Tag: Kano State

  • Sanusi vs Bayero: Inside the Kano Emirate Crisis and Court Battle

    Sanusi vs Bayero: Inside the Kano Emirate Crisis and Court Battle

    An unusual event happened in Kano around 2020 that people still talk about like it is not finished, because it really never settled into anything stable after that point, and what should have been a clear transition of traditional authority turned into a slow burning dispute that keeps returning every time there is a political change in the state.

    At the center of it are two men whose lives have been tied to a single seat of authority but now sit on opposite sides of a long disagreement, Muhammadu Sanusi II and Aminu Ado Bayero, both carrying not just titles but expectations, loyalties, and interpretations of legitimacy that refuse to align in any simple way.

    What makes this situation difficult to reduce into a single story is that it is not only about tradition or personality, it has become something that touches law, politics, religion, and identity all at once, and every attempt to separate one layer from the other only seems to make the picture more complicated.

    The early cracks that changed everything

    Before the public arguments and court filings, the tension was already forming quietly through political decisions taken between 2019 and 2020 when Kano State underwent a major restructuring of its traditional system under the administration of Abdullahi Ganduje.

    The decision to split the historic Kano Emirate into 5 separate emirates was presented as administrative reform, but many people understood it as something deeper, because it immediately reduced the central authority of the Kano throne and redistributed influence across newly created traditional domains.

    At the time, Muhammadu Sanusi II was already a highly visible figure, not only within Kano but nationally, known for his outspoken positions on governance and social issues, and that visibility made him a central figure in conversations about whether the restructuring was purely administrative or politically motivated.

    By March 2020, the tension reached a turning point when he was removed from the throne and directed to leave the palace, an event that unfolded quickly and left little room for gradual adjustment or reconciliation within the traditional system.

    Within the same period, Aminu Ado Bayero was installed as Emir, stepping into an institution already under pressure and inheriting a throne that no longer felt unified even though it still carried its historical weight.

    The silence that followed removal

    After the dethronement in March 2020, Kano did not experience calm in the usual sense, instead it entered a period where silence was filled with interpretation, debate, and quiet disagreement that lived in conversations across households, religious spaces, and political circles.

    Aminu Ado Bayero began his reign with formal authority, carrying out duties expected of the Emir, attending ceremonies, and maintaining the traditional structure that supported his position, yet the circumstances of his emergence remained part of public conversation.

    At the same time, Muhammadu Sanusi II did not fade into political obscurity, as many expected might happen after such a removal, instead he remained active in public discourse, contributing to policy discussions and maintaining visibility that kept his influence alive beyond the palace walls.

    What developed during this period was not a resolution but a kind of dual awareness, where one Emir ruled in practice while the memory of another continued to shape public sentiment in ways that could not be ignored.

    2024 reversal that reopened old wounds

    Everything shifted again in 2024 when a new political administration led by Abba Kabir Yusuf revisited the earlier restructuring of the emirate system and moved to reverse it, a decision that immediately changed the direction of the entire dispute.

    The repeal of the 2019 emirate law dissolved the 5 emirates that had been created, restoring the old centralized structure and effectively reopening the path for the reinstatement of Muhammadu Sanusi II.

    His return to the palace was not a symbolic gesture alone, it carried legal and political backing from the state government, and it immediately created a situation where the existing Emir, Aminu Ado Bayero, no longer occupied a universally accepted position.

    What made this moment particularly sensitive was that it did not remove him physically from the system, instead it created overlapping claims that both carried institutional weight, leaving Kano with a situation that had no clear historical precedent in recent memory.

    Two palaces, two claims, one contested authority

    The reality that followed was unusual even for a system as historically complex as the Kano Emirate, because both men continued to function within the same traditional space but from different physical and symbolic positions.

    Muhammadu Sanusi II returned to Gidan Rumfa, the main palace traditionally associated with the Emir of Kano, supported by the state government and recognized by the administration that restored him.

    Meanwhile Aminu Ado Bayero remained within the Nasarawa palace, continuing to act as Emir within his own structure of support, maintaining ceremonies and engagements that reinforced his continued relevance.

