Ganduje’s ex-commissioner chides poor 2025 budget performance in Kano

Chief of Staff to the former National Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Comrade Muhammad Garba, has strongly criticised the Kano State Government over what he described as an embarrassingly poor and unacceptable budget performance in the first three quarters of 2025.

Garba, a former President of the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ), expressed concern that the New Nigerian Peoples Party (NNPP)-led administration has performed woefully in water resources, health, and education.

Garba, a former Commissioner for Information and Internal Affairs during the administration of Dr. Abdullah Umar Ganduje, made the criticism in a statement signed on Wednesday.

According to Garba, a recent budget review published by an online platform rated the government poorly in key sectoral performance, while placing the capital budget performance spanning January to September 2025 below 40 per cent.

He said the findings expose the gap between the administration’s public rhetoric and its actual delivery, adding that the figures confirm the failure of a government that has invested more in propaganda than in governance.

He added that the Kano state Water Board, which received N5.6 billion for capital projects, did not spend a single naira within the same period.

Garba described this as “a shocking dereliction of duty,” especially in a state where residents continue to suffer acute water scarcity across many local government areas.

“It is tragic that a government which declared a state of emergency on water supply has failed to invest even one per cent of the Water Board’s allocation,” he said.

“Instead of building on the previous administration’s completed projects that include the Tiga Hydropower Project, designed to power water pumping and street lighting, the government abandoned sustainable solutions.”

The former commissioner added that after abandoning the more efficient IPP model, the government continues to pay millions of naira per month to KEDCO for electricity, possibly because such arrangements confer personal benefits on some actors.

He also criticised the administration’s performance in the education sector, noting that despite declaring a state of emergency and allocating the highest share of the budget to education, the results have been “a monumental disappointment.”

The Ministry of Education achieved just 32.2 per cent capital performance, while the Ministry of Higher Education recorded a dismal 7.7 per cent. He said the administration’s emphasis on sponsoring selected students abroad “appears more like political patronage than a genuine attempt to strengthen the entire education system.”

“Local schools remain underfunded, overcrowded and poorly equipped, while completed projects like the Mega Secondary School along Court Road have been abandoned,” he said.

Garba further expressed concern about the health sector’s performance, noting that only N7.9 billion of the N65.7 billion capital budget had been utilised by September 2025. He said this underinvestment is indefensible in a state that has battled recurring cholera outbreaks and faces high infant and maternal mortality rates.

“Failure to fund primary healthcare and water infrastructure is costing lives,” Garba said. “Kano’s recurring health crises cannot be addressed when the government spends only 12 per cent of its health capital budget.”

He also faulted the quality of road projects being executed by the NNPP government, saying many of the works are hurried and poorly coordinated.

“The surface scraping and overlay projects being celebrated are not only haphazard but have created traffic chaos with poorly planned diversions,” he said. “These are not the signs of a government serious about infrastructure.”

Garba said the budget figures raise serious doubts about the administration’s ability to manage the recently proposed N1 trillion 2025 budget.

“When a government cannot implement even half of its approved budget, proposing a trillion-naira budget becomes nothing more than a political performance,” he said. “Kano deserves better than governance driven by slogans without substance.”

He called on the state government to prioritise transparency, discipline and responsible project execution for the remaining months of the fiscal year.

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