Posted by Samuel on Thu 23rd Sep, 2021 - tori.ng
Mailafia died at the age of 64 at the University of Abuja Teaching Hospital, Gwagwalada, after a brief illness.
The popular phrase, “Hunted alive, not honoured in death.” perhaps, succinctly captured the story of a former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Dr. Obadiah Mailafia, who died in the early hours of Sunday, September 19, 2021.
Mailafia died at the age of 64 at the University of Abuja Teaching Hospital, Gwagwalada, after a brief illness.
His death shocked many Nigerians who looked up to him for his audacious voice against perceived official tardiness that has contributed to the crisis being experienced in certain sectors of the national life, including the economy.
Many leading organisations, including the Northern Governors Forum; Christian Association of Nigeria, Southern Kaduna People’s Union, Arewa Consultative Forum, National Consultative Front, amongst others, have since mourned the passing of the developmental economist.
However, in an unusual departure from the norm, the Presidency and the apex bank where Mailafia served as deputy governor between May 2005 and March 2007, have kept mum.
Though the Presidency has not issued any condolence message on the death of Mailafia five days after, it has condoled with legendary juju singer, Sunday Adegeye aka King Sunny Ade, on the death of his wife, Risikat Adegeye, who died on Tuesday.
The Presidency had also expressed sadness over the death of the Emir of Gaya, Ibrahim Abdulkadir, who died on Wednesday, September 22, a clear four days after Mailafia’s demise.
This is even as the administration had also congratulated, on September 21, the Prime Minister of Canada, Justin Trudeau, on his re-emergence after a hard fought snap election.
The Kaduna State Government, the home state of the deceased economist, has also not issued any condolence message on the demise of Mailafia; but the Benue State Governor, Samuel Ortom, has described Mailafia as a true patriot, saying that his death was painful to Nigerians, especially the people of the Middle Belt.
Efforts to reach presidential spokesman, Femi Adesina, proved abortive, as he neither took calls to his line nor replied to a text message sent by our correspondent on the matter.
Also, efforts to reach the Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed; as well as his spokesman, Segun Adeyemi, were unsuccessful as their lines were unreachable, while text messages sent to their lines were not replied as of press time.
Muyiwa Adekeye, Special Adviser on Media and Communication to Kaduna State Governor, Nasir El-Rufai, did not take calls to his line and did not reply to a text message sent by The PUNCH.
Our correspondent also contacted CBN Acting Director, Corporate Communications Department, Osita Nwanisobi, but when the matter was raised in a phone conversation on Thursday morning, he said, “Can you please send whatever you want to my phone?”
However, he had yet to reply to a text message sent by our correspondent on the matter.
Meanwhile, controversies have since trailed the demise of the Kaduna State indigene as the Middle Belt Forum alleged that he was shabbily treated by doctors at the hospital. The hospital management had denied the allegations, saying the doctors did all they could to save Mailafia’s life.
Profile
Mailafia was born on December 24, 1956, in the Sanga Local Government Area of Kaduna State.
He later graduated top of his class at Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, in 1978 with a B.Sc. Honours Social Sciences degree (Politics, Economics, and Sociology). He also has an M.Sc. from the same institution.
He subsequently won a French Government Scholarship to France, where he earned a Certificate in French Language and Civilisation from the University of Clermont-Ferrand in 1985.
Mailafia later proceeded to the United Kingdom as a Foreign and Commonwealth Office Scholar at Oriel College, earning a DPhil from the University of Oxford in 1995.
As a consistent ferocious critic of the Buhari regime, in September 2020, Mailafia alleged that a northern governor was a Boko Haram commander and moneybag. The Department of State Services and the Nigeria Police Force invited him to their Abuja and Jos offices several times, quizzing him, forcing him to recant his statement.
The former deputy governor, who was the Presidential candidate of the African Democratic Congress in the 2019 election, was an unapologetic critic of the Buhari regime and had advocated for public sector and exchange rate reforms.
In his last interview with The PUNCH, Mailafia said the refusal of the CBN to sell foreign exchange to bureau de change operators may not yield the expected result because corrupt bankers would frustrate it while the BDC operators were being shielded by a “Jigawa cabal”.
He had also lamented that Nigeria was operating a “dollarised” economy which was hampering economic growth.
Mailafia was a columnist with The PUNCH till his death.