Tag: Abubakar Atiku

  • ‘My miraculous survival of Boko Haram attack’

    ‘My miraculous survival of Boko Haram attack’

    It sounds like a movie story but it isn’t. Abubakar Umar, who has just graduated in Petroleum Chemistry from the American University of Nigeria (AUN) in Yola, the Adamawa State capital, was shot thrice by Boko Haram insurgents. He survived despite not receiving medical help for almost 24 hours. He is planning to write a book on his “miraculous survival”. He shares the synopsis of the book with KOFOWOROLA BELO-OSAGIE at his graduation last Saturday.

    •The story of a Boko Haram survivor

    Many in the graduating Class of the 2015 American University of Nigeria (AUN), Yola, won  thousands of naira in prizes for excellence in academics and leadership at an awards dinner last Friday, but the prize for courage, which went to Abubakar Umar, surpassed them all.

    It was only Umar that parents, teachers and dignitaries from far and wide, including the university’s founder, Alhaji Atiku Abubakar, gave a standing ovation as he made his way from the back of the expansive hall to the podium to receive his prize. Umar fell a victim of Boko Haram insurgency last year because of his dedication to community service. It remains a miracle that he lived to complete his BSc programme.  He had no medical help for almost 24 hours after he was shot last December 4.

    The university’s President, Dr Margee Ensign, described Umar’s courage as profound and deserving of recognition, especially as he was busy raising funds for the less privileged before he was attacked.

     

    The genesis

     

    It was not for want of adventure that Umar, who hails from Jigawa State, stayed behind after the university closed last December to do extra community service.  It was because the university requires all students to undertake community service projects of their choice – programmes they must initiate, raise funds for and implement to positively impact on their host community; and also because of his passion to help the less privileged.

    He said: “Here at AUN we do a lot of community service. For example, there’s this secondary school that has some extension of classrooms and they don’t have paint. So we organised some of our students to buy paint to paint those schools. We also tutor some of them. Also women from the community are taught English and Mathematics. Some are also taught tailoring and others.

    “I happen to be someone that loves travelling and anytime I am travelling, I see a lot of people, challenging people, lots of struggles everywhere.  I notice some people trekking some kilometres just trying to get drinking water so I know that not all people are from the same place, and some get many things easier than others. Hence, I believe that by reaching out to those people, one day, the gap won’t be that wide and everyone will be okay.”

    During his community service project, Umar said he helped to paint a secondary school in Yola and also teach mathematics and English, among other activities.

     

    The journey

     

    Done with his extra community service, Umar left Yola at 6am with the hope of stopping over at Jigawa to visit his grandparents before getting to Kano, where he lives with his parents.  He was aware of the increasing insecurity in the northeast, which forced the university to close earlier than normal for the year.  He took precautions by stopping in the transit town of Gombe to get some items for his grandparents and share information with fellow travellers on how best to proceed on the journey.  That interaction made him to change his route.

    “The travellers usually converse and exchange ideas about what is happening on the road. That was where the drivers were saying the road from Gombe to Bauchi was not safe. Usually, the road used to have more than 12 checkpoints, but on that day, those people coming from Kano said they saw no single checkpoint. And the military personnel stationed there are not usually brought to that place; they have their containers there so they live at that place.

    “For some strange reason on that day, no check point was seen. So the people were very cautious and they shared the information with us, telling us that we should not pass that road because anything could happen. A road that there is no check point, you know, you are on your own. So we decided that there is a much safer road, which is through the Nafana-Bajuga road, which will take you to Potiskum; then from Potiskum, you pass to Jigawa and then from there, you get to Kano. Although that was a longer route, on that day, it seemed to be the safest of all roads.”

    Sadly, it was not.  It was on that route – about three hours into the journey – that the insurgents struck twice.

    “So myself together with some public drivers, we passed that road and unfortunately, that was where it happened. We passed Bajuga, we passed Nafana, I think I was almost 40 km away from Potiskum. That was where the road was really bad, so I slowed down. When I slowed down, these insurgents came out from the bush and they started shooting drastically at us. At first I wanted to stop because I noticed they were putting on the military uniform.  The trousers were military and the timberland boots. But they were putting on head bands and screaming ‘Allahu Akbar’ so it made me realise that these were not military, they were the insurgents. So I downshifted the vehicle and sped off. And that was when they shot me on my left arm.

