Ministerial Appointments: President Bola Ahmed Tinubu To Break A Record or Continue the Legacy of Injustice, Unfairness, and Discrimination to The Indigenous People of The FCT.By Deborah Yusuf

All eyes are now on President Tinubu to  reveal his ministerial nominees. An act that would kick-start the engines of his administration and set the pulse of the nation while the Nigerian people react by either applauding or scrutinizing the cabinet appointments of the newly elected President, Bola Ahmed Tinubu.
Nigerians await with keen interest the personalities to be tapped from across the country to form the next Federal Executive Council (FEC). The emergence of ministers will enable the people gauge the intent and direction of Mr. President towards tackling myriads of development challenges facing the country.
During this waiting period, indigenous people of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Abuja have a course to renew their perennial agitation to be considered for ministerial appointment. Just like other Nigerians, irrespective of where they may reside on the globe are interested in the affairs of their ancestral home and constantly stay in tune with ongoing  developments in their states. Indigenes of FCT  likewise yearn for such representation, justice, equity and fairness within the Nigeria project.
Since the advent of the present democratic dispensation in 1999, indigenes of FCT have been treated as second class citizens in the country. No President has considered it appropriate to appoint from the pool of brilliant personalities of the indigenes of the FCT as Minister of the FCT fulfilling  the Constitutional right of representation in the Federal Executive Council. This is in disregard of the spirit of the Nigerian Constitution 1999 (As Amended) which provides that the FCT be considered and treated as if it were equal to the other 36 states of the federation. 
Aside representation, ministerial appointment is a balancing act that guarantees sense of belonging to all the federating units of the country. Indigenous people of the FCT have been denied these two fundamental rights over the years. Out of the nine ethnic groups in the FCT, none have been regarded for appointment nor considered as having the rights to be represented. The opportunity to correct this anomaly soonest rather than later presently beckons on President Tinubu.
The FCT is by no means bereft of indigenes politically and academically qualified to efficiently perform the duties of ministers of the Federal Republic. In the past and present dispensations, several citizens from amongst the FCT aboriginals have distinguished themselves in various capacities of national assignments. To mention a few and not in any particular order; there is Honourable Zephaniah Bitrus Jisalo, a former member House of Representatives, AMAC/ Bwari federal constituency, and one-time chairman of Abuja municipal council.There is Malam Abdullahi Adamu Candido. A former two terms chairman of Abuja municipal area council, a former councillor in the same area council, and a former Council Secretary and immediate past Secretary Transportation Secretariat of the FCT administration
There is Senator Usman Jibrin Wowo, a one-time chairman of the Kuje area council and Senator Isah Maina, a retired army officer and Former Mandate Secretary, FCTA. These are capable personality that could be considered. 
However as a political analyst and follower of socio political events in the FCT and the nation at large, one name rings a resounding bell and stands out amongst these viable personalities, and that is no other but Malam Abdullahi Adamu popularly known as Candido. It is verifiable that during his time as chairman of AMAC, Candido executed several projects in Education, Infrastructure, job creation and several innovative interventions. He stands out among the lot and is a man with an unwavering passion for the cause of his people. 
Despite his principles based disagreements with the immediate past FCT Minister during his tenure as AMAC Chairman, the minister found him (Candido) worthy to be appointed Transportation Secretary after his tenure as AMAC chairman. As a household name across the FCT, Candido is presently about the most suitable of the chieftains of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC) from the FCT to be considered for ministerial appointment. Only recently he was described by a respected traditional leader as the best performing AMAC Chairman amongst several accolades.
It is abundantly clear that the FCT is not lacking in indigenous persons that are fit for  ministerial appointment either for  the Federal Capital Territory or other ministerial positions. As a lover of justice, fairness and equity I join my voice along with many advocates of fairness, justice, equity and representation both dead or alive to implore that the President does due diligence and take a look at the antecedents and precedents of these persons as well as their heart for service before deciding who is best suited for the Ministerial appointment.
The people of Abuja should not be reduced to a lost people in the wilderness of history. Where they come from is not lost on them. The 1999 Constitution provided representation at the FEC and the same constitution also states that the FCT be treated as if it were a state. Sadly, for the indigenous people of the FCT, who have in their magnanimity and upon the promulgation of decree number 6 of 1976 gifted the nation its beautiful capital in Abuja, their good gesture has so far been rewarded in bad taste. These beautiful people of Amwamwa, Bassa, Egbira, Gade, Ganagana, Gbagyi, Gbari, Gwandara and Koro ethnicity have not had a feel of what representation at the highest level of Nigeria’s political echelon feels like since 1999. They have also not benefitted from other cabinet appointments in the past. This has left many of the indigenes in states of dejection and a feel of political marginalization.
The agitation has been long and futile. In 2019, Alhaji Hassan Usman Sokodabo, a House of Representatives member for Abuja South Federal Constituency in an interview stated that the agitation for an FCT minister is backed by the law and joined his voice in advocating that the then President, Muhammadu Buhari appointed an indigene as minister of FCT. This fell on deaf ears as the aboriginals of the FCT were yet again denied the opportunity to be represented by one of their own.
In 2020, when the issue was raised in the Senate under the leadership of former Senate President, Ahmad Lawan. The Senate urged the executive to appoint a minister amongst indigenes of the FCT referencing the decision of the Court of Appeal, Abuja.
In 2021 An activist and Constitutional Lawyer, Late Musa Baba-Panya, in advocating for the representation of natives of the FCT called on President Muhammadu Buhari to appoint an indigene of the FCT Abuja as a minister to correct the injustices of the past, when the former president was to reshuffle his cabinet in August 2019.
These are only but a few references out of the decades-long agitation for representation and political emancipation by the aboriginal people of the FCT.
A lot has been said to infer that the Minister of the FCT must not be an indigene of the FCT and while that is true, it is also a matter of fact and absolute truth that the constitution did not state that the Minister of the FCT cannot be an indigene of FCT. Recall a court of appeal judgment on January 15, 2018, in favor of the natives on the need for a ministerial appointment and the legal status of FCT -Abuja to be a State by the provisions of the law and are indeed entitled to a ministerial representation in the FEC as provided by the combined provisions of Sections 147 (3), 299, 14 (3) and 42 of 1999 Constitution. 
The Court also declared that the persistent denial and refusal of past presidents to so appoint an indigene of FCT Abuja as a minister since May 1999 was tantamount to a gross violation of the said constitutional right against discrimination.
It therefore rules out that argument. The Abuja indigenes are rather being faced with an issue of fairness, justice inclusion, and representation which shouldn't be denied to the natives of the FCT especially because they are as Nigerian as other Nigerians across the 36 states of the country. 
Beyond record-breaking, a decision by President Tinubu to appoint an indigene of the FCT as minister as well as giving due consideration for appointment in other ministerial positions, will demonstrate the spirit of federal character and his slogan of renewed hope will automatically resonate across the length and breadth of the FCT and beyond.

It is the hope of the FCT indigenous people that this noised renewed hope is extended to them, to yet again hope and count on Mr President, Bola Ahmed Tinubu to make the unparalleled decision of giving the people the representation they have long agitated for along with the some of the optimum decisions he has made since his entry into the Presidency that has given many Nigerians the reason to hope against hope. The indigenes of the  Federal Capital Territory of Nigeria have yet again renewed their hope as the President has called for and are keeping the hope alive, waiting anxiously that this will not be yet another shattered dream but rather the breaking of a new dawn for them to experience what it means to not just be seen, but be heard and as well represented.

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