Home OPINION COLUMNISTS Father Mbaka, Dankwambo And PDP, By Emmanuel Yawe

Father Mbaka, Dankwambo And PDP, By Emmanuel Yawe

Gombe State Governor, Ibrahim Hassan Dankwambo
Gombe State Governor, Ibrahim Hassan Dankwambo

In December 2014, a maverick Catholic Priest, Rev Fr EjikeMbaka of the Adoration Ministry Enugu read out his New Year message for the coming year entitled “From Goodluck to Badluck”. In it he prophesized that the incumbent President, Goodluck Jonathan would be defeated by his challenger, Gen Muhammadu Buhari. That prophecy was fulfilled in 2015.

President Buhari is yet to end his four-year mandate but the drum beats of prophet Mbaka have changed. On December 31st last year, he came out with a warning to Buhari:

“Mr President, you need to change or you will be changed. You are the one who introduced change as your mantra. Nigerian economy is in shambles and Nigerians are in sorrow. Nigeria is not just passing through an economic depression but also economic repression and compression. Very soon, Nigerians will know that the country is in a terrible mess”, he thundered.

The prophet from Enugu then spotted a new Messiah:

“If you go to Gombe, it was a rural state, the present Governor there, Ibrahim Hassan, has turned that place into almost an ultra modern city and that man was a former Accountant General of the country. If you go to Gombe, you won’t know Gombe again; why can’t such a person come out; I don’t know the party he is in; and he is still a young man; in his early 50s, whether in PDP or APC, I don’t know but whoever is doing that kind of magic in Gombe can handle Nigeria. A man who did PhD in Accountancy, chartered in marketing, chartered in Accountancy, a lot of things, a guru, we need somebody with such aura.

“And the Gombe people will tell you, he does not discriminate between Muslims and Christians, he is shielding even Christians there.”

If Fr Mbaka does not know, I make bold to inform him that Dankwambo is a member of the PDP on whose ticket he was elected Governor of Gombe State.

Readers of my column may have noticed that for all that happened to Nigeria under the PDP, I never completely lost hope in that party. I believe that the country should be ruled by a strong party with a strong opposition party as a check on its excesses. But as I regretted in my column of December 18 last year after the PDP National Convention, “PDP leaders are sadly doing nothing to make the party more attractive to the Nigerian voter.”

My hope that the PDP will be an alternative voice in Nigeria is predicated on my distaste for a one party state. In the same column I warned that:

“The APC may soon become an all-conquering party as the PDP was in its hey days. That will make me sad because when you have such a powerful party in an African country, the end result is always a comprehensive catastrophe. Look at Kenya under MzeeJomo Kenyatta, Uganda under Milton Obote, Ivory Coast under Felix Houphouet – Boigny, Zaire under Mobutu SeseSekoNgbenduWaZaBanga,Liberia under William Tolbert and lately Zimbabwe under Robert Mugabe. The list is endless. If only the PDP could change and give the APC a serious challenge.”

If Fr Mbakas crystal balls are telling him the truth and Dankwambo becomes the new face of the PDP in next year’s polls, the party would have risen to my challenge that it needs to “make itself more attractive to the Nigerian voter.” Such a development will also give a signal that “it is poised to give the APC a serious challenge.”

I am a living witness to the progressive efforts of the Dankwambo government. As I confessed to his Deputy Governor, the amiable Charles Iliya when we met in Abuja late last year, my first visit to Gombe was in the mid 70’s when it was a one street town. All I needed on that visit was to wait by the roadside and as my senior brother drove pass in less than an hour’s time, I waved him down.These days, when I go to Gombe, I get completely lost.

In 2013, two years after Dankwambo became governor of Gombe State, I was there to attend the 2nd North East Economic Summit. It was clear to me at the time that the man was moving Gombe forward.

Again I was there last year – to hold public hearings – as part of the activities of Nnamani Panel on Constitution and Electoral Reforms. This time, it became even more clearer to me that the Governor was moving the State forward and moving it very fast.

Given his pedigree before assumption of office as Governor, Dankwambo has lived up to expectations. An alumnus of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria and University of Lagos, where he bagged his Bachelor and Master degrees in Accounting and Economics respectively, he became the Accountant General of Gombe state in 1999 at age 37. In 2005, President Olusegun Obasanjo elevated him to the position of the Accountant General of the federation (AGF), thereby reaching the pinnacle of his profession in the public service. He resigned his job as AGF in January 2011, ran for Governor of Gombe state and won in the April 2011 poll.

As Governor, he bagged a PhD in Accounting from Igbenedion University, Okada. He is also a fellow with the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Nigeria, (FCA), Fellow, Chartered Institute of Taxation of Nigeria (FCTI), Fellow, Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria (FCIB) and Fellow, Nigeria Institute of Marketers (FNIM).

Governor (Dr) Ibrahim Hassan Dankwamboat 54 years represents the generational shift many people are yearning for in the leadership of Nigeria. He is said to be a core professional and a perfect technocrat.

If we are to believe Fr Mbaka,GovernorDankwambo, though a practicing Muslim, is not a religious and tribal bigot – a perfect description of what a leader should be in a multiethnic society like ours.

When I spoke to Charles Iliya late last year, he rolled out the achievements of his boss: Dankwamboconverted the Yan-kalare – a group of political and social miscreants that unleashed terror and havoc on the State – to employable and responsible citizens by giving them skills.

He also invested heavily in the education sector making way for a revolution from the primary through secondary up to tertiary levels by establishing fresh academic institutions like State Polytechnic (Bajoga); State College of Education (Billiri); College of Business and Administrative Studies (Kumo); Vocational and Technical Institute (Akko); and College of Nursing Studies (Dukku) etc.

I have always argued that any governor in the North that improves the education of his people touches my heart. It is educational backwardness in the north that has dealt a painful blow to the region and stifled Nigeria’s development. For this and many other achievements, Dankwambo has won my heart.[myad]