Tag: Aliyu

  • Aliyu will succeed as minister, says Gaya

    Former Yobe State Deputy Governor Abubakar Aliyu was one of the ministerial nominees screened by the Senate. Correspondent DUKU JOEL examines the challenges that will confront him in his new position.

    To many observers in Yobe State, former Deputy Governor Abubakar Aliyu has been a sacrificial lamb during general elections.

    His nomination as a minister, therefore, came as a surprise. It was shocking to the people who perceived him as a victim of power play. Although he aspired to be a senator, luck did not smile on him.

    Aliyu’s nomination can be described a voyage on a political  sea characterised by turbulence.

    Observers thought that the ‘Jarma of Potiskum’ was effortlessly and blindly swimming against the tide. Everything seemed to be falling in the opposite direction.

    However, his admirers beleve that his nominationwas an act of God.

    Many thought that Aliyu, an engineer, would succceed his former boss, Governor Ibrahim Gaidam, after his two terms of eight years.But, he cautioned his supporters against making unnecessary moves on his behalf to avoid heating up the state. Instead, he urged them to pray and allow the will of Allah to be done.

    Aliyu lost out during the selection process. Govenor  Mai Mala emerged as the anointed candidate of the party.

    Also, the former deputy governor lost out during the senatorial shadow poll. Although he was given the House of Representatives ticket, he declained. Aliyu explained that he did not want to disrupt the existing zoning agreement in his constituency.

    Hailing his humility and honesty,  Senator  Kabiru Gaya (Kano North) described him as “a loyal, humbled and competent gentleman.”

    During the screening in the Senate, Gaya alluded to these virtues. Thus, he was asked to “take a bow and go.” It was a rare privilege.

    Gaya had urged the Senate to set aside its tradition and accord Aliyu the honour.

    He said:“He has been a loyal deputy governor for 10 years. I have known him for  many years. This is a person that was given another opportunity to take a seat at the House of Representatives, but he refused. He has been nice and humble. He is also a fellow of the Nigerian Society of Engineers. I believe he is qualified . I appeal to our colleagues that this is a gentleman to the core and we should allow him take a bow and leave”.

    To Senator James Manager,  Aliyu earned himself the respect of the Red Chambers because of his “fantastic humility.”

    Senate President Ahmad Lawan also said he was proud of the nominee, based on the testimonies about him.

    The Senate President said:“He is loyal, committed and competent. He has been doing well and he followed the footsteps of the former governor. We are proud of our nominee.”

    Aliyu was an outstanding deputy governor. Hehas received many awards as the most loyal  and longest serving deputy governor in Nigeria.  Throughout his tenure, he maintained  cordial relations with his boss, despite efforts to create rifts between them.

    Reflecting on his political career, Aliyu said: “Naturally, I am a very loyal person. Not only to my boss, but everyone that comes my way and interacts with me.

    “To my boss, I am and would always be, because he is my mentor. Another thing is that, one has to be patient, honest, truthful and avoid lying, breaking promises or hypocrisy. I always tried my best not to be found in any of these. I don’t harm or reciprocate harm. That is why I was considered loyal and my inspiration is from the teachings of my religion, Islam.”

    He added: “As a deputy governor, l maintained loyalty to the governor, which added value and trust into our relationship. Unlike what was obtained in some places, my governor invested his trust in me and nominated me twice to serve as his deputy. The 10 years have been of service to the people.”

    Aliyu’s asset is competence. He was never found wanting in any assignment given to him by Gaidam, who delegated many duties to him, including overseeing the Ministries of Health, Commerce, Integrated and Rural Development.

    His exemplary leadership at the State Ad-hoc Committee on Immunization propelled Yobe State into that first position as the most improved state in primary health delivery. His commitment to the success of the ‘Save One Million Life’ also earned the state a $29 grant and accolades from the Bill Malinda & Gates Foundation and Dangote Foundation.

    Aliyu developed a strong coordinated approach with humanitarian actors in the state, following  his appointment as the chairman of the  Ad-hoc committee on the Resettlement, Reconstruction and Rehabilitation. He brought the humanitarian actors working under one roof and streamlined their activities to mitigate duplication in interventions in care and welfare of displaced people.

