How Jonathan, PDP Helped Sanusi To Become Emir of Kano
Last Friday, Emir Ado
Bayero, the longest reigning monarch in the history of the ancient city of Kano
passed on to the great beyond. The monarch’s death followed prolonged illness
that may have been exacerbated by the traumatic experiences of the Boko Haram
attacks in and around the palace and the ancient city of Kano.
But Ado Bayero could not
have chosen a better day to join his maker: a holy Friday. And in line with
Islamic doctrine, the man, who only last year marked his golden jubilee on the
throne of Kano, was interred.
The demise of this
venerable and quintessential bridge-builder marked the end of an era. And on
Sunday, maverick former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Sanusi
Lamido Sanusi (SLS) was named in his stead as the 14th Emir of
Kano.
His appointment as Emir,
in fulfillment of a life-long ambition, was victory for his supporters and
bookmakers, who had wagered their money on him. But it has left butterflies in
the stomach of his opponents, who find it inconceivable that they may have to
eventually bow before Emir Sanusi.
Mr. Sanusi knew what he
wanted and had started very early in life to make real his ambition. His
ascension to the throne lends credence to the postulation by Ralph Waldo
Emerson, American essayist and poet, that “the only person you are destined to
become is the person you decide to be”.
Mr. Sanusi did not become
the Emir of Kano by accident. Though he is qualified by virtue of his lineage
(being a grandson of Muhammadu Sanusi, the 11th Emir of Kano)
to make a bid for the exalted throne, it was indeed, ironically, the actions
and inactions of some of his opponents that helped him in achieving his
life-long ambition. In this category can be counted the Jonathan administration
in particular, some of his aides who acted as if they are fifth columnists in
his government and the erstwhile Bamanga Tukur-led Peoples Democratic Party
(PDP).
Mr. Sanusi’s path to
becoming emir started to become easy last August 31 when former Vice President
Atiku Abubakar led the G7 in a walkout at the PDP national convention in Abuja.
The resultant split paved the way for the formation of the New Peoples
Democratic Party (nPDP), which members were later to find permanent residency
in the mega opposition party, All Progressives Congress (APC).
The Bisi Akande-led opposition
party was too willing to open its doors open to political heavyweights that
included Atiku Abubakar Governors Rabiu Kwankwaso (Kano), Rotimi Amaechi
(Rivers), Aliyu Magatakarda Wamakko (Sokoto), Abdulfatah Ahmed (Kwara) and
Murtala Nyako (Adamawa), among others. And soon, the opposition party was
further buoyed by the cross carpeting of 11 senators, 49 members of the House
of Representatives, ex-governors and ex-lawmakers. For the APC, there seems to
be no end to its fishing for new members from the ranks of the ruling party.
If the mismanagement of
the PDP crisis that led to the split of the party and defection of some of its
key members to the APC was a tipping point, the suspension of Mr. Sanusi as the
helmsman of the CBN by President Jonathan on February 19 elevated the
administration’s “political potholes” to “political craters.” That suspension,
which was a culmination of the face-off between Mr. Sanusi and the Jonathan
administration over unremitted oil proceeds totaling $20 billion ensured a
convergence of opposition in that flank of the many battles of the
administration. It was only a matter of time before the APC, which now has his
state governor, Mr. Kwankwaso, in its fold, took ownership of Mr. Sanusi’s
battle.
Reminded of William Shakespeare’s
exhortation that “it is not in the stars to hold our destiny but in ourselves,”
Mr. Sanusi, now out in limbo, was too willing to align forces with the
opposition party. For the party and the pariah, it could only have been a
win-win.
I am not in a position to
verify if those who wanted Mr. Sanusi’s head ever read the “The Art of War” by
Sun Tzu. If they did, then they would have been in the know about the Chinese
writer’s counsel to “keep your friends close, and your enemies closer.” Out of
job, Mr. Sanusi had plenty of time to fraternize with the opposition and learn
one or two tricks from them.
It needs no telling that
the relationship that benefited him the most was that between him and Governor
Kwankwaso, the man who would have the last say on the appointment of a new Emir
of Kano. Of course we all knew that late Emir Ado Bayero was ill but no one
except the clairvoyant could have had a sense of his passage. But keeping tabs
with the power bases, if and when the need arises, is a sine qua non in these
matters and Mr. Sanusi did just that.
The scenario would surely
have been different if Mr. Kwankwaso did not defect to the APC. That would have
made it an uphill task for a sitting PDP governor to make one of the harshest
critics of the Jonathan administration the Emir of Kano when the stool became
vacant following the demise of Emir Ado Bayero. As they say in PDP parlance,
the issue would have been handled as a “family affair” and perhaps Mr. Sanusi’s
dream of mounting the throne of his forebears would have gone up in smoke.
By now I am sure that the
Jonathan administration must be bemoaning a lost opportunity arising from the
wrong choices it made. If the government had not been focused on humiliating
Mr. Sanusi by bundling him out of the CBN, the banker would have quit the plum
job on June 1 and Godwin Emefiele would still have stepped into his shoes.
Mr. Sanusi’s exit date
from the CBN was just five days before the demise of Emir Ado Bayero last
Friday. The truth is that a battle-weary and damaged Mr. Sanusi may not have
been an attractive and preferred option for the coveted throne.
The Jonathan
administration made a hero of Mr. Sanusi by its mismanagement of the crisis
over the missing $20bn. Because of the manner the controversial banker was
booted out, he attracted huge deposits of sympathy to his bank of goodwill. And
don’t we all love the seemingly oppressed?
It was no secret that Mr.
Sanusi wanted to be Emir of Kano more than anything else. The man himself had
said so in an interview in 2009. His appointment as Dan Maje Kano in June 2012
was to ostensibly prepare him for the office.
He walked with the
swagger of royalty and was not shy to show off his regalia at the CBN
headquarters in Abuja. That was how much Mr. Sanusi desired the Kano stool. His
desire was, however, matched by his determination to make his dream come true.
Now his harshest critics
would know that in preparation for this journey from banker to the throne, Mr.
Sanusi had as far back as in 1997 obtained a degree in Sharia and Islamic
Studies from the African International University in Khartoum, Sudan.
Sanusi Lamido Sanusi was
destined to be Emir of Kano and was ironically helped in his quest by his
opponents. Mr. Kwankwaso’s defection to the APC and the controversial former
banker’s humiliation out of CBN all worked in concert in his favour.
But as protests over his
appointment continues, the question is: Will the man who wanted to be Emir of
Kano have the ideal atmosphere to reign and enjoy the spoils of his conquest.



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