Yuguda
who was one of the founding members of the PDP in Bauchi State backed the
present National Chairman of the party, Ahmadu Mu’azu for governorship and
struck an agreement with the governor that he will succeed him at the end of
eight years. In the meantime, Yuguda became a minister in the Olusegun
Obasanjo-led administration for six years. However,
when it became time for Mu’azu to honour his own end of the agreement, he
reneged on it and frustrated Yuguda’s ambitions, and instead making his Secretary
to the State Government, Nadada Umar the candidate. Yuguda moved to ANPP and
the combined force of the popularity of the ANPP presidential candidate then
and now president-elect, General Muhammadu Buhari and the sympathy Bauchi
people had for him over his treatment by Mu’azu, he coasted to victory.
But
before you could say ‘Jack Robinson’, Yuguda had gone back into the PDP, even
ingratiating himself with the family of late President Umaru Yar’adua to the
point that he married the president’s daughter in what was clearly a political
alliance being forged. At a point, he was named as one of those that the then
First Lady, Turai Yar’adua wanted to succeed her husband when it seemed
inevitable that he was going to pass away, the other person being another
presidential son-in-law, the outgoing governor of Katsina State, Ibrahim Shema.
One
would have thought that this alone would have put him in the bad books of then
Vice-President Goodluck Jonathan when he became president, having been
relegated by Turai Yar’adua and the cabal that held the late president hostage.
But again, Yuguda showed his adroitness in the manner he became close to
President Jonathan, first delivering the state to him during the PDP primaries
and backing his decisions such as supporting the ‘election’ of Plateau State
governor, Jonah Jang as the Chairman of the Nigeria Governors’ Forum.
Even
though the PDP lost at the federal level and in Bauchi State with Yuguda
missing in his attempt to ‘retire’ to the Senate, it will be foolhardy for anyone
to write him off politically. It will not be surprising if he weaves his way
into the good graces of the APC at the federal level; after all, rumours are
rife that the governor-elect of Bauchi State, Mohammed Abubakar was propped up
by him, despite the fact that he is in APC.
But
why should the president-elect be wary of Yuguda?
For
starters, despite the fact that he has been in government as minister and
governor for a combined 14 years, one is hard-pressed to point to any tangible
achievement of his. His eight years as the Bauchi State governor was a failure
as he was unable to build on the foundations laid by his predecessor,
especially in terms of infrastructural development. Instead, the citizens of
the state were left poorer than when he came into office. simply put, Yuguda
has nothing to offer and has been selling Nigerians a dummy for far too long,
and Nigeria cannot afford this anymore.
Even
worse, his tenure has been filled with allegations of financial impropriety –
from inflated contracts such as the construction of the Bauchi International
Airport to excessive withdrawals from state government accounts of up to
N1billion daily at a time, so much that the state has been unable to pay
salaries for a few months now.
Persons
like Yuguda ought to be on the list of politically exposed persons to be
investigated and tried for corruption, and knowing how serious the
president-elect is about corruption, associating with Yuguda will tarnish his
pristine image.
Lastly,
as a man who values loyalty highly, president-elect Buhari should be very wary
of Yuguda who has no idea what the word ‘loyalty’ means. There is no greater
evidence of that more than how he shifts his allegiances from party to party,
and from person to person – as long as it served his interests. A man with such
shifting loyalty cannot be trusted.
We
do hope that the President-elect is listening.