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The Architect of Renewal: How Comrade Ibrahim Abdullahi Waiya Is Quietly Rewriting Kano’s Governance Story

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By Munir I. Publisher

In the long and often turbulent history of Nigerian governance, it has become almost axiomatic that the most visible actors attract the most attention. Governors cut ribbons. Politicians make speeches. Press releases are issued, photographs are taken, and the machinery of public perception grinds steadily forward. Yet history, when it takes the longer and more honest view, consistently reminds us that the men and women who shape the intellectual direction of governance are rarely the ones occupying the most prominent positions on the podium. They are, more often, the ones working in the spaces between spectacle and substance, translating vision into doctrine, converting political ambition into civic philosophy, and doing the painstaking, unglamorous work of building ideas that outlast the administrations that gave birth to them.
In Kano State today, that figure is the Honourable Commissioner for Information and Internal Affairs, Comrade Ibrahim Abdullahi Waiya. His name has become inseparable from the Kano First Initiative, the most intellectually serious and socially ambitious governance commitment that the state has undertaken in recent memory. And the reason his name has become inseparable from it is not because he was assigned to communicate it, but because he understood it, believed in it, and worked with a consistency and conviction that gradually transformed a political vision into an emerging civic philosophy. In the circles where Kano’s governance trajectory is seriously discussed, the honorific that has attached itself to him, Limamin Kano First, is not merely a title. It is a recognition of intellectual authorship.
To appreciate the significance of what Waiya has contributed, one must first appreciate the nature of the challenge that the Kano First Initiative was designed to address. Kano is not simply a state facing the familiar Nigerian difficulties of infrastructure deficit and economic underdevelopment, serious and pressing as those challenges are. Kano is a state facing a deeper and more difficult crisis: the erosion of the normative foundations on which its historical greatness was built. The values of integrity, communal responsibility, respect for legitimate authority, the dignity of productive labor, and the centrality of knowledge and ethical conduct in public life, these are not abstract ideals. They were, for generations, the operational principles of a civilization that made Kano one of the most enduring and consequential societies in West Africa. Their erosion, accumulated over decades of misgovernance, institutional decay, and cultural dislocation, is the real crisis that the Kano First Initiative was conceived to address.
Waiya understood this with a clarity that preceded his appointment as commissioner. Long before he assumed public office, he was a figure of significance in Kano’s civic landscape, an activist, an advocate, and an intellectual voice whose engagement with questions of democratic governance, youth mobilization, and civic participation gave him a perspective on the state’s challenges that was both grounded and searching. When Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf brought him into the cabinet, he brought with him not merely professional competence but a formed worldview, a coherent and deeply held set of convictions about what genuine governance requires and what genuine communication must achieve. It is this worldview, rather than any particular communication technique or media strategy, that has defined his tenure and shaped his contribution.
The most consequential of those contributions has been the deliberate reframing of the Kano First Initiative from a political programme into a civic philosophy. This distinction is not semantic. Across Nigeria, government programmes are born and buried with the administrations that created them, because they are understood, by citizens and by the political class alike, as belonging to a particular governor or a particular party rather than to the society they were ostensibly designed to serve. This cycle of programmatic discontinuity is one of the most destructive features of Nigerian governance, and it has robbed successive generations of citizens of the cumulative benefits of sustained policy commitment. By consistently and insistently framing Kano First as a shared civic responsibility, as a covenant between government and citizens that transcends electoral cycles and partisan boundaries, Waiya has worked to break that cycle. He has sought to anchor the initiative in Kano’s identity rather than in any single administration’s political fortunes, and in doing so, he has given it the best possible chance of surviving beyond the immediate political moment.