    An elated Lawan, who is from Yobe, assured that Aliyu will succeed as minister.

    He said: “We from Yobe are very proud of the choice of Engr. Abubakar Aliyu as our nominee. He is one person that everyone in the state is proud of his nomination as minister.”

    Aliyu’s choice  has also underlined the unity of purpose in Yobe APC.

    However, many challenges will confront him. Many expect him to support the present governor, who was his rival during the primary.

    Aliyu is also expected to extend the same cooperation to the National Assembly members from his zone who were also his co-contestants.

  • Rerun polls: Tambuwal, Aliyu, Ganduje,Yusuf, others locked in fierce battle

    After the March 9 governorship elections across the country, the polls in six states – Adamawa, Bauchi, Benue, Kano, Plateau and Sokoto – were declared inconclusive. In this analysis, Deputy Political Editor RAYMOND MORDI who has been monitoring the situation writes on how the elections in five states will be fought and won. In Adamawa, the governorship rerun is on hold following a court order; the supplementary poll holds today only in two constituencies for state assembly.

    THE two major parties, the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) resorted to a war of words when the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) declared the recent governorship elections in six states inconclusive and announced later that it would conduct supplementary polls in five of the affected states today. The governorship rerun will not hold today in Adamawa because of a court order barring INEC. It will, however, hold in two constituencies for the state assembly.

    Both conventional and social media are awash with last ditch efforts by the affected parties to get an upper hand in today’s supplementary elections. The two parties have been busy with fresh campaigns, establishing alliances and heading to the courts, to secure injunctions to stop the election.

    Curiously, it is first-term governors from either the APC or the PDP that are facing serious challenge in the states where elections are scheduled to hold. The following is how the supplementary election battle in each of the states would be fought and won.

    BAUCHI

    The back and forth movement over today’s supplementary election in some polling units Bauchi State was eventually settled on Thursday, with INEC saying it will go ahead with the exercise.

    The Bauchi State governorship election was declared inconclusive, follow ing irregularities in some polling units across 15 local government areas.

    The INEC Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) in Bauchi, Ibrahim Abdullahi, said today’s supplementary elections are due to be held in 36 polling units in 15 local government areas. There are 22,759 registered voters in the affected 36 polling units where the supplementary elections will be taking place today.

    In the results released so far, the PDP candidate, Bala Mohammed, is leading with 4,059 votes; having scored 469,512 votes, against 465,453 votes polled by the incumbent Governor Mohammed Abubakar of the APC.

    Results from Tafawa Balewa local government are also in dispute, after thugs attacked the local government collation centre and disrupted the collation of results.

    INEC had decided to resume the collation of results in the council, but a court ruling has  suspended the exercise in the local government, which is regarded as a stronghold of the PDP. So, the local government is not part of today’s supplementary elections.

    INEC had indicated that it would resume the collation of results of the disputed Tafawa Balewa Local Government after considering a report submitted by the Resident Electoral Commissioner (REC) in Bauchi. But it had to stay action on the matter, following the court injunction. The PDP insists that the initial cancellation of the result from the local government was illegal because the returning officer did not have the power to cancel the results already collated. The party said since there were no reports of violent clashes and disruptions of voting at the polling units,  which was the only ground for the cancellation of results, the returning officer acted outside his power by rejecting the result from the council. The PDP on Thursday threatened to boycott today’s supplementary elections on the grounds that INEC has allegedly compromised the process by acceding to the demands of the ruling APC.

    It had also appointed a new collation/returning officer to conclude the collation process, after Mrs Dominion Anosike withdrew over alleged threats to her life and her family. But the decision of the electoral body was rejected by the APC.

    PDP chairman, Hamza Akuyam, said no supplementary elections should take place until the full governorship election results collation, which ended with Tafawa Balewa local government, are announced.