    This created a situation where two parallel systems of authority existed in the same city, both drawing from tradition, both supported by different interpretations of legality, and both sustained by loyal followers who did not easily shift allegiance.

    Courts enter a dispute they cannot easily contain

    As the dispute intensified, it naturally moved into the legal system where courts were expected to provide clarity, but what followed instead was a series of rulings that added more layers rather than removing confusion.

    Early decisions from the Federal High Court attempted to halt the reinstatement of Muhammadu Sanusi II, which briefly strengthened the position of Aminu Ado Bayero, but the situation shifted again when appellate interpretations questioned jurisdiction.

    As cases moved between courts, the issue became less about who should be Emir and more about which court had authority to decide such a matter, turning a traditional dispute into a constitutional question that was difficult to resolve quickly.

    By 2026, the matter had reached the Supreme Court, but instead of closure, the case was adjourned to April 19, 2027, extending uncertainty and effectively freezing the situation in its current form.

    Daily life inside a divided traditional system

    Outside courtrooms and government statements, life in Kano adjusted to a reality where the emirate no longer functioned as a single unified institution, and people had to interpret authority based on context, event, and alignment.

    Public ceremonies became sensitive moments where presence, protocol, and leadership roles carried extra meaning, especially during religious gatherings where the Emir’s visibility holds symbolic importance beyond administration.

    There were occasions where attempts to organize events around both figures created confusion, forcing authorities to step in to prevent overlapping celebrations that could escalate tension among supporters.

    Security agencies also became more involved in managing public order around traditional events, not because of active warfare, but because the emotional weight attached to leadership identity made even peaceful gatherings potentially unstable.

    Political currents beneath traditional authority

    While the crisis appears on the surface to be about tradition, it is deeply connected to political structures within Kano State, where alliances influence decisions that directly or indirectly shape the direction of the emirate.

    Support around Abba Kabir Yusuf has often been associated with political alignment tied to Rabiu Kwankwaso, while the emergence of Aminu Ado Bayero has been viewed by others as connected to earlier state decisions under Abdullahi Ganduje.

    This alignment does not reduce the crisis to politics alone, but it explains why resolution has been difficult, because every move within the emirate is interpreted through a wider political lens that extends beyond tradition.

    Kano itself holds significant electoral influence in Nigeria, and the Emir carries moral and cultural authority that can shape public mood, making the throne more than a ceremonial position.

    Law, tradition, and the struggle for alignment

    At the center of the crisis is a question that does not have an easy answer, which is how modern legal systems should interact with traditional authority that predates them by centuries and operates on principles that are not always written in constitutional language.

    Courts operate on jurisdiction, procedure, and statutory interpretation, while traditional institutions operate on lineage, cultural legitimacy, and historical continuity, and when these two systems overlap, conflict becomes difficult to avoid.

    Supporters of each side interpret legitimacy differently, some prioritizing legal backing from state government decisions while others emphasize historical continuity and cultural recognition that cannot be easily rewritten by legislation.

    This divide means that even when legal clarity emerges, acceptance is not guaranteed, because legitimacy in traditional systems is not only a legal concept but also a social one.

    A frozen conflict with no immediate end

    As of 2026, Kano continues to function with two competing centers of traditional authority, where Muhammadu Sanusi II maintains presence at the main palace under state recognition while Aminu Ado Bayero remains active from Nasarawa palace.

    The Supreme Court adjournment has effectively extended the timeline of uncertainty, ensuring that no final resolution will arrive in the short term and leaving both camps in continued operation.

    Public life has adapted to this reality, but not without tension, as every major traditional or religious event carries the possibility of renewed disagreement depending on how authority is recognized in that moment.

    A throne that reflects a larger national question

    What is unfolding in Kano is not just a dispute between two individuals, it reflects a broader question about how traditional institutions fit within modern governance structures and how authority is defined in a system where history, politics, and law overlap.

    The emirate crisis continues to test the balance between elected authority and inherited tradition, between legal judgment and cultural acceptance, and between political influence and historical legitimacy.