    “I kept on driving. I was very scared; so scared that I did not even notice that I had been shot. I was bleeding and kept on driving. I think I drove for five minutes when I noticed that the road was very rough again.  Within that interval of five minutes, there wasn’t any check point or any town in between. I wanted to stop anywhere I could reach quickly, like the nearest town, to report the incident, but there was none.  After the five minutes, I noticed another check point and the pot holes and the road was very bad so I slowed down. And when I slowed down, the same people came out again and they shot me the second time. That was when I was shot twice at my right arm.  But I had to continue driving, because if I had stopped, it would have been the end. I don’t know where the energy came from.”

     

    Help

     

    After some distance, Umar abandoned his car to seek help.  He was bleeding profusely and getting weak.  But help did not come early.  Despite meeting about four groups of people in the village (called Daudu) where he stopped and speaking Hausa to them, they did not help him; they even ignored him.    The last group of older men only volunteered information, advising him to avoid the major roads within the village because the insurgents were around and preaching.

    Their counsel ultimately proved useful as the back routes led him to his helpers – though he was initially turned away by them too.

    He said: “I just took a left turn and I was going. I never knew where I was going but I was just walking and I found myself in the compound of someone. I met a lady there and she wanted to give me shelter to stay but two older women in the house said I cannot stay because if the insurgents came, they would kill me and kill them too. So in order to protect themselves, I have to stay out.

    “I pleaded, because I knew if I should leave that place, I was going to die. But they said if I should continue pleading, that they were going to scream and call them and they were going to kill me. I said there was no need for that and I thanked the old woman and was on the verge of going.

    “But as I was about to go, the old woman told them that the insurgents told them that they were going to attack Gombe and those people happened to have relatives at Gombe. So the old woman told them that ‘if you cannot help this young man, how would you now expect God to protect your own relatives that the Boko Haram are going to attack next?’

    “That was what convinced them that I can stay at their house but should the insurgents come, they don’t know anything about me. So I said ok, I would take my chance. They took me to a toilet where I hid.”

    From about 10am after getting to Dauda Village to the next morning, Umar stayed without medical attention because none was available in the village.  It was perhaps the longest wait of his life as his military contacts could not rescue him until the next day.

    With his car and all its contents stolen, he had to depend on his hosts for first aid and contact with the world.

    “When the man of the house came…I directed him to make the salt and water solution to be very thick and asked him to pour it on the wounds. I could see my bones from the injuries, because they were very deep. He poured it and funny enough, I don’t know what happened, maybe because of the trauma, but I did not feel any pain at that point. He used rags to tie my hand that I had a fracture.  Fortunately, the bleeding reduced to drops.  That sustained till I think around 6pm.

    “He gave me his phone and that was when I made contact.  I have friends in the military.  I called them.  The person I know in the military was not in town.  So he called his friend and the friend then called me; he asked for my location, I told him.  That was around 7 ‘o’ clock in the evening.  He told me that no one can come and take me at that particular moment because Gombe State had imposed a 24-hour curfew then; no one was allowed to move.  He said from Potiskum where they were coming to rescue me, they were afraid that the insurgents may still be around.  So there might be a chance that I might eventually die unless I stayed there till the next morning.  I said no problem.  He told me not to take a lot of water; that if I take water I might die, so I didn’t take anything.  He told me to get some antibiotics if it was possible.  Everyone had left that place so there wasn’t any pharmaceutical help of any kind.  I have to stay there till the next place and that was when they came to get me.”

    The next day, in order to get help, Umar said he disguised like a mad man to beat Boko Haram informants.

    “The man of the house told me that there were Boko Haram informants in that particular village.  So if I am going out I need to dress like a mad man and disguise myself so nobody would recognise me; and I had to go through the back door so that no one will see me and I won’t put him into any sort of trouble.

    “And that was exactly what happened.  I covered myself in chicken dung and some sand, mud and something like that.  I removed my shoes; put them inside my pocket, and walked barefooted like a mad man.  I walked to the road side and they came and took me to Potiskum, where I received first aid treatment before my parents came and took me to Kano where I had surgery.  And I think I didn’t recover until after 14 weeks,” he said.