    He said: “Doing otherwise will be synonymous with writing a reseat examination while the main examination has not been marked.” He accused the REC in Bauchi of deliberately keeping everybody waiting at the collation centre until around 2pm when he abruptly surfaced with a court injunction halting the collation exercise.

    With the current state of affairs, the PDP is in pole position to win the election. Apart from the fact that it is leading with 4,059 votes, the results from Tafawa Balewa Local Government, which is a stronghold of the party is still outstanding. At the end of the day, the opposition party is likely to carry the day.

    BENUE

    In Benue State, with the margin between Governor Samuel Ortom of the PDP and his APC counterpart, Emmanuel Jime, INEC is conducting today’s election to fulfill all righteousness, because it is obvious that PDP has an unassailable lead.

    The supplementary election will be conducted in almost all the 23 local government areas with about 121,091 votes at stake. After the March 9 election, the PDP was leading 81,554 votes. The party polled 420,576 votes, while its closest challenger, the APC, scored 329,022. INEC had to declare the election inconclusive, because cancelled votes -121,091 — were higher than the margin between the two top candidates.

    Governor Ortom is likely to emerge victorious at the end of today’s exercise, because it will be difficult to have a 100 per cent turnout and the APC getting enough votes to cancel the PDP’s lead. The two leading political parties have been wooing voters ahead of today’s election.

    The PDP had insisted that Ortom won the election and that he should be declared winner of the election.

    KANO

    Today’s supplementary election in Kano State is a battle between former Governor Rabiu Kwankwaso and incumbent Governor Abdullahi Ganduje. The election is likely to determine the political future of the two gladiators. The two politicians were allies from 1999 when they were elected as governor and deputy governor respectively, up to 2015 when the former nominated the latter to succeed him as the state governor.

    But, less than two years after the election that brought Ganduje to power, his relationship with his former boss became sour and this finally led to the defection of Kwankwaso to the PDP.

    Ganduje is seeking re-election to complete a second tenure as governor, while the ‘PDP candidate, Abba Kabir Yusuf, is contesting governorship for the first time.

    This is where the real contest is. Although the PDP occupies the high ground in this contest, its lead is not enough to guarantee that it would triumph at the end of the day. The final outcome would be determined by the electors who will come out to cast their ballot today.  In the results declared so far, the PDP flag bearer leads the incumbent governor with 26,000 votes, while the votes at stake in the 172 polling units where the supplementary election is taking place are 128,572.

    The March 9 governorship election was cancelled in the affected units due to disturbances over voting and nonusage of the Card Reader machines.

    The declaration of the election as inconclusive is in accordance with section 26 of the INEC Act, because the number of cancelled votes is beyond the margin between the candidate with the highest votes and the one that came second.

    In the results released so far, the PDP candidate scored 1,014,474, while the APC had 987,819 votes.

    There is no telling who will emerge victorious at the end of the day, given the number of registered voters in the area where results were cancelled.

    Nevertheless, the PDP candidate appears to have an upper hand, with the 26,000 votes advantage he enjoys going into today’s supplementary election.

    PLATEAU

    In the case of Plateau State, today’s supplementary election may turn out to be a mere formality. Incumbent Governor Simon Lalong, who is the APC candidate, is in pole position to secure his re-election.

    While the supplementary elections in Adamawa, Bauchi and Benue seem set to go PDP way, the APC has similarly secured acomfortable lead in Plateau State.

    Other things being equal, the incumbent, Simon Lalong, seems ready to clinch a second term in office.

    So far, in the declared election result, Lalong polled 583,255 votes, while Jeremiah Useni of the PDP secured 538,326 votes. With a margin 44,929 between the two contestants and 49,377 cancelled votes, today’s election is a mere formality.

    Observers say the supplementary election is needless and a mere waste of time and resources because it will be extremely difficult, if not impossible, for Useni to come from far behind to level up the margin and beat Lalong. They say the odds weigh heavily to the point of impossibility against the PDP candidate, for him to defeat the APC candidate.