    Until those elements find some form of alignment, Kano remains in a state where two voices speak from one throne, and the city itself continues to live with the weight of an unresolved chapter that still feels very much open.

  • Meet Abdullahi Garba Ramat, Kano-born IT expert who is the newly appointed NERC chair

    Meet Abdullahi Garba Ramat, Kano-born IT expert who is the newly appointed NERC chair

    Abdullahi Garba Ramat has been appointed by President Bola Tinubu as the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC).

    According to a statement released on Thursday by Bayo Onanuga, special adviser to the president on information and strategy, the newly appointed NERC boss will assume office in an acting capacity until he is confirmed by the Senate.

    WITHIN NIGERIA also learned that the president appointed Abubakar Yusuf as commissioner of consumer affairs and Fouad Olayinka Animashun as commissioner of finance and management services for NERC.


    Here is a short profile about the new NERC chairman, Abdullahi Garba Ramat:

    1. He was born in 1985.
    2. He attended a primary school in his local community in Kano
    3. He completed his junior secondary school education at Government Technical College, Ungogo
    4. He obtained his secondary school certificate from Dawakin Tofa Science College
    5. He pursued his first degree at Bayero University, Kano, graduating with a second-class upper division in electrical engineering
    6. He founded AG RAMAT GLOBAL LINKS, an IT and computer-based company, in 2008 while studying at Bayero University
    7. He continued his education at Jodhpur International University, India, where he earned a master’s degree in telecom
    8. He has a PhD in strategic management from Lincoln University
    9. As a businessman, he has expanded AG RAMAT GLOBAL LINKS, which now has branches in Nigeria, Chad, India, and Dubai
    10. According to the report, the company has diversified into agriculture, mining, and import/export while maintaining its core expertise in computers (software and hardware) and other gadgets
    11. He sought election to the Federal House of Assembly, representing the Ungogo and Minjibir Constituency under the People’s Redemption Party (PRP) in 2018, and lost
    12. He also holds a suite of executive certifications from world-class institutions, including Harvard University (Big Data Analytics, Civil Engagement), Google (Workshop Administration), Microsoft (Azure Solutions Architect Expert), and Gonzaga University (Power Transmission and Distribution Systems)
    13. He contested again for the chairman of Ungogo LGA and as Executive Chairman of Ungogo LGA (2021–2024)
    14. He championed Nigeria’s first blockchain-based decentralized e-identity system, facilitating the issuance of tamper-proof indigene and resident ID cards.
  • Ganduje’s Controversial Appointment as FAAN Board Chair: What Does the Law Say?

    Ganduje’s Controversial Appointment as FAAN Board Chair: What Does the Law Say?

    In 2018, former Kano Governor Abdullahi Ganduje was caught in video clips stuffing bundles of dollars into his pockets. Daily Nigerian claimed that the $230,000 was part of a series of cash payments given to the governor in a total bribery deal of $5 million. This resulted in a series of court cases that have yet to be concluded, with the case scheduled to be heard again by the Kano State High Court on February 13, 2025.

    Despite these allegations and video evidence, Ganduje was appointed Chairperson of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in 2023, the party to which Nigeria’s President Bola Tinubu belongs.

    On April 4, 2024, Ganduje faced a series of attacks from the Kano State government in a fresh suit filed against him, his wife Hafsat Umar, and six others before a state high court. The suit contained eight counts of charges concerning dollar bribery allegations, misappropriation, and diversion of funds running into billions of naira.

    Amidst these ongoing corruption cases, Ganduje continues to scale up through several leadership positions, evidently with his recent appointment as the Board Chairperson of the Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) by President Tinubu on January 24, 2025.

    Several Nigerians have, however, condemned this appointment because of his ongoing court ordeal.

    What Does the Law Say

    “Public accountability and transparency require people with unquestionable character to occupy public positions and contribute their quota to the country’s development,” said David Isaac, a lawyer who commented on Ganduje’s appointment. 

    According to him, the appointment of people with questionable character not only affects credibility but also creates attitudes among the citizenry, particularly regarding patriotism and the concept of nationalism. 