His approach to the ministry itself reflects the same philosophical seriousness. The conventional Nigerian information ministry is, at its most functional, a reactive institution, designed to manage the government’s image, respond to unfavorable coverage, and project official narratives through the available media channels. Waiya has operated from a fundamentally different premise: that the Ministry of Information, properly understood, is a governance institution whose primary function is not the management of perception but the cultivation of civic understanding. Under his stewardship, government communication has been repositioned as a form of public education, an ongoing effort to help citizens understand not merely what the government is doing but why it is doing it, what values and principles underpin its decisions, and what role citizens themselves are expected to play in the shared project of Kano’s development.
The practical expression of this philosophy has been visible in the quality and consistency of his public engagements. Whether addressing media briefings, participating in policy forums, engaging with youth organizations, or reaching out to traditional and religious institutions, Waiya’s communication has been characterized by a disciplined fidelity to a small number of core ideas: that Kano’s interests must always take precedence over narrow personal or political considerations, that development requires not just government investment but citizen responsibility, that institutional trust must be earned through alignment between words and deeds, and that the renewal of Kano’s civic culture is a generational project that demands patience, consistency, and collective commitment. These are not talking points. They are convictions, and their authenticity is precisely what has given them traction in a public environment deeply habituated to the difference between what officials say and what they mean.
For Governor Abba Kabir Yusuf, whose administration has committed itself to a range of developmental initiatives spanning infrastructure, education, economic empowerment, and social welfare, the Kano First philosophy provides what every serious governance agenda requires but few administrations are fortunate enough to have: a coherent intellectual framework through which individual policies can be understood as part of a larger and purposeful whole. The governor’s political authority and executive commitment drive the policy agenda. Waiya’s intellectual contribution gives that agenda a narrative architecture, a set of ideas and values that makes the administration’s work legible and meaningful to citizens who might otherwise see only a collection of disconnected projects and announcements.
This is the work that rarely generates headlines but frequently determines outcomes. The construction of a governance doctrine, the patient, persistent effort to embed a set of principles deeply enough in a society’s public life that they begin to shape how institutions behave and how citizens engage with those institutions, is among the most difficult and most important contributions that any public official can make. It requires intellectual seriousness, communicative skill, personal conviction, and a willingness to do work whose rewards are deferred and whose recognition is uncertain. Waiya has brought all of these qualities to his role, and the emerging resonance of the Kano First philosophy in the state’s public discourse is the clearest evidence of their impact.
The road ahead is neither short nor smooth. For the Kano First Initiative to achieve the transformative impact its architects intend, its principles must travel far beyond the walls of government ministries and into the daily life of the state, into its markets and mosques, its schools and community associations, its media houses and professional organizations, its youth networks and women’s groups. Every institution and every individual that engages seriously with the initiative’s values adds to the momentum of renewal. Every act of civic responsibility, every demonstration of institutional integrity, every young person who chooses productive enterprise over destructive shortcuts, is a small but real vindication of the philosophy that Waiya has championed.
Ideas, when they are genuinely good and genuinely held, have a way of outlasting the circumstances of their birth. The Kano First Initiative is still in its formative stages, and its ultimate legacy will be written by the quality of its implementation and the depth of its public embrace. But the intellectual foundation has been laid with seriousness and care, and the man who has done more than any other to lay it deserves the recognition that serious public service demands. History will record, when it takes the full and honest measure of this moment in Kano’s governance journey, that one of the most consequential contributions to the state’s renewal came not from the most visible podium, but from the disciplined, purposeful, and deeply committed work of Comrade Ibrahim Abdullahi Waiya, the Architect of Renewal, and the enduring voice of Kano First.