     

    SOKOTO

    In Sokoto, the PDP candidate, Alhaji Aminu Waziri Tambuwal, is clinging to a narrow lead ahead of his APC counterpart, Alhaji Ahmad Aliyu Sokoto. Tambuwal leads with 3,413 votes, having scored 489,558 votes, against his APC counterparts 486,090 votes.

    A winner could not be declared since the cancelled votes were more than the margin between the winner and the runner off. The number of registered voters in the area where results were cancelled are 75, 403, whereas Tambuwal is leading his APC counterpart with 3, 413 votes.

    Sokoto is another electoral contest that is too close to call. After defecting to the PDP to pursue his presidential ambition, Tambuwal lost some of his local support, especially that of the defacto godfather of Sokoto politics and a former governor of the state, Aliyu Wamakko.

    The APC draws most of its support from the influential Wamakko and many analysts did not give the PDP a chance until it managed to secure a respectable portion of the votes during the presidential election.

    The supplementary election may, however, offer the APC an opportunity to rouse itself from slumber and restrategise for a better outing.

  • Your investments yielded no gain, Bello tells Aliyu

    Niger State Governor Abubakar Sani Bello yesterday replied his predecessor, Dr. Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu, over allegation that the governor was feeding the residents with lies and sentiments.

    The governor said none of the investments his predecessor embarked upon yielded any gain to the state.

    He said it was uncharitable for Aliyu to accuse him of feeding the people with lies, especially when he made efforts not to join issues with the former governor.

    In a statement by his Media and Publicity Coordinator, Mr. Jide Orintunsin, the governor said he never accused Aliyu of not investing.

    He said majority of the projects the former governor embarked upon were not only inflated but had little or no direct impact on their immediate communities.

    Bello said others were mere white elephant projects.

    The statement added: “On assumption of office in 2015, we chose to draw the line in order to focus on his Restoration Agenda, despite the massive deterioration and decayed system inherited. Today, most of the so-called investments the past administration prides itself of suffered on arrival.

    “It is on record that some of these projects never took off before Dr. Aliyu left office on May 28, 2015, especially the well-articulated projects on paper by the portfolio-carrying investors who invaded the state during the period under review. Sadly, millions of naira of public funds were sunk into the never-to-take-off projects.

    “One recalls with regrets the funfair and the huge budget expended on the climbing of Zuma Rock under the disguise of flagging off a tourism project.

    “The failed cable car project linking the rock to the popular Gurara Waterfalls; the half a billion naira burnt on the drawing and feasibility study of the moribund five-star hotel in Minna; the massive Minna City Centre project; the conversion of IBB Specialised Hospital to a world-class facility and the over-inflated New Minna Township Stadium in Maikunkule, to mention but a few. One then wonders what proof Dr. Aliyu requires.

    “One is hastened to ask: what is in an investment that has failed to yield any dividend, years after? How many of such investments took off before the expiration of his term?

    “The irony of it is that the huge expenditure on all these non-yielding projects would have been used to fund infrastructure when the value of naira was appreciably high. Despite several promises made by the Talba administration to defray all the bonds secured, it is on record that we have to reschedule repayment till 2021.”

    The statement stressed that it would have been better “for Dr. Babangida Aliyu to keep mute rather than challenge his successor”.

    It added: “The predecessors, especially, ex-Governor Aliyu, is to blame for the sorry state of infrastructure in the state. The immediate past Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) administration indulged in wasteful spending.”

  • APC convention: Group backs Aliyu for women leader

    A group,  Women in Grassroots Politics, has called for the re-election of the All Progressives Congress (APC) National Woman Leader, Dr. Ramatu Tijjani Aliyu.

    The group commended Hajiya Aliyu, who is also the President of the Council of African Political Parties (CAPP) in Sudan, for her commitment to democratic ideals and open door policy.

    The group applauded her willingness to address issues that are germane to the growth and development of womenfolk.

    It said: ”The way and manner she has kept the APC Women of Worth, a platform representing key voices of APC women in one-fold, is one of the reasons for wanting her to continue.”