    However, with Ganduje yet to be convicted by the court, Isaac noted that his appointment is valid. 

    He emphasised that as amended, section 35 of the 1999 constitution provides for the presumption of innocence of every individual except for those who a court of competent jurisdiction has convicted. 

    “What that intends to amplify is that a person is being arraigned facing trials or being in a corruption case does not in any way prevent him from occupying any public office, more so that a court of competent jurisdiction has not determined such a person’s delay of judgment or guilt,” he said.

    He explained that sections 35 and 36 of the 1999 constitution have made it abundantly clear that an accused person, a person alleged to have committed an offence, is presumed innocent until convicted.

    Adding that “1999 constitution section 1 subsection 3 provides for the supremacy of the constitution and it goes by to provide that every other law, the constitution is superior to every other law in Nigeria.” 

    Isaac noted that despite the president’s appointment of Ganduje, which can affect public transparency and credibility, no existing law, legally speaking, around the positions of the constitution appointing an individual facing corruption charges.

  • Hisbah commander arrested for allegedly sleeping with married woman in Kano

    Hisbah commander arrested for allegedly sleeping with married woman in Kano

    Police have reportedly arrested a senior official with Kano Hisbah after he was allegedly caught with a married woman in a hotel in Kano.

    The Hisbah Corps is a religious police force created in northern state, Kano and it is responsible for the enforcement of Sharia.

    These Hisbah officers regularly arrest unmarried people caught in hotels and people breaking Sharia laws. They also punish those who are indecently dressed, have haircuts considered immoral in Islam, and they are known to destroy crates of alcohol.

    According to SaharaReporters, the arrest of the senior official of Hisbah seen in a hotel with a married woman came as a surprise.

    The incident was announced on Freedom Radio Kano on Tuesday, February 16 where it was reported that the official was arrested in Sabon Gari area of the city.

    As at the time of reportage, the name of the senior Hisbah official is yet to be disclosed but he was described only as police chief when the matter came up on Freedom FM’s popular magazine programme “Inda Ranka”.

    The arrested commander is said to be in charge of arresting beggars and prostitutes in Kano metro area. He was taken into custody after the husband of the woman with whom he allegedly had affairs filed complaints.

    Speaking on the development, Muhammad Haruna, the Kano Hisbah Commander described the incident as unfortunate.

    Haruna said a two-man committee has been established to investigate the matter.

  • Teenager, Farouk who was sentenced for blasphemy in Kano, relocates abroad

    Teenager, Farouk who was sentenced for blasphemy in Kano, relocates abroad

    Nigerian teenager identified as Omar Farouk who was sentenced by a Sharia court has relocated from Nigeria due to threats to his life.

    Recall that the teenager, Farouq was sentenced to 10 years in prison after he wqs accused of using language considered to be blasphemous toward Allah in a chat with his friend when he was a 13-year-old.

    He was sentenced by a Sharia court in 2020.

    Taking his case up, a Lagos-based human rights lawyer, Kola Alapini filed the appeal against the Kano State government to challenge the lower court judgement.

    Piotr Cywinski, the director of Poland’s Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum also appealed to Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari to pardon Farouq.

    Farouq was thereafter cleared of all charges, acquitted, and released from prison on January 25, 2021.

    However, Poland’s Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial, in a post on its website, said Farouq was facing further threats to his life from some extremists in Kano State.

    Cywinski in a post on the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial website, said Farouq’s life “is still under severe threat by extremist groups.”

    The director said, “In order to avoid a possible attack, Omar had to immediately relocate following his release”.

    He did not disclose Farouq’s new location.

    Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum said it plans to help Farouq “to build a new life. Depending on the amount raised, we plan to provide him with a new home in a safe environment outside the Kano state where he was accused and tried, pay for his education, and also compensate part of the costs incurred by the lawyers supporting him in Nigeria.”

    Cywinski said due to legal regulations of museums’ operations in Poland, the fundraising effort and all related communications will be driven by the Auschwitz-Birkenau Foundation, of which the Museum Director is also President.

    “The Foundation will do this pro bono,” Cywinski said.