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Munir I. Publisher is a governance analyst and public affairs commentator based in Kano State.

Opinion

DSP Barau and “Abandoned Projects” : An Appraisal

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By Abba Anwar

Only those who know and understand the sluggish nature of budget implementation under different administrations, can understand whether projects are deliberately abandoned by their initiators and facilitators. Or whether the onus is on the pattern of implementation and implementors.

If Kaduna Eastern Bypass, initiated 2002, Abuja-Lokoja highway started in 2006, Kano-Maiduguri of 2007, Sokoto – Tambuwal- Jega-Kontagora, flagged – off in 2009, Abuja-Minna of 2010, among other abandoned federal projects, are not marked as noise making hubs, why then is Kano-Gwarzo-Dayi, that was flagged – off in June, 2021, can deliberately be tagged as point of condemnation by noise makers?

Kano-Gwarzo-Dayi federal road, as facilitated by the Deputy President of the Senate, His Excellency Barau I Jibrin, CFR, since 2021, though abandoned at a point, up to January, 2026, the work has resumed since February, 2026, this year.

Senator Jibrin worked hard and made sure that, the sum of Thirty Seven Billion Naira (N37,000,000,000) only was appropriated in 2026 Appropriation Bill, which has now become Act. After that he also pushed, very well for the additional Six Billion and Three Hundred Million Naira (N6, 300,000,000) only.

Unlike DSP’s facilitated federal road project of Kano-Gwarzo-Dayi, which was flagged – off in 2021, as contractors are back to site, since February, this year, there are many abandoned federal road projects, scattered around the country, whose resumption of work, with so many of the projects, is still elusive.

Such as Makurdi-Naka-Adoka-Ankpa federal road flagged – of in 2012, Calabar-Itu-Ikot Ekpene, of 2010, Benin-Sapele-Warri road, which was flagged – off in 2009, Enugu – Onitsha road, of 2013, Kano-Katsina dualization project, that was started in 2013, as contractor left in 2022, among many other abandoned federal roads.

Abuja-Kaduna-Zaria-Kano federal road is another case of study, in this context. The project has been in limbo for many years, with touch-and-go strategy.

So to me, castigating or rather blaming DSP for this singular Kano-Gwarzo-Dayi road is either premature or not necessary at all. In his own case, the work has resumed. And look at what he pushed to be reflected in 2026 national budget. Which has already become, 2026 Appropriation Act.

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Another constituency project for DSP Jibrin, is E-learning Centres across 5 local governments from his Kano North Senatorial District, in collaboration with National Information Technology Development Agency (NITDA), was facilitated by the Senator in 2015.

The Centres are across 5 local governments, Tofa, Gwarzo, Kabo, Bichi and Dambatta.

Some people erroneously blame the Senator, advancing that, the E-learning Centres were abandoned by him, since 2015, which, according to them, shows his “negligence” over his constituency. As a matter of fact, the truth of the matter is this, all the 5 E-learning Centres were converted to become Study Centres for National Open University of Nigeria (NOUN). Amongst other locations from the remaining local governments that constitute Kano North Senatorial District.

Another great project that some are blaming His Excellency DSP is Barau Initiative for Agricultural Revolution in the North West (BIARN). Many things were said about it by opponents. But the truth of the matter is this, that the project is yet to take-off fully due to the issue of cash flow from the end of the partner agency. Which is Bank of Agriculture (BOA).

Coincidentally I came across a press statement issued by the
Special Adviser to the Deputy President of the Senate on Media and Publicity, Ismail Mudashir, narrating that, the Chairman of the Initiative, Prof. Bashir Fagge Muhammad, disclosed that, “Following the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the BOA management, applicants were invited to participate in the initiative. However, implementation was stalled due to challenges relating to cash flow.”

As the programme was unveiled March, 2025, it aims to revolutionise agriculture and encourage young Nigerian graduates to venture into farming.

Part of the statement reads, “Specifically, the programme was designed to empower 558 young farmers with loans ranging from N1 million to N5 million for rice and maize cultivation across the seven North West states in line with President Bola Ahmed Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda on food security and youth empowerment.”

Adding that, “Applicants are therefore urged to remain patient, as the Board of the Initiative, under the chairmanship of Professor Bashir Fagge Muhammad, is working closely with the BOA management to resolve the issue.”

So we can now understand that the programme is not, and can never be, abandoned, as some started speculating while peddling rumors around.

It is not the intention of this piece to start cataloging DSP’s long standing achievements as the Senator representing Kano North, in many areas of human endeavor.