    A member of the group and a stalwart of APC, Princess Olajumoke, said Aliyu’s open door policy and good disposition to people, irrespective of tribe, race or position, have endeared her to stakeholders.   She said: “This is a woman that will not look at you as being inferior to her. She will listen to you and be eager to attend to any issue brought to her. If you enter her office crying, you will smile on your way out,” Olajumoke enthused.

    Another member of the group, Hajia Rabiu Adama, said: “Aliyu has done what other women in her shoes has never done before now within the shortest time she got to her present position.

    “Let’s look into what she has done, from being loyal to the party, to the total support she has been giving to the  President himself. Her support for the women folks is enormous, although there is no money attached to her office for such projects.

    “After rendering help, she is not the type that goes out to be proclaiming she has done you a favour. She is indeed a silent philanthropist.

    ”Many things have happened in the party, but due to her sheer magnanimity, it never resulted into chaos. This is the type that we want to be seeing in our country.

    “We want her re-elected and if possible be given bigger responsibilities where she can impact more to the society.”

  • Starving in plain sight

    Starving in plain sight

    ALIYU squatted in the spot where shrapnel tore his mother apart. The explosion at dusk harvested souls like unripe nuts. It shattered the four-year-old’s temporary refuge in Konduga, killing 21 people including his mother and five suicide bombers.

    But as the village mourned it’s losses, Aliyu’s flaky skin and parched lips, his distended belly and gaunt eyes, bemoaned excruciating hunger pangs. Spasms of starvation constrain filial grief he could make no sense of. Aliyu, like his displaced peer in Maiduguri, Borno state, worries about food.

    Having lost his father in an earlier terrorist attack in Bama, the four-year-old lives at the mercy of elderly refugees and volunteers of the United Nations’ World Food Programme (WFP) serving in the area. Impatiently, he waits for the moment food would be shared by camp officials.

    “However, his rations are given to an adult, a woman and mother in particular, willing to help administer it to him. The woman feeds it to him alongside her own kids,” disclosed a relief worker on the camp.

    Several metres from Aliyu’s perch, Bintu Umaru’s cry stabbed at the quiet like a desperate dirge. It pierced through her sister, Jariya’s teenage heart, evoking anguish she would rather forget. Jariya dreads Bintu’s hunger spasms.

    Since their mother’s death during Boko Haram’s assault on their community in Bama, Jariya and her three-year-old sibling have been living in dire straits.

    “She was few months old when Boko Haram killed mother. We lost contact with father too when Boko Haram attacked our community. They killed too many people. We didn’t see father afterwards. We don’t know if he is alive or dead,” she said.

    Life was unbearable for the duo until they relocated from the forest that they fled into in the wake of Boko Haram’s assault on Bama. “We couldn’t get food to eat and we had no one to fend for us or give us money,” she said.

    Save periodic donations by local and international humanitarian agencies, the sisters’ case may aggravate. Nonetheless, the reality of feeding and providing decent shelter for her three-year-old sister manifests scarily on Jariya. Thus she occasionally begs for food and money whenever they exhaust the little provisions they get.

    Every month, the sisters eagerly await the hour when humanitarian personnel would beckon on parents and guardians to present their infants to receive rations of food and nutritional supplements.

    In the decrepit tent they share, the ambiance is dour and stripped of comfort. All around the siblings, starvation booms eerily in shades of angst and despondency, masking their visage and other refugees’ faces.

    Aliyu and the Umarus are among the 5.2 million people currently facing food insecurity in northeast Nigeria. However, as the government and humanitarian agencies struggle to contain the emergency, a fresh crisis looms in the guise of displaced persons trooping in from Cameroon.

    Their arrival portends unforeseen disruptions to ongoing palliatives, particularly nutritional support to displaced infants and underage kids scattered across the northeast, according to a WFP scribe.

    “In June, WFP, both directly and through partnerships, provided food assistance to approximately 1.1 million beneficiaries in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa States. This month we have assisted around 16,500 new arrivals and returnees in Bama, Gwoza and Ngala LGAs,” she said.

