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Written
By Yushau A. Shuaib
SIX ‘ELRUFAIS’ AT MUMMY’S SHOP
New
Nigerian April 6, Leadership April 8 and Sunday Trust April 152007
“Daddy… daddy… Six Elrufais are at Mummy’s
shop!”
The young nursery school boy shouted to his father
as he reached home. The father was bamboozled by the countenance portrayed on
the innocent face of his child. The father wondered the authenticity of the
claim. At Mummy’s Shop? He mused: could it be some people were at the shop for
shopping or looting.
He couldn’t wait to probe the child further as he
dashed into his car, zooming off at top speed to his wife’s shop. His
heart kept on pumping with the mixture of joy and fear of the unknown. Could it
be the Elrufai, the Minister of Federal Capital Territory (FCT) who was
allegedly declared wanted by the court? Or could there be another popular
Elrufai that a child of 4 years could easily pronounce the name like nursery
rhymes for the kindergarten kids?
The only popular Elrufai is the not too tall a
minister whose works in term of physical development of Abuja is as unique as
the pains that goes with the restoration of the original master plan of FCT. A
highly intelligent person who always has his ways on various reforms of the
administration but without large followership of ardent supporters of his
hard-line stance that make city dwellers give him various nicknames. He is so
passionate about the master plan that he was once quoted to have expressed his
personal experience that: “You do not know how painful the reclamation of Abuja
master plan is until you have your family members and friends come to you in the
dead of the night crying that the policy has affected him or her. Then you will
feel the pain. But it is something that needs to be done.”
As dreadful as some may perceive his fearless
resolve, the father of the kid believes Elrufai has a soft spot too. He
witnessed an incident at the premises of FCT when some old women ambushed the
minister on a Friday as he arrived from the mosque. As the official car edged
into his parking lot, the women dashed forward but were restricted by his
overzealous security men. Knowing the implication of not conveying their
grievances directly to him, the women screamed out pleadingly. He turned towards
their direction and asked the security personnel to give them access.
With fears written on their face, tears about to
roll down their cheek, they attempted to prostrate before he discourage them.
From a distance one could read the agony of motherhood – agony of deprivation -
an agony that is usually associated with the poor. The minister was attentive,
readily disposed to listen as they reeled out their predicament. Momentarily, he
summoned some of his aides and gave a directive which made the women
spontaneously in joyous moods. Within a few minutes the jubilant women were
beaming with smile, praying and praising the minister. The compassionate
disposition of the minister in tolerating and accommodating their request may
therefore be borne out of two obvious reasons: either he was emotionally moved
by their plights or was convinced that they would have been unjustly treated.
In recapitulation of the situation on ground, the
father of the young school boy kept on ruminating on what might befall his wife
or the shop. He quickly noticed a heavy presence of policemen around the Area 7
Shopping Complex, which largely accommodates stores and shops for stationeries,
computers accessory, business centres and printing press in Abuja. As he
attempted to park his car, his attention was drawn to six huge bulldozers
menacingly stationed at the shopping complex. His heart skipped, as the presence
of those giant demolishing equipments reminds one of executioners at firing
square, well-armed and ready for order to strike. Probably those were what the
child referred to as “Six Elrufais.”
Illegal squatters and genuine shop owners were in
frenzy moving out their wares and not in the frame of mind to argue or defend
their shops. Once Abuja Bulldozer visits, like popular military parlance
obey-before-complain, park-out-before-complain become the
order. Afterall top public officers, politicians and millionaires were not
spared in the spate of demolition to restore the Abuja masterplan. The extremely
rich can afford replacements not the lesser mortals who will pray to higher
heaven to retain their sanity from committing suicide after such demolition,
especially where one has genuine allocation.
The few that still had the gut brought out their
allocation papers. Most of the papers were officially issued by past
administrations with their shops indicated in the plan of the complex likewise
the man’s wife too whose shop was among those strategically located at the gates
that had approval and in the masterplan. So what could have been the problem?
Stories abound, like gossips that some fifth
columnists, for the purpose of extortion, regularly visited the complex to
intimidate owners with threats of demolition on flimsy excuses. They usually
claimed that the complex was intended to be an abattoir. Through undesirable
connivance with insiders, those elements receive regular generous
allowance, a ridiculous monetization by spreading rumours and concocting
stories to confuse owners and occupants only to extort them. In fact on the day
the six-bulldozers (tagged six-elrufais) visited, negotiations and consultations
were going on with speculation that once the owners play ball their shops might
be spared. At another corner were some policemen, on the assignment, enjoying
themselves with free meal and drinks from to-be-victims, thinking
they could be their messiah. The generosity to security personnel might be a
demonstration of being our-brothers’-keepers if not corruption in the day light.
The man looked at the horrific face of his spouse
as she was vomiting blood…red human blood and imagined the agony many had gone
through as they face a bleak dilemma which was so sudden. The assurance that her
shop was legitimately acquired through appropriate authority with intervention
of a highly respected former administrator of the city could not douse the
apprehension of the woman.
The six bulldozers were just there with the
security personnel doing nothing until the third day when their engines roared
and moved like armored tanks used in destroying Iraq. They mauled all the
structures on sight around the complex: places of worship, legal and illegal
structures to the consternation of the new victims who must start their business
afresh if they are lucky to get new capitals. Miraculously inner shops were not
destroyed to the celebration of their owners who had early removed their wares.
The lessons to be learned here is that Elrufai is
human like all of us and is doubtful if he has clear pictures of all the
demolition taking place in Abuja especially when there is obvious existence of a
systematic connivance of undesirable elements for the purpose of extorting
hapless occupants of properties through threats of demolition. It also seems the
poor bulldozers relish the exercise so that they are not willing to go for break
or holidays few weeks to the end of the administration after all they have done.
My advice is that no matter the situation, it would be worthwhile if adequate
compensations or alternative arrangements are provided immediately to allow
genuine and innocent victims of demolition to recover from their losses.
Lets us pray that we shall not be caught off guard
like some victims of demolishers who have invested in their properties and have
the right papers.
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