence of community transmission.
Members of the NGF also expressed serious concern over the rising spread of the virus among health workers and resolved to work with the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control (NCDC) to ensure that health workers are “adequately” provided with personal protective equipment (PPE) and are “constantly” trained on the use of protective gears.
This followed an update from the NGF Secretariat on the number of coronavirus cases in the country. Governors also resolved to set up coronavirus committees at the regional level, headed by their State Commissioners of Health in order to strengthen coordinated implementation of necessary public health recommendations across States.
Regional committees, the communique added, will continue to interface with the State Task Force Committees on coronavirus already established in each State.
The NGF Chairman briefed the forum on the rapidly evolving situation of the coronavirus pandemic and coordination efforts with the federal government, multilateral and bilateral partners, and the private sector through the Coalition against COVID-19 (CACOVID). The forum held a minute’s silence in honour of all Nigerians who had lost their lives from coronavirus, especially health workers who were in the front lines of the epidemic. The NGF also congratulated the governor of Kaduna State, Nasir El-Rufai, who after nearly four weeks of testing positive and observing very strict medical regime, has now received two consecutive negative test results for the coronavirus. Members also conveyed their condolence to President Muhammadu Buhari and the people of Borno State on the passing of the Chief of Staff to the President, Malam Abba Kyari, who passed away on April 17, 2020 in the line of duty to the country. It would be recalled that President Buhari currently imposed lockdown in only the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Lagos and Ogun States to halt the spread of the novel pandemic coronavirus.
Some of the States have taken similar measures to fight the deadly virus but there is no nationwide lockdown from the federal government. Health experts say the country may be heading towards the need for nationwide lockdown to stop the virus.
However, the National Coordinator of the Presidential Task Force (PTF) on COVID-19, Dr. Sani Aliyu, had earlier in the day denied proposing a national lockdown to tackle COVID-19 in the country.
Aliyu made the claim today in Abuja, at the 17th joint national briefing of the PTF on COVID-19.
That came after the Director-General, Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, Chikwe Ihekweazu hinted on Monday that President Buhari will make some very difficult decisions next week about the lockdown occasioned by the coronavirus pandemic.
He said this in Katsina when he visited Governor Aminu Masari to see the state’s preparedness for COVID 19. The audio of the discussion by the duo was obtained by our correspondent. Ihekweazu disclosed that the president was scheduled to join the governors’ forum teleconference meeting to discuss some of the decisions.
As at April 21, the official cases in the country stand at 782.

Gunmen Kill Civil Defence Assistant Commandant In Benue

Unidentified gunmen have killed an Assistant Commandant of the Nigeria Security and Civil Defense Corps (NSCDC) in Benue state, Abeeka Abeeka.

According to Ekunola Gbenga, Media Assistant to the Commandant General NSCDC in a statement, the killing of the officer took place at Akile village, Tyo Mu along Makurdi- Gboko road at about 4am on Monday outside the officer’s house, when the youths shot to death the officer and took to their heels.

The statement said that the late officer was woken up following the alarm raised by neighbours that some people were coming to attack the village.

It said that as soon as Abeeka stepped out of his house, one of the gunmen opened fire and killed him.

Tyo Mu community had witnessed a series of clashes in recent times between the indigenes and settlers over land dispute.

It could be recalled that for some time now, villagers in the area have been engaged in rivalry over land matters as well as contention over rights over economic sites in the area.

Human Rights Group Gives Ebony Gov 48 Hours To Reverse Life Ban On Newspaper Reporters

Governor Dave Umahi

A Human group,  Socio-economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP) has condemned what it called, the blatant intimidation, harassment and attacks on journalists and media houses by Governor David Umahi of Ebonyi State, and the illegal banning of the Correspondent of The Sun newspaper, Chijioke Agwu, and the Vanguard Newspaper, Peter Okutu, from entering Government house and Government facilities in the State for life.

The journalists and media houses have been reportedly banned over a report on the Lassa Fever outbreak in the state.
Reacting in a statement by its deputy director, Kolawole Oluwadare SERAP said: “this action is a blatant violation of the right to freedom of expression and media freedom as guaranteed by the Nigerian Constitution of 1999 (as amended) and the country’s international obligations including under the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights to which Nigeria is a state party. We will pursue appropriate legal action nationally and internationally against Ebonyi State authorities if this illegality is not reversed within 48 hours of the publication of this statement.”
The statement read, in part: “We urge Governor David Umahi to show a greater level of transparency and accountability by immediately reversing the purported ban, and allowing journalists and media houses to freely cover the activities of his government.”
“Nigerians expect their leaders to show a greater level of transparency and accountability and to explain and take responsibility for what they are doing rather than threatening, intimidating, harassing and banning journalists and media houses from covering their public functions. These journalists and media houses are simply doing their work and playing their constitutional roles.”
“The ban clearly runs counter to the notion of a free marketplace of ideas, necessary to serve the best interests of the public. Barring journalists undermines Nigeria’s pledges on democratic reforms and the rule of law and must stop now.”

Abba Kyari: Heir To British Throne, Prince Charles, Sympathises With Buhari

Prince Charles

Heir to British throne, Prince Charles has described the death of Abba Kyari, the former Chief of Staff to the President as “a desperately sad news,” for which he sent his “deepest possible sympathy” to President Muhammadu Buhari and the government and people of Nigeria.

Prince Charles regretted that the death of Mallam Kyari had occurred through this “pernicious virus,” adding: “I can only begin to imagine what an immense gap Mr. Kyari’s untimely death will leave in Your Excellency’s life and my heart goes to you and Mr. Kyari’s family.”
Also in a message through the Embassy of Rwanda in Abuja, President Paul Kagame, the government and people of Rwanda extended their heart-felt condolences and used the opportunity “to express solidarity to the government and people of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as we are faced with the Covid-19 global crisis.”
The former Vice President, Architect Namadi Sambo in his own message to the President, described the death of Abba Kyari as a “monumental national loss.”
Industry leader and businessman, Abdulsamad Rabi’u in his letter to the President said he was deeply saddened by what he described as “this colossal loss.”
He said Abba Kyari “served the country and your administration with diligence and utmost loyalty. He was deeply committed to the service of Nigeria and his efforts especially in ensuring the success of Your Excellency’s Agriculture Industry agenda did not go unnoticed. He was a beacon of loyalty and a patriot.”
Other messages received by President Buhari included those from the Emir of Gazargamu, Ahmad Tijjani Ibn Saleh from Yobe State; the Secretariat of the Developing D-8 Organization for Economic Cooperation headquarters in Ankara, Turkey; retired Ambassador Jibrin Chinade; Alhaji (Dr) Adamu Abubakar Maje, the Emir of Hadejia, Jigawa State.
Former Minister of Labour and Productivity, Dr Emeka Nwogu and a former Managing Director of the Guardian Newspapers, Eluem Emeka Izeze, also sent condolence messages to the President.

Katsina Gov Laments: We Travel 12 Hours To Abuja For Coronavirus Testing As None In The State

Aminu Bello Masari

Katsina State Governor, Aminu Masari has lamented that those in charge of coronavirus issue in the State used to travel for about 12 hours after collecting samples of suspected patients for test in the laboratory at Abuja.

Governor Masari, who received the Director General of the National Center for Disease Control (NCDC) Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu
in audience in his office at Government House, Katsina today, April 22, requested immediate establishment of a testing centre in the State to ensure speedy confirmation of samples of suspected cases.
”Availability of a testing centre here will actually help in reducing the duration and the stress we are presently going through.
“Samples from Katsina had to reach Abuja in 24 hours otherwise it would not be tested.”
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