From his Scholarship scheme where hundreds of students were sponsored for their undergraduate studies, across Nigerian universities and dozens, who were sponsored for Postgraduate studies abroad, as some completed their studies and started coming back. As thousands students from his constituency are given scholarship for their upkeep. Not to talk of his intervention in all other areas of education.

I’m not cataloging his intervention in the security sector. As he is the single individual from across North West whose intervention in the sector supersedes that of many. A Senator like no other.

His effort in sports development is unmatched. Apart from aiding football clubs and players, his completion of stadium in each of the 13 local governments under his constituency, is something to write home about.

All his interventions in such areas will come our way shortly.

Anwar writes from Kano
Wednesday, 29th April, 2026

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Opinion

The Ink Dried Up: An Open Letter to Matthew Hassan Kukah-Prince Daniel Aboki

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Dear Bishop Matthew Hassan Kukah

I write you with the utmost sense of respect.

Permit me to begin by congratulating you. Not in the usual way, but in a manner that reflects a keen observation of recent developments in our country. Since the emergence of Bola Ahmed Tinubu as President, and coincidentally since your assumption of office as Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of the Governing Council of Federal University of Applied Sciences Kachia, there appears to have been a remarkable shift in the narrative of insecurity across Nigeria.

From Zamfara State to Sokoto State, Katsina State, Benue State, Plateau State, Kwara State, and indeed across several troubled parts of our nation, one might be tempted to conclude that the k!llings have suddenly come to an end. The silence is striking. The headlines have softened. The urgency has waned.

It is this very contrast that compels this letter.

You will recall, Bishop, your powerful and courageous interventions during the administration of Muhammadu Buhari. Your voice rang loud through a series of open letters that captured national attention and stirred both conscience and controversy.

On Christmas Day, December 25, 2018, you wrote with piercing clarity about a nation drifting, warning of a “nation at w@r with itself.”

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Again, on December 25, 2019, your message, “A Nation in Search of Vindication,” questioned the moral and political direction of leadership, calling attention to bloodshed and division.

On December 25, 2020, in “A Nation in Search of Peace,” you spoke even more bluntly, addressing the worsening insecurity and the growing despair among Nigerians.

And on December 25, 2022, your letter once again raised concerns about governance, justice, and the value of human life in Nigeria.

These interventions were not just letters. They were moral signposts. They reminded leadership of its duty and the nation of its conscience.

It is against this backdrop that your current silence, or perhaps restraint, becomes more noticeable.

Has the situation improved so dramatically that the urgency of those words is no longer required?

Have the forests suddenly emptied?
Have the highways become safe?
Have the cries of victims ceased?

Or is it that the burden of national admonition must shift depending on who occupies the seat of power?

Lord Bishop, sir, your voice has always carried weight not because it was loud, but because it was consistent. Not because it was critical, but because it was principled.

Nigeria still needs that voice.

Not selectively. Not occasionally. But steadfastly.

If indeed peace has returned to the troubled lands of Zamfara, Sokoto, Katsina, Benue, Plateau, Kwara, and beyond, then you deserve commendation for witnessing such a transformation. But if, as many still believe, the reality on the ground has not changed as dramatically as the silence suggests, then your voice is needed now as much as it was then. Unless there is something we are not seeing that you would want us to see, could it be a case of “Tinubu I love, Buhari I hate”? Or should we begin to wonder whether conviction has given way to convenience?

Bishop, sir, would you recommend that we keep silent when we benefit and speak up only when we do not?

Over time, we have seen that history is kinder to those who remain constant in truth than to those who are convenient in silence.

I write not in condemnation, but in expectation.

Prince Daniel a Concerned Citizen and Head of cool Wazobia And Arewa Radio on Kano

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Opinion

Tarauni Breathes As Ja’o’ji Advances

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By Abba Anwar

Confidence, focus and straightforwardness are some of the major reasons why 2027 political contest in Tarauni is increasingly becoming more interesting and more dicey. Race for the House of Representatives seat especially.