    The refugees return from Cameroon puts additional pressure on the humanitarian response no doubt. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) reports that between April and June this year, over 13,300 refugees have returned to northeast Nigeria. The influx of returnees is severely stressing limited existing services and aggravating the food and nutrition crisis, as returning refugees and IDPs are adding to the strain on both camps and host communities.

    On July 19 and 22, two movements took place from Cameroonian’s Kolofata region with 155 people returning to Banki in Borno under two separate circumstances. The 56 people that arrived on July claimed that they returned voluntarily while the 59 individuals that returned on three days later were transported by Cameroonian military convoy.

    They disclosed that they were rescued by the Cameroonian military from Boko Haram and held at the Maroura Salak Military Barrack in Cameroon for 11 months before being transported to Nigeria on July 22.

    The UNHCR team in Banki described the physical condition of all the 155 people as satisfactory. Majority of the returnees are women and children. With the latest arrivals, the total number of individuals in Banki is close to 45,000, said UNHCR.

    Many new arrivals dwell outside the camps, taking refuge in Banki, Muna, Muna-Dalti among others. Many more are scattered across Maiduguri. New arrivals are either renting houses or staying with host families, who are themselves living in very precarious conditions in the open and under trees.

    The presence of the newcomers is putting a strain on meagre local food and water resources. But for the support of the state government and international aid groups and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) many kids would starve to death in the IDP camps.

    Despite the flurry of bleak reports about the situation in Borno and other parts of northeast Nigeria, the situation, according to Mohammed Kanar, National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) coordinator for the country’s northeast region, is improving. Kanar revealed that the Borno State government is doing a lot to alleviate the suffering of displaced persons living in the state’s IDP camps. According to him, despite the increase in the number of arrivals to the IDP camps, NEMA and state agencies are doing their best to ameliorate the displaced persons’ woes.

    Notwithstanding relief interventions, IDPs besiege refugee camps from Borno’s strife-torn areas. In response, the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) in concert with the WFP, has devised a system by which new arrivals are registered and accommodated into the IDP camps’ feeding programme. But of the new arrivals, the welfare of malnourished infants, toddlers and other underage children are prioritised above all others because as minors, they are more vulnerable than others.

    Of this vulnerable divide, greater attention is currently devoted to children under two years of age by WFP due to the organisation’s lean resources.

    Thus displaced orphans like Aliyu and Bintu fall outside the loop of government and non-governmental organisation (NGO) dietary support for displaced minors.

    Not your typical cash palliative

    Besides offering nutritional support, WFP has also devised a cash-based palliative for starving mothers and kids. Several miles from Maiduguri, Mariam Labi, 34, recalled her past struggles to feed her three children. Labi’s life disintegrated in the wake of  Boko Haram’s attack on her community, Manjin village in Gujba local government of Yobe state. In the attack, the insurgents killed her husband and first son.

    She said: “I had to flee into the bush with my surviving children, to escape death in the hands of Boko Haram. From there, the soldiers helped us to Damaturu.”

    As she took flight, Labi bemoaned the loss of her loved ones. She bewailed the farm land and cap-knitting business she was leaving behind.

    Despite finding a nest in Damaturu, life became harder for Labi and children. “We had to beg for food and money,” she said.

    Labi experienced relief when Kasaisa village was liberated in 2016, by the Nigerian Military. This guaranteed her access to the WFP’s cash based transfer food delivery modality. The cash palliative enables her purchase food, water and medical supplies for her family.

    In the programme, Labi and other recipients receive a monthly transfer of N23,643.089 (about $75) to meet their food needs and those graduating from the food assistance programme would be enrolled into the planned early recovery and livelihood restoration programme.

     

    Bad roads, lean harvests, other calamities

    As areas become inaccessible UN and government relief workers are working to evolve a refined understanding of what people need; for instance, WFP is working with the government and other agencies such as UNICEF to urgently reach the most vulnerable.

    The WFP claimed it is working in a highly complex environment marred by poor harvests and rainy season. Thus the need to act fast as hunger will only deepen in coming months.

    “With diminished harvests caused by the devastating effects of drought and halted crop production in most farming districts, food supplies are terribly low. We face various constraints as we make provision for our dwindling food reserves,” said Borno state governor, Kashim Shettima.

