I inherited only N4m with so many debts from Matawalle – Zamfara gov

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Zamfara State Governor, Dauda Lawal, has reflected on the hurdles his administration has encountered and the strides made since taking office.

Speaking during an interview with Arise TV on Monday, Lawal described the dire state in which he inherited the government from his predecessor, Bello Matawalle.

He said the state was in disarray across multiple sectors, grappling with rampant insecurity, a deteriorating education system, inadequate healthcare services, and significant financial liabilities.

Lawal said: “When I took over as a governor, Zamfara State was in a mess in every aspect of life, be it security at the highest level, education at the bottom, healthcare at the bottom, human development capacity almost non-existent, and it’s one reason why I had to declare a state emergency in education as well as healthcare.

“There was not a single drop of water for five months in Zamfara State when I took over, and we were able to solve that in just three days. So, in fact, the liabilities were unbelievable, but as a leader, I had to find a way to be able to take care of that.

“When I took over, there was nothing in our treasury, so many debts. I only inherited N4 million. The records are there, with all sorts of liabilities, ranging from a backlog of salaries of four and a half months, judiciary owing 1.6 billion, WAEC-1.6 billion, NECO-1.4 billion, and so many other challenges which I had to face head-on.

“The first thing I did was to clear the backlog of those salaries. I had to make sure I went in some kind of agreement with WAEC as well as NECO so that our children could sit for WAEC and NECO, and not only that, to also be able to get some of those certificates, the one they wrote in the past, that they were not able to collect because of non-payment.

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“When I took over, the salary of a civil servant in Zamfara State was 7,000 naira, just 7,000 across the state, state and local government. I had to quickly do what I had to do to jack it up to then the minimum wage of 30,000 naira.

“Not only that, since 2011, pensioners were not paid to the tune of 16.5 billion, which I was able to settle everybody as of last month. That has been cleared. Every civil servant from 2011 pension was cleared, and we’re now paying the 70,000 minimum wage.

“When I declared an emergency in education, it had to be holistic. If you look at the condition of our schools at the time, it’s unbelievable. So, as we speak now, we were able to turn things around. We have renovated over 400 schools, fully renovated, and furnished across all the 40 local governments of the state.

“We’ve settled NECO. We’ve settled WAEC and other liabilities, like scholarships. We’re able to settle our students in Sudan. We’re able to settle our students in India, and we’re now in the process of finalizing Cyprus. This is what we’re doing in education.”

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