I
learnt of his death on my way to
Kaduna
on an
official trip in the early hours of
Monday 3rd
January, 2005
.
Here is a man full of strength and health when I met him a
fortnight ago declared dead. It
was like a daydream. Wada
Nas, no doubt left an indelible landmark on the sands of time.
He was a fulfilled man leaving a big vacuum that is very
different to fill. If I say
he was a man with the courageousness of a lion, I am not exaggerating
matters neither, am I stretching issues too far by saying that Wada Nas
was an embodiment of honesty and truth.
He left behind the attributes of honesty, dedication,
determination, loyalty and trust. He
was a consummate politician with a magical charm, a writer with incisive
torrents and an elder of insurmountable wisdom.
When Nas talks, there was always an eloquence of oratory – a
man that could for hours talk without the boredom of the audience.
He was a journalist’s delight; a man of the people and the
succor to the underprivileged. It
was like a coincidence of fate when I was posted from my primary post at
Ahmadu Bello University (A.B.U) to serve as the first Deputy Director of
the newly established School of Basic and Remedial Studies (sbrs), which we collectively agreed as a committee to be
located in Funtua, the then Vice-Chancellor of ABU; Professor Abdullahi
Mahadi once jokingly confronted me that “I hope I did not send you
to Funtua to meet your friend, Wada Nas”.
In sublime terms, its like sending me to the stronghold of
my political like-mind. But
as fate would have it, my sojourn in Funtua enabled the enhanced
relationship. If there’s
any lesson I have learnt from Wada Nas it is that of consistency in
truth and perseverance in my personal approach towards issues becoming
more or less Wada Nas personified. There
are times I challenged Wada Nas’s approaches when we rub minds, but at
the end of it all, each of us become convinced in our personal
convictions I cant remember a time we differ on fundamental issues of
the North and misguided policies of the Federal Government.
We always disagreed to agree and agreed to disagree.
It was an opportunity I had never experienced in my lifetime.
Wada Nas is definitely a politician with a difference, swallowing
emotions for reasoning and convictions, sometimes offering evidences for
convince. Many a time he
would re-cast experiences, illustrations and projections to pursue his
line of arguments in anticipation that I will succumb.
As an academic I found him investigative and challenging.
It was like a fieldwork of enforcing realities.
Wada
Nas was a man of many parts but one fact summarizes it all: courage and
fearlessness. Wada Nas can
be a long-ranger sometimes quarantined in his own self-beliefs and hence
never cared whether somebody cared.
He would have been a perfect example-fit of a promising
opposition leader if not for some disfiguring political tendencies of
the dawdling political class. Even
out of the power-stream he had exhibited a damning opposition to the
power at the center. A
friend of the Gowons’, Buharis’, Babangidas’, Gani Fawehinmis’,
Balarabe Musas’, Abubakar Rimis’, the Kalus’, the Nzeribes’ etc.
Wada Nas would be missed greatly in this period of our evolution.
He died fighting earnestly for justice, fairness and peace.
The Igbo race now clamoring for the presidency in 2007 will
remember him as one that joined forces with them in order to actualize
their dreams. He was a good
friend of the Igbos, the uncompressing star of the North and patriotic
symbol of
Nigeria
. The
African continent had lost a great son and Nigerians will not forget him
easily.
Born
66 years ago in Funtua,
Katsina
State
.
Wada Nas was a First Republic member of the House of
Representatives under the platform of Northern Elements Progressive
Union (NEPU), former Secretary of National Party of Nigeria (NPN) Kaduna
State, during the Second Republic and Chairman National Republican
Convention (NRC).
Katsina
State
, during the
Babangidas’ Transition Programme.
The Government of General Sani Abacha appointed Wada Nas as
Minister of State for Education, Special Adviser on Political Matters to
the Head of State and later Special Duties Minister, an appointment he
retained until the death of Abacha.
With the dawn of the new democratic model, Wada Nas became the
President General of People’s Salvation Party (PSP) and had been in
the forefront of The Buhari Organization (TBO) and Conference of Nigeria
Political Party (CNPP). He
is married to two wives and bore 22 children.
Monday, 3rd
January, 2005
marked the
physical end of Wada Nas but his spirit still lives on – the spirit of
pursuit of justice, reliance on truth and exhibition of courage.
The North and
Nigeria
will
definitely miss this great man – a man that would have brought hope to
the masses, a man that would have fought against injustice and a man
that stood for fairness. A
consummate politician, a communicator with zealous focus and an elder
with a large heart. Good-bye
Wada Nas. May his soul rest
in perfect peace. Amin.
Mamza
writes from ABU
Zaria.