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Nuhu Yaqub: The indelible footsteps of a humanist – By Owei Lakemfa

I am a member of the foreign relations think tank, the Society for International Relations Awareness, SIRA.  Its membership is made up primarily of retired ambassadors, Emeritus Professors, academics, former Permanent Secretaries, political scientists and lawyers. There is just a sprinkling of other professionals such as the military  and  trade   unions. About four years ago, SIRA founding President, Professor Nuhu Omeiza Yaqub, former Vice Chancellor, University of  Abuja, UNIABUJA and, later, Sokoto State University, called me. He wanted to visit me at home. I protested that it was I as one of his mentees that should visit him. He insisted on the visit. What he said shocked me.  The elders of SIRA had consulted and had decided that I should be the next president of the organisation. I gave some reasons why I could not be SIRA President including the fact that I had not even been a member of the Executive Board. Yaqub brushed aside my objections saying I had no choice in the matter. He added in his characteristic humour that since Nigeria is a democracy, I had the right to  protest against my nomination at the convention.

He  had no airs and was ever ready to assist people. In January 2024,  I sent him an urgent text  message. A group of  us in Nigeria  had decided to organise The International  Lenin Centenary Conference  to commemorate the  January 21, 1924  passing of Vladimir Lenin, the man who led the first Socialist Revolution in the world. I asked if despite the very short notice of  a  few weeks, he could present the Keynote Address. Within hours, he sent me theme of his presentation: “Labour Aristocracy and the Denouement  of Democratic Politics in Nigeria: Marxism-Leninism to the Rescue.”

Some months later, SIRA decided to organise an International Conference for the Eradication of Colonialism on Earth. The theme was: “The Forgotten Peoples: International Conference  to Decolonize the World.” We zeroed in on Professor Ibrahim Gambari, last Chair, UN Special Committee Against Apartheid and former UN Special Envoy to Cyprus, Zimbabwe and Myanmar.  To secure the consent of the quite busy international envoy, Prof Yaqub led a delegation to Prof Gambari.

Prof was a very active advocate of   various causes including  those  for the total independence of Western Sahara and, the lifting of the six-decade  embargo against Cuba by the United States. I recall that in 2019, the Nigerian  Movement of Solidarity with Cuba had a public campaign for Cuba in the Nasarawa State University, Keffi. Prof drove there  to express  his solidarity. He just could not stand by and watch people suffer.

In 1992, a young public servant, Olusola Magbadelo,  based on the perspective of  the ‘Home-grown Democratization  Theory’ presented a paper on the Transition Programme of the Babangida regime.  It was at the International Political Science Association Conference.  He got jeers and condemnation,  left the hall  head bowed with a sense of dejection.

It was in that state of despair, someone approached him outside the hall, commended him for the bravery he displayed and enquired why he was  not in a doctoral programme. That was how he met Yaqub.

Magbadelo told him   that he was shortlisted for the 1994/1995  Commonwealth scholarship to support his PhD programme in Canada. Yaqub advised him  to start the doctoral programme locally  while awaiting the Commonwealth scholarship. Yaqub who was then the Head of Political Science, Usmanu Danfodiyo University, Sokoto, obtained the institution’s postgraduate form and sent it to Magbadelo. The  latter was admitted into Danfodio in  1994. Shortly afterwards, the Commonwealth Scholarship  programme for Nigerian scholars was cancelled as Canada pulled out of Nigeria in protest against the annulment of the June 12, 1993 Presidential Election and, the 1995 execution of environmentalist, Ken Saro-Wiwa.  So, Yaqub’s advise and action turned out to be providential. As his main supervisor, he  helped  Magbadelo  secure the research grant to support his  comparative study  of the democratization processes in Nigeria and South Korea. When the latter’s workload in the civil service from 1998 made him to abandon the PhD programme, Yaqub, whenever he was in Abuja, ensured he met Magbadelo to pressure him to resume his PhD programme. When he eventually did, Yaqub and his family hosted his student whenever he was in Sokoto and arranged accommodation for him in the University Guest House.  These acts enabled Magbadelo to complete  his Political Science doctoral programme in  2001.

When Yaqub was UNIABUJA Vice Chancellor,  Professors  Ohaire and Aliyu Hussaini who were travelling  to attend the College of Education, Okene, convocation ceremony, died in a motor accident.  Yaqub did not only ensure befitting funeral rites, but also offered jobs to the families of the academics.

In 2024, that is fifteen years after he had left UNIABUJA, a professor pasted on the Professors WhatsApp page, a photograph he took with Yaqub. What followed was an avalanche of testimonies highlighting  his humanness, commitment to merit, mentorship and sense of social justice.

On Monday, December 2, 2024 I was with  Yaqub at the 70th Birthday programme of Professor   Jibrin ‘Jibo’ Ibrahim. We agreed to meet to update ourselves on events. He was also active in at least three other programmes leading to the  New Year. So, nothing prepared me for the shock on Saturday, January 4, 2025 that he had marched on.

At his  January 11, 2024 Fidau prayer, the crowds gathered. The diplomats included the 74th  United Nations General Assembly President Tijjani Muhammad- Bande, Cuban Ambassador Miriam Morales Palmero and Western Sahara First Secretary Hamahu-Allah Mohamed. The political class included former Education Minister, Professor Tunde Adeniran, former Niger State Governor Babangida Aliyu and two Commissioners representing Kogi State Governor Usman Ododo. Also present was prolific author, Dr Buka Usman and  trade unionists Chris Uyot, Hauwa Mustapha and Denja Yaqub. Civil Society leaders included Mma Odi. The Amilcar Cabral Ideological School sent a three-person delegation.  Academics expectedly thronged the venue. They included Professors Adele Jinadu, Bolade Eyinla and  Jibrin Ibrahim. The SIRA family included Professor Warisu Alli and Rear Admiral Anthony Isa, who gave the vote of thanks.

Professor Abubakar  Suleiman, Director General of the National Institute of Legislative and Democratic Studies said Yaqub had so much humility that even when he wanted to minute to a messenger, he would begin with the word ‘Please’

In response to the messages of appreciation heaped on him by UNIABUJA professors, Professor Yaqub had responded  in October, 2024: “My obsession in this earthly world is to beseech God not to allow me to fall below the high estimation that each of THESE MY COLLEAGUES have bestowed upon me. God, kindly allow me to come back to You in the Hereafter in this blaze of integrity and performance quotients that my colleagues have heaped on me.”

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