     

    Recovery

     

    Eight weeks in hospital stabilised Umar enough to return to school towards the end of January.  But it took another six weeks before he could remove his cast and learn to write again.  He missed examinations; could not take notes in class and had trouble with post traumatic stress disorder.  But, he got help from the university.

    He said: “Even when I was recovering I hardly slept for over two hours in the night or may be one hour. I had nightmares.  But later on, I kept on getting help from the AUN Psychologist, Regina Musa.  She did well.  I also received therapy from AUN clinic.

    “I resumed school sometime late January (21st/22nd) – that was about eight weeks.  I had to be with my POP cast for like I think extra four or five weeks.  And then I just attend classes but I can’t write.  I used my phone to snap the blackboard, stuff like that.  There were exams then but I couldn’t write them.  The school knew about my situation so they said that they were going to give me make-up exams when I was alright.

    “After the cast was removed, it took me like two extra weeks to learn to start holding my pen because I had a fracture in my right hand and I could not write.  You can see that it is still not fully alright.  They gave me my make up exams and here I am.  I passed and I have graduated.”

     

    Future plans

     

    Despite the challenges, Umar graduated with a Cumulative Grade Point Average (CGPA) of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale), which is an equivalent of a second class upper degree.

    His immediate plan, with his school’s support, is to write a book on his experience; then go for further studies.

    Above all, Umar is grateful to be alive and now he is a Petroleum Chemist.

    “The day of the incident, I felt like I could have died because I passed out. I lost so much blood; there wasn’t any transfusion; I stayed for 24 hours without any medical help.  So I believed I could have died that day but somehow Allah kept me alive for some reasons I guess.  Who knows maybe completing this degree is one of the reasons.”

  • Adamawa: Atiku disowns pro-Ribadu messages

    Adamawa: Atiku disowns pro-Ribadu messages

    Former Vice President and chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Atiku Abubakar has dissociated himself from a purported photograph of him canvassing for votes for Mallam Nuhu Ribadu, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) governorship candidate in Adamawa State.

    Atiku, in a press statement signed by his media office on Friday, said that the circulation of a photograph showing him carrying a banner asking for votes for Ribadu was a fraud done out of malice.

    According to the statement, the banner in question was the banner he held in canvassing for votes for the Osun State governor, Rauf Aregbesola, during the last governorship election in Osun State last year.

    Atiku said that the imperative of voting for the APC in the next line of elections in the country on April 11 is a virtue that he is firmly committed to, and to which he will urge all Nigerians to give unwavering support.

    He said: “The purported photograph of me canvassing for votes for the PDP in the Adamawa governorship election is a fraud and done out of outright malice.

    “I did not and will never call for support for any candidate of the PDP. The photograph that is being circulated is the Photoshop copy of my photograph that called for votes for the Osun State governor in the 2014 gubernatorial election in that state.

    “My commitment to support and canvass for votes for the APC, not only in Adamawa State, but in all strata of elections across the country is a virtue that I will urge all Nigerians to follow,” he said.

  • ‘Atiku confident of victory at  primaries’

    ‘Atiku confident of victory at primaries’

    All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential aspirant, former Vice President Abubakar Atiku, is confident of victory at the primaries, his campaign organisation said yesterday in Lagos.

    The Chairman of the campaign organisation, Dr. Babalola Borisade, said Atiku, the Turaki Adamawa, had about 70 per cent chance of getting the ticket at the shadow poll billed for Lagos tomorrow.

    Also in the race are former Head of State Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, Kano State Governor Rabiu Kwanwaso, his Imo State counterpart, Owelle Rochas Okorocha, and Leadership newspaper publisher Nda-Isaiah.

    No fewer than 7,000 delegates are expected at Teslim Balogun Stadium, Surulere, Lagos, venue of the primaries.

    Borisade, the former Aviation minister, who spoke with reporters, said many delegates supported Atiku’s candidature because he was an experienced politician with tentacles across the 36 states.

    He said: “To be realistic, I believe we have between 65 and 70 per cent chances of winning. I got my last briefing about an hour ago and the beauty of it is that our momentum is growing. There is no state we are in control that has been taken away from us. But, we have been encroaching into states we were not in control before. So, conservatively, I will say we have between 65 and 75 per cent chances.”

