Kano
State Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso has accused President Goodluck Jonathan of
“causing crisis” that followed the appointment of a former Central Bank of
Nigeria governor, Mallam Lamido Sanusi, as the Emir of Kano.
Kwankwaso
said it was worrisome that Jonathan was meddling in the affair of the state,
adding that he (Jonathan) had no business with Sanusi’s
appointment.
Writing
on his Twitter page on Wednesday, the governor said his government followed the
same process which his counterpart in Gombe State, Ibrahim Dankwambo, used
in appointing the Emir of Gombe.
He therefore
wondered why the President was stoking crisis in the state and
accused him of plotting an “agenda which is not good for this
country.”
The
governor said it was a known fact that the Jonathan administration had enough
security challenges which it should focus its attention on.
He
specifically advised the President to find the over 200 schoolgirls
abducted on April 14 instead of sending policemen to
lay siege to the emir’s palace.
The
message on Kwankwaso’s Twitter page was also posted on the Facebook page of his Director of Press and
Public Relations, Baba Dantiye.
The
governor, who granted interviews to some media houses, said he was
elated that nobody had so far questioned Sanusi’s eligibility or the fact that
“he is also royally blooded.”
He said,
“Mr. President doesn’t seem to know where his power starts and where it stops.
The appointment of an emir is purely a state affair. I am happy to say that
nobody has questioned the eligibility of the new emir.
“They
did not even fault or question the process. We are happy because he is well
educated and exposed both nationally and internationally. What business has the
Federal Government with the appointment of the Emir of Kano.
“If there
is Emir of Nigeria, let him go and appoint him. My feeling is that they have
more than enough security problems, especially finding the Chibok girls than
sending police to go and block the Emir of Kano’s palace just because of
Sanusi.”
Arguing
that the President had been instructing his “supporters and stooges” to unleash
mayhem on the state, he lamented that the protesters had begun destroying
government property.
He added
that Jonathan should be held responsible if attempts were made on his life.
“I have
told my friends, and people of Kano, other Nigerians and indeed the
international community to hold Jonathan responsible for whatever happens to
Kwankwaso, his family or even the people of Kano State,” the governor added.
The
police had deployed additional team of riot
policemen in the palace, as the siege to the palatial official
residence of the traditional ruler of the Kano Emirate entered its
fourth day on Wednesday.
The
deployment, The PUNCH gathered, followed the action of some
youths, who on hearing rumours that the appointment of
Alhaji Sanusi Lamido as the new emir had be cancelled trooped to the streets
jubilating on Tuesday night.
The
youth were said to be from Mandawari, Gwale, Kofar Nassarawa in the old Kano
city.
Sources
said the policemen were deployed to beef up security and block
movements into the palace, which is now to be occupied by Sanusi,
who was on Monday named the successor of the late Emir, Alhaji Ado Bayero.
Police
authorities had on Sunday sent policemen to the palace and its
environs ahead of the announcement of a new emir for the Emirate.
Protests
however broke out on Monday when the appointment of Sanusi, a
former governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, by the state government.
Since he
was appointed, he has been operating from the state Government
House, Kano, where he has received many prominent personalities, including
governors and business chieftains.
The
Commissioner of Police, Aderenle Shinaba, and the Public Relations Officer,
Musa Majiya, did not offer any explanations for the continued siege to the
palace when approached by journalists.
Efforts
to get the President’s reaction to Kwankwaso’s accusation did not yield any
positive result last night.
Presidential
spokesman, Reuben Abati, told one of our correspondents that he was in a convoy
when he was contacted on the telephone.
Although
he promised to read the electronic mail our correspondent sent to him on the
issue and react, he has yet to do so as of the time of filing this report.
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