    In the worst-affected areas, a mishmash of poor sanitation, a prevalence of disease and lack of access to food, water and healthcare could create a famine-like situation if assistance is not urgently provided revealed a joint NGO and government assessment.

    More worrisome is the persistent insecurity ravaging the region. Sporadic and sustained attacks by Boko Haram disrupt food supplies and seriously hinder access to basic services. It also limits agricultural activities, worsening an already dire food security situation, revealed a WFP Logistics head.

    Indeed, farming has been severely affected as farmers are unable to access and cultivate their farmlands due to security threats. The ongoing violence has restricted livelihood activities and caused disruption to markets in the Lake Chad Basin region, significantly affecting the availability of food.

    For the eighth consecutive year, the humanitarian crisis has deepened, resulting in the displacement of nearly 1.9 million people across northeast Nigeria, of which over 80 percent are from Borno State and 56 per cent are children, according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM).

    The ongoing trend of refugee returns exerts additional pressure on the humanitarian response. The food security situation is expected to deteriorate in July–August due to persistent insecurity. This is compounded by the lean season.

    Thus the number of people facing critical food insecurity in Nigeria’s northeast is expected to reach 5.2 million during the lean season including more than 50,000 people who could face starvation across Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states.

    Some 450,000 children across the northeast are projected to suffer acute malnutrition in  alone, according to UNICEF. At least 90,000 of these severely malnourished children could starve to death this year – an average of almost 250 a day – if they do not receive treatment urgently, warned the UN child agency.

     

    Giving returnees a humane welcome

    Unexpected returns to Banki and other areas have created further emergency because those returning are coming back to a situation of internal displacement. The management of this situation is proving challenging to the government and the humanitarian community.

    Over the last few weeks, UNHCR stepped up its advocacy efforts to ensure that the return process is conducted in conditions of safety and dignity, and in line with the provisions of the Tripartite Agreement signed between the agency and the Governments of Nigeria and Cameroon on March 2.

    The Assistant High Commissioner for Protection, Volker Turk and UNHCR’s Regional Representative based in Dakar, Senegal, Liz Ahua, visited Nigeria and held talks with federal and state officials on the plight of the returnees.

    Thus upon arrival, the returnees are kept in the UNHCR transit facility and provided with food for three days while their shelters are being constructed for relocation. UNHCR also provided the returnees with essential non-food items including cooking pots, sleep mats, laundry detergent, slippers, and for women, sanitary pads.

    Due to security concerns, returnees and IDPs are unable to access firewood. Those who make the effort to do so have been exposed to protection risks including violation and abuse. To mitigate the risk, UNHCR is providing charcoal to address this important protection challenge to women.

    Recently, a government delegation led by the Director-General of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), Mustapha Maihaja, was in Banki as part of continued efforts to support those returning from Cameroon.

    During the visit, the delegation distributed relief items including food, mattresses, blankets and clothes donated by the government to refugee returnees and IDPs. The minister also announced that the redeployment of the police to Banki would take place in early September.

    Despite these efforts, services and needs such as food, shelter, health, water and sanitation remain inadequate and formal education is yet to be restored as children have been out of school since the insurgency began more than seven years ago.

    Freedom of movement is limited by continued security restriction in Banki, Pulka, Bama, Gwosa, Ngala and Damasak. This is significantly impacting expansion of services such as construction of additional shelters for people returning to newly liberated areas and affecting ability of returnees to engage in income generating activities.

    According to the military, the decision to restrict movement and access to areas not cleared is a precautionary measure intended to prevent infiltration by the insurgents, protect refugee returnees, IDPs and humanitarian workers.

    At the moment, the risk of mass starvation increases across northeast Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan and Yemen, warned UNHCR.  About 20 million people live in hard-hit areas where harvests have failed and acute malnutrition rates are increasing, particularly among children.

    “We are raising our alarm level further by today warning that the risk of mass deaths from starvation among populations in the Horn of Africa, Yemen and Nigeria is growing,” said UNHCR spokesman, Adrian Edwards.