    Borisade reiterated the determination of Atiku to halt the tendency towards one party state and dictatorship, assuring that he would not defect from APC if he did not emerge as its standard-bearer.

     

    The campaign director, however, showed reservations about the preparations for the exercise by the Planning Committee, stressing that some issues must be resolved to guarantee a credible process.

    He added: “Only three states have issues that need to be resolved. These are states where non-elected council chairmen are being listed as delegates, whereas the guidelines of the party say, to participate in the convention, you must have been an elected chairman. So, if somebody appoints a chairman against the stipulation of the constitution, we believe that it is not appropriate and the party has taken a decision on that. If they resolve it and return with what the constitution says, we have no objection.”

     

     

  • Boko Haram: Nigeria needs global support now -Atiku

    Boko Haram: Nigeria needs global support now -Atiku

    Text of a World Press Conference by H.E. Atiku Abubakar, GCON, former Vice President, Federal Republic of Nigeria, at the Transcorp Hilton Hotel, Abuja.

    Monday, November 3, 2014

     

    Gentlemen of the Press:

    It is with deep regret that I came to learn that Mubi, which is one the largest towns in Adamawa State of northeast Nigeria, has been taken by the terrorist group commonly known as Boko Haram.  As you may know, in recent weeks and months, Mubi has been a town to which displaced persons from further north have fled for safety after their communities fell to Boko Haram.  As I speak, the inhabitants of Mubi, together with those who went there for safety, find themselves at the mercy of this terrorist group.  
     
    I am Nigerian.  I believe in the integrity of Nigeria as a whole, and every part of this country matters to me.  But I was born and bred in the northeast.  So, please, excuse me if I should say a few words about the part of the country where I am from, about what the people from the northeast of Nigeria have had to suffer for far, far too long.  
     
    Things should never have got to this stage.  Thousands of Nigerians have had to flee their homes.  Their houses and farms have been destroyed.  They do not know where to go or how to restart their lives.  That is the degree to which we have come in this country. I say this with reluctance and with shame.  The situation in which we find ourselves today is grave.  Much of Borno, and the north of Adamawa and Yobe states is already at the mercy of the terrorists.  It started a few months ago with Bama, which is nearly 400 kilometres from Yola, capital of Adamawa State. 

    The next major town to be taken by terrorists was Gwoza, where a terrorist caliphate flag has long been hoisted.  Smaller towns near Gwoza such as Pulka and Limankra are equally not free.  Next was Madagali.  The town is still being occupied.  Then fell Gulak.  Next was Michika, then Bazza.  Next was the twin town of Uba which is half Adamawa and half Bornu.  Its neighboring town of Lassa was also overrun.  Uba was the latest town captured before the terrorists trampled on Mubi.  People from these troubled areas are now pouring into Yola for safety.
     
    As somebody who hails from Adamawa State, you can appreciate why I feel such emotion at the fate of my people.    For whatever reason, our defence forces are unable to cope and unable to defend. My sympathies go out to the soldiers who find themselves in a situation not of their making.  This is a crisis of leadership.
     
    We were told that the budget for security was going to be enlarged so that the security agencies and military would be in a better position to tackle the insurgency.  How is it possible that a great nation like Nigeria should find itself in a situation where a handful of terrorists is able to invade a town as large as Mubi with a population of about 300,000? How were the insurgents able to so easily take a town of this size, and the people find themselves defenseless and undefended?  How is it that the people have been made to suffer as they have?
     
    I have previously spoken about the deteriorating security situation in this country on a number of occasions. On those occasions I deliberately restrained myself from speaking in a manner that might be construed as distracting the government and the security forces as they grappled with the dire security situation.  But the scale of injustice the people of Nigeria are suffering has reached a stage where I am obliged to amplify my concerns. 

    Many of our citizens, unable to come to terms with why a so-called “Africa’s best army” has been unable to confront this horrendous situation, are increasingly assuming that this whole thing is about electoral politics.  They suspect that the seeming inability of the government to end the crisis is a ploy to weaken some parts of the country ahead of the 2015 elections. Can we, in all honesty, blame them for having those suspicions?
     
    I call upon the international community to help us.  I am making a special appeal to countries with sufficient know how and experience in tackling terrorism to increase their assistance to us. 