When the former Senior Special Assistant to the President, on Citizenship and Leadership, Hon Nasir Bala Ja’oji, declared his intention to contest for the House of Representatives seat, against the current member, many keen political observers believe that, there are two major contenders now.

Ja’oji, according to many observers, is fast becoming one of the most fearless politicians within Kano metropolis. In the public eye, he was the first appointee to resign from his position, at the federal government level. The gut was seen as an asset, that cannot be purchase by every Tom, Dick and Harry.

Political pundits accept that, with all his unmatched connection, at the top of the ladder, Ja’oji, believes that, searching for political soul mates, on top of his “save our souls” empowerment and interventions are necessary tools for political victory. So he is changing tactics now, and for better.

The thousands of supporters he was able to gather, yesterday Friday, for the declaration of his intention to contest, surprised many as being unprecedented and overwhelming. Though anticipated.

He started from Gadar Lado, on Zaria road, took to the street with procession, to the All Progressives Congress (APC) Tarauni local government Secretariat, back to Zaria road to his base Ja’oji quarters. As dozens horse riders, thousands of supporters trekking and bike riders were chanting party slogan.

At the Secretariat he told the party leaders that his ambition “… is not borne out of mere ambition, but from deep sense of responsibility, commitment and consistent engagement with the people and the ideals of our great party.”

Ja’o’ji is someone with outright and unscathing love for APC’s strength and victory for all elections. He stresses this notion, when he said, “Over the past few years, I have remained steadfast in my loyalty and contributions to the growth, unity and electoral successes of our party at various levels.”

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For the simple reason that, this rare gem, has so many advantages over his challengers, in the race, he typifies that, his experience serving as Senior Special Assistant to the President on Citizenship and Leadership, has further shaped his understanding of governance, nation building and inclusive leadership.

Adding that, “In that capacity, I contributed initiatives aimed at promoting civic responsibility, youth engagement, and leadership development across the country.”

During the declaration event youth and women constituted the larger part of the participants, who made the event more colorful and intimidating. Many of those who attended the event, were of the opinion that, it is now their turn to support Ja’o’ji realize his political dream victoriously.

Ja’oji is indeed second to none, as Tarauni electorate believe that, his long standing initiatives in empowering his people, are indelible in the face of Tarauni political reality. Hundreds of women and youth benefited from his grant schemes, where some hundreds beneficiaries collected One Million Naira (N1m) each to aid their economic engagement in the society. For the overall development of the state, as a whole.

Many hundreds benefited from his scholarship scheme at periodic intervals. Where he sponsored their higher education across tertiary institutions in the state. Apart from yearly assistance rendered to secondary school students for writing their Joint Admission and Matriculation Board (JAMB) examinations. And their second school leaving examinations, NECON and SSCE. Among many other programmes.

His intervention cuts across all segments of people in Tarauni and beyond. Sometimes not minding their political affiliation. That is why people are of the opinion that, Ja’oji could be marketable and sellable easily. As his pedigree informs this reality, for the past few years. Even before he started nurturing a political ambition. Which shows that, Ja’oji has been an ardent supporter for human progress and development. A sole action that endears him to the people. Particularly those at the grassroot. Genuine electorate at all levels.

With all his shortcomings, as a human being, as no human beings, apart from Prophets and Messengers of Allah, are infallible, meaning infallibility of human beings is assured and reassured in this life, Ja’oji has age over other would be contestants. As some political pundits observed.

His long presence in the life of his people, supercedes other contestants, especially those that are new into the system. As speculation suggests that, there are some people who are drafted and some are about to be drafted into the battleground. But electorate promised that their weight is already behind Ja’oji.

As Ja’oji advances with full force with his declaration of interest and as there are reports that, within the circle of those would be contestants’ structures, some misunderstandings started emanating from within, Tarauni is about to breath well with Ja’o’ji as the rallying point.

Anwar writes from Kano
Saturday, 25th April, 2026

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