    “This really is an absolutely critical situation that is rapidly unfolding across a large swathe of Africa from west to east,” he said.

    A preventable catastrophe, possibly worse than that of 2011 when 260,000 people died of famine in the Horn of Africa, half of them children, “is fast becoming an inevitability,” warned Edwards.

    Although UNHCR is scaling up its operations, it suffers a funding shortfall, with some country programmes only funded at between 3 and 11 percent, he said.

     

    Millions face starvation as relief funding depletes

    Millions of people, children in particular, in the northeast risk starvation in the wake of the WFP’s warning that it could in a few weeks, run out of funding to run aid programs.

    Over the next six months, the organisation needs about $207 million to feed IDPs in Nigeria. At the moment, the programme is 13 percent funded for 2017 which is ‘extremely low’ by the estimation of agency staff.

    International and local humanitarian groups have warned that the northeast is at the threshold of a famine situation, citing two years of missed crop harvests in Borno, a state fondly acknowledged as Nigeria’s “food basket.”

    There is rising fear that the region could miss a third year of crop harvest even as torrential rains aggravate the risk of a pandemic, especially in IDP settlements where displaced persons live at subhuman level.

    The number of people in northeast Nigeria without enough to eat is set to soar to 11 million this year and more than 120,000 could suffer famine-like conditions, if the situation persists according to humanitarian estimates. Amid such grim reality, the government is investigating allegations of food aid being stolen and sold by state officials in Borno even as it accuses international aid agencies of exaggerating hunger levels to get more funding from international donors.

    Yet the U.N.’s $484 million 2016 appeal for Nigeria is barely over half funded.

    As the humanitarian crisis deepens, a dark pall settles across northeastern skies. For instance, at the Muna IDPs Camp, nurses and aid workers grapple with curious anomalies, like Hauwa Abubakar, the 16-year old mother and widow who shared her son, Ahmedu’s ‘Plumpy Sup’ nutritional diet with him.

    Subsequently,  she pawned it off at a paltry fee.

    “We caught her selling it to make money a couple of times. She said she needed the money to buy cosmetics,” said a nurse in the camp.

    Today, Abubakar’s son is dead. He died of malnutrition. He was 18 months old.

  • PDP seeks release of Lamido, Suswam, Aliyu

    PDP seeks release of Lamido, Suswam, Aliyu

    Police: ex-Jigawa governor to remain in our custody for investigation

    The Assistant Inspector General of Police in charge of Zone 1, Kano, Mr. Kayode Aderanti, said yesterday the arrested former Jigawa State Governor Sule Lamido would remain in their custody for further investigation.
    Aderanti spoke through the Public Relations Officer, Zone 1,DSP Sambo Sokoto, at a news briefing in Kano.
    According to him, the former governor ‘honourably’ presented himself before the Police after an invitation was sent to him to answer questions.
    “The invitation was as a result of a complaint we received from the Jigawa State Government on April 27, following an inciting statements alleged to have been made on a local radio by Lamido.
     ”The Jigawa State Government alleged that the former governor called on his supporters in the state to stop the conduct of the upcoming local council polls by all means,” he said.
    According to him, the statement made by Lamido was capable of breaching the Public peace.
    He said it is a public offence, which is contrary to Section 114 of the Penal Code of Nigeria.
    He said as soon as the investigation is completed, Lamido would be charged to court for appropriate prosecution.

    The Ahmed Makarfi-led Caretaker Committee of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has demanded the immediate release of the former Jigawa State Governor Sule Lamido.
    Lamido was arrested and detained by the police in Kano on Sunday for allegedly making inciting statement regarding the forthcoming local government election in Jigawa State.
    The PDP faction also demanded the release of former Benue State Governor Gabriel Suswam and ex-Niger State Governor Babangida Aliyu, who are also being detained.
    A statement yesterday by the spokesman of the Makarfi camp, Prince Dayo Adeyeye, demanded the unconditional release of the three former governors and other political detainees.
    Describing the arrest and detention of