    The relief agencies that are already working here should please double their efforts. And all people of goodwill should help in any way they can and to do more than they have been doing to alleviate the pain and suffering that we Nigerians face through this insurgency.  At a time when we are constantly bombarded with horror stories of ugly events elsewhere in the world – here in West Africa, we are faced with the Ebola epidemic and other trouble spots – I draw your attention to a humanitarian crisis which is also a matter of international security. 

    This Boko Haram insurgency has been with us now for several years but has, in these last few days, taken a step further towards being a disaster of unimaginable proportions.  Hundreds of thousands of people are at risk.  Nigeria needs the world’s support. The world must not abandon Nigerians in our time of need.

     


  • Jonathan running government of clientelism  – Atiku

    Jonathan running government of clientelism – Atiku

    • The former vice president, Atiku Abubakar, on Monday accused President Goodluck Jonathan of indulging in “politics of clientelism” – awarding favours only to cronies, to the detriment of accountability and full democratic participation.Atiku, who is a presidential aspirant of the All Progressives Congress (APC), said the favours take the form of “public sector jobs appointments, distribution of resources through licences, contracts and tax waivers” ostensibly to curry political gains from the beneficiaries.The former vice president, who spoke during a press briefing at the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library (OOPL), Abeokuta, the Ogun State, through the Director – General, 2015 Atiku Campaign Organisation, Prof. Babalola  Borishade, said the beneficiaries of the favours go about “mobilising political support and loyalty for their patrons.”Aside the press briefing attended by Dr. Nathaniel Yaduma, Dr. Akinwunmi Oluwole, Dr. Garba Abari and chaired by Prof. Femi Aborisade at the OOPL, a two – day summit to review the state of the nation and proffer a way forward organised by the Atiku Campaign Organisation also takes place at the same venue.

      Citing the Transformation Ambassadors of Nigeria (TAN) spectacle as a case in point to buttress Jonathan’s clientelism style, Atiku lamented that the rest of Nigerians  who stay out of this network do not only remain excluded from the decision making process, but are also cut – off from enjoying the benefits of democracy.

      He said, “A deductive observer will not fail to notice that the nation has been gravitating from the presidential system of governance stipulated in our constitution to presidentialism.

      “This means the systematic concentration of political power in the hands of one individual or a cabal.

      “As a result, effective accountability and representation through popular democratic participation is giving way to personal rule and single party dictatorships rooted on politics of clientelism.

      “Clientelism refers to the awarding of personal favours among patrimonial cronies. These favours take the form of public sector jobs, appointments, distribution of resources through licences, contracts and tax waivers. In return, the cronies mobilize political support and loyalty for their patrons, the TAN spectacle.”

  • Atiku to Nigerians: You have opportunity to change inept government

    Atiku to Nigerians: You have opportunity to change inept government

    Former Vice President Abubakar Atiku sent a wakeup call to Nigerians yesterday, sensitizing them to change the clueless, inept,  and corrupt Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) led government in the 2015 Presidential election.

    He said: “Today, you have got the opportunity to change the government that is corrupt, that is inept, that is weak, that has no clue.”

    Speaking at the All Progressives Congress (APC) National Convention at Abuja, he said that his prediction in 2011 that President Goodluck Jonathan has no clue about the nation’s problems has come to pass.

    “In 2011, I stood in this Square and I told Nigerians that they were about to elect a government that did not have any clue to the problem of this country. And today, we are seeing that prophecy,” he submitted.

    Atiku assured the citizenry that he will particularly lead the battle for the change of the current administration at the centre.

    The ex-Vice President said:  “Tonight is going to be the birth of the alternative party for the people of this country, who yearn change: For the people of this country who want good governance, for the people of this country who want better security, for people of this country who want employment particularly our youth, for the people of this country who want better healthcare, for the people of this country who want to see a better future for their children.”

    He urged fellow party men to use their convention to distinguish themselves from the PDP, stressing that “to night we must show that we are a democratic party.”

    APC, according to him, was not founded on the premise of region, religion and ethnicity.

    His words: “Tonight, we must show that we place this country Nigeria first before any other thing. We are not going to show that we are either from the North or from the South, we are not Muslims or Christians. We are not anything but Nigerians first.”

    While appealing to Nigerians to embrace the opportunity, Atiku urged the members to ensure that APC comes victorious in the 2015 polls.