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Woman In Legal Battle With Kano Governor Goes Into Hiding

Sai’da Saad Bugaje, a lawyer, mother of two, is in hiding after a spat with Governor Ganduje of Kano State, Northwest Nigeria.

Sai’da Saad Bugaje, a lawyer and Legal Adviser to the Kaduna Geographic Information Service (KADGIS), became a victim of harassment and intimidation at her home in Kaduna back in September 2020, after she dabbled into the manner the Kano Governor is managing the COVID-19 pandemic

The harassment started after a private conversation leaked, in which she and few others were discussing how Nigerian leaders were managing the COVID-19 outbreak back in March 2020.

The high mortality rate in Kano and the response by the Kano state governor was raised by Sai’da, which she claims was later rejigged in the leaked copy which made its way to social media.

“I want it to be clear that when the audio came out, it was changed around but the message is still there. I don’t deny the message I was trying to send out which was that Kano state was not managing the COVID-19 crisis very well and the Governor at the time requested for some funding from the federal government which they refused to give,” she tells HumAngle. 


“I also said that Kano is being run by the family and they are involved in everything. So it went viral and I honestly didn’t think there was any issue. As a leader, people are bound to criticise your policies and even get personal, I have always been critical on issues all my life,” Sai’da added.

She says it was the main reason she opted to go into politics, then becoming a civil society activist and now a lawyer.

Sai’da stated that it would be impossible for her to keep silent when things are going wrong in her backyard.

Sai’da narrated to HumAngle how events unfolded in September 2020 at her house in Kaduna, when an armed group of people in mufti showed up at her gate, demanding to see her.

After her security guard informed her of the guests, she asked to speak to them to confirm their identity and the purpose of their unannounced visit.

“When I spoke to them it was a lady who asked me to come down. I had to ask who she was and where she was from and said she was from the zonal office in Kano and was here to have a word with me. I was baffled why they had come all the way to Kaduna. All of a sudden, she became rude saying that an authority sent her and if I didn’t come down, whatever happened to me I would have myself to blame.”

In light of the threat, she quickly placed a call to her office requesting for security, sent her kids upstairs and locked up her house, suspicious that the unidentified persons could be kidnappers or some other criminal elements. 

“For a group of Police to come all the way from another division from another state was very fishy. And she couldn’t produce a warrant when I asked her for it,” Sa’ida explained.

“I had to ask ‘on what grounds? What have I done?’ It was then that I was told that the video circulating regarding the governor was defaming his character.”

“That was when I raised that it wasn’t how to go about it. If he felt like I had defamed him, then he should go to court and the judge will summon me after you have filed a petition against me. This is a civil matter, not a criminal one,” she said. 

Sa’ida said she first considered going to Kano as requested but later grew cold feet when she recalled how many people had gone missing, ended up locked up or intimidated in similar circumstances. She couldn’t take that risk. 

Instead of going to Kano, Sa’ida went to a high court in Zaria where she got an injunction from the judge restraining Ganduje and other officers from the IGP below from arresting her. This was essential in ensuring her safety and that of her family. 

Although they did back down a bit, Sa’ida still lived a life of fear and vigilance, with people still randomly coming to her house to ask about her whereabouts and forcing her to change her son’s school.

 This was followed by a request for an arrest warrant in Kaduna state in Dec. 2020, Sa’ida learnt from a reliable source. This was when she decided to move to a major city within Nigeria and enrolled her children in new schools to get some sense of security. 

But as a mother, Sa’ida’s main concern is for her two young children – a nine-year-old and a four-year-old fighting sickle cell, with whom she currently shares a one room apartment with. Both at primary school age, their education had been abruptly interrupted after the school closure in response to the pandemic in March last year and now, due to the security threats posed by those in power intimidating their mother. 

“I ended up having to withdraw my four-year-old from school completely while I’ve had to change schools for my nine year old three times within the span of three months,” she said. 

“Ganduje has stooped so low for what he’s doing to you,” her four-year-old son tells her. 

“Someone said I shouldn’t allow my children to be exposed to what’s happening, but I’d rather they hear it from me than to pick up from conversations here and there.”

 “I can’t be waking them up in the middle of the night running around with them without an explanation. Plus, they are going around saying I’m a dangerous suspect and a criminal. The perception they have of me is very important,” she explains. 

Sai’da tells HumAngle how heartbreaking she finds it that her children have to go through this, but still finds it very important to update them every step of the way in language they can understand.

“If it was my husband who was being hunted, the house would still be in order, the kids can still go to school, it would just seem like he has traveled. But my entire house is locked up now. Everyone around me is suffering. Men have gone to jail and have been hounded before, but the lives of their families at home goes on,” she laments.


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Hafsah Abubakar Matazu

Hafsah Abubakar Matazu is the current Programme Director at HumAngle. She holds a Bachelor of Science (B.Sc) in Mass Communication from Baze University Abuja. Prior to joining HumAngle, she worked for Abuja-based Daily Trust Newspapers as an investigative reporter. She leads the program team in planning and implementing grants as well as funded and non funded reporting projects. She tweets via @hafsahabubakar_

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