  • Gas explosion injures housewife and baby in Kano

    Gas explosion injures housewife and baby in Kano

    An early morning gas explosion has reportedly left a 35-year-old housewife and 1-year-old baby boy injured in Kano.

    WITHIN NIGERIA learnt that the gas explosion happened in the early hours of Monday, February 15 leading to the destruction of a building and properties.

    It was further learnt that the explosion was caused by a domestic cooking gas.

    Both the injured woman and child were taken in an ambulance to the International Clinic.

    But they were referred to the Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital where they are currently receiving treatment.

    In other news, WITHIN NIGERIA reported that the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) has disclosed that reports from its preliminary investigations showed that the Best Roof Gas Plant Station, Baruwa, Lagos, where last Thursday’s gas explosion occurred had no operational licence.

    This was disclosed by the DPR director, Mr Sarki Auwalu while commiserating with victims.

    Recall that NAN reported that five persons died in the explosion. Eight persons were rescued with various injuries.

  • Mother of four who suffered miscarriage in police cell remanded for murder in Kano

    Mother of four who suffered miscarriage in police cell remanded for murder in Kano

    A mother of four identified as Fatima Hamza has been remanded in prison custody by a magistrate court in Kano state for allegedly killing her 16-year-old housemaid.

    Recall that the suspect, Fatima was arrested after she was accused of beating the late Khadija Rabiu to a pulp and inserting dried pepper and metal object in her vagina for not doing the house chores she was instructed to do.

    The late Khadijat who is a native of Kwara State reportedly died as a result of injuries she sustained from the beating.

    According to her co-housemaid  Khadija died as a result of injuries she sustained from the beating. But Khadija later retracted her statement.

    The Magistrate Court No 8 sitting in Gyadi-Gyadi area of the state metropolis on Monday, ordered that Hamza be remanded in a correctional centre for murder.

    The State Counsel, Barrister Asma’u Ado, told the court that the woman was brought before the court on a one-count charge of culpable homicide, which contradicts section 224 of Penal Code Law.

    The accused person pleaded not guilty.

    Her counsel, Barrister Ibrahim Abdullahi Chedi applied for bail on health ground, noting that the accused had a miscarriage while in police detention and her baby was also not feeling fine.

    “We have a medical report from the Police Headquarters Medical Centre as our client had a miscarriage as a result of shock. And as a nursing mother, her daughter is also sick so we are seeking bail so that our client can have access to a facility for better medical care,” he said.

    But the state counsel objected to the application on the grounds that the medical report did not indicate a specific illness that the accused person was suffering from “apart from the miscarriage, which she will recover from as she continues taking her drugs”.

    The presiding Judge, Chief Magistrate Ibrahim Khalil Mahmood, thereafter ordered that the accused person be remanded in a correctional centre and adjourned the case to February 16 for ruling on the bail application.

  • Civil servant bags 5 years jail term over N500K fraud in Kano

    Civil servant bags 5 years jail term over N500K fraud in Kano

    A staff of the Kano State Urban Planning and Development Authority (KNUPDA) identified as Mohammed Ibrahim Hassan has been sentenced to 5 years jail term by a Kano State High Court for defrauding the state government of N513,445.

    WITHIN NIGERIA learnt that the suspect, Hassan was charged by the Independent Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Commission (ICPC) on a 4-count charge of allegedly forging a treasury receipt of the Kano State Government, with the intent to support a claim of refunding the said amount to the State Government.

    The prosecuting counsel told the court that the offence violated Section 25 (1)(a) of the Corrupt Practices and Other Related Offences Act, 2000, punishable under Section 25 (1)(b) of the same Act, as well as Section 363 of the Penal Code, Cap 105 Laws of Kano State,  punishable under Section 364 of the same law.

    According to the charge, Mr. Hassan committed the offence between June 2017 and March, 2018, when he dishonestly made fake treasury receipts of Kano State Government to support his claim of returning N299, 509 and N213, 935 in separate tranches, to the State Government, when he actually did not refund any money.

    He pleaded not guilty when the charge was read to him, but changed his plea and entered into a plea bargain which was granted on the condition that he agreed to refund the N513, 445.

    The presiding judge, Justice Lawal Wada sentenced the defendant to five years imprisonment or a fine of N100, 000. He also ruled that the convict should refund N513, 445 to the Kano State Government.

  • Kano approves Child Rights Act, awaits passage of bill from Assembly

    Kano approves Child Rights Act, awaits passage of bill from Assembly

    Kano state Executive Council has approved the acceptable version of the proposed bill on Child Rights (protection) Act 2010 which reflected the position of Shari’ah on each and every section of the Child Rights Act (CRA) 2003 adopted by the federal government.

    It would be recalled that after its adoption by the federal government in 2003, the state government and other relevant stakeholders that included the Ulama, academics, Non-Governmental Organization, later drafted the 2010 act, which, however, could not be passed due to lack of political will and continuity in government.

    The state commissioner for Information, Malam Muhammad Garba, who disclosed this at the end of the council meeting held at the Government House in Kano said the administration of Governor Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, due to his commitment to child welfare, after assenting to the bill on Free and Compulsory Education, develop keen interest in seeing the passing of the CRA.

    “The approved bill when passed, seeks to protect the rights of the child and would be transmitted to the State House of Assembly for passage and subsequent assent by the governor.

    “Other approvals by the council include the release of N29,311,647.24 million for the 2020/2021 vaccination exercise which has not been holding for three years as a result of the prevailing health risk and high economic loss affecting the pastoral community in the state.

    “Approval has also been made for the release of the sum of N274,230,000.00 million to the state team, Kano Pillars Football Club, to facilitate smooth conduct of the year 2021 National Professional Football League,” Malam Muhammad Garba stated.

    Other approvals he mentioned include the sum of N1,240,637,737.50 billion for the completion and rehabilitation of Ahmadu Bello Way, the sum of N212,959,665.00 for the reconstruction of Dangote female hostel of Kano University of Science and Technology, Wudil, as well as the sum of N245,000,000.00 million for the conduct of Mass Wedding Programme in the state.

  • Police arrest young Benue barber for blasphemy over customer’s haircuts that allegedly insults Islam in Kano

    Police arrest young Benue barber for blasphemy over customer’s haircuts that allegedly insults Islam in Kano

    Police have reportedly arrested a young barber from Benue state identified as Elijah Ode over blasphemy.

    A Benue activist identified as Smith Akoko who is also a student, was arrested last Wednesday, after two of his customers were caught with hairstyles deemed blasphemous to the Islamic religion.

    Confirming the incident to Akoko, his cousin identified as Sunday Ukenya said that Elijah was arraigned in court on Tuesday, February 2 and later remanded.

    Read the report below:

    ”Elijah Ode, a resident of Kano from Adum East, Obi LGA of Benue State, who combines barbing with studies and is domicile in the Sabon Gari town of the state was reported to have been in the net of Islamic religious extremists, who believe he has committed blasphemy in the cause of his work as barber.

    Report says Elijah, who is well patronized by young people for possessing exceptional skills in trendy haircuts, attracted the wrath of the extremists last week Wednesday when two of his customers were tortured to stupor for designs claimed to be blasphemous to the Islamic religion.

    Thereupon, Elijah was traced to his barbershop, where he was arrested for complicity, and has been in Police detention with the two customers since last week.

    According to information obtained from his cousin, Mr Sunday Ukenya, the young barber did not design the hairstyles with the intention to provoke. He said he was only being innovative doing his work as usual to eke a living and pay his fees at his tertiary institution of study in Kano, where he sponsors himself.

    Ukenya also added that the case is already in the court of law at the wish of the aggrieved Muslims with first session being yesterday. He expressed sadness, however, that all efforts by the young barber’s lawyer to bail him proved abortive for the claim that it is a major case and is as a result not bailable.

    At the moment, the family has run out of hope, soliciting intercessory prayers as the reality of incarceration stares Elijah in the face. And indeed, jamesibechi.com can confirm that unless prayers are offered or reputable human rights activists from across the globe rise up for the defenceless self-sponsored young barber, the reality may be undesirable but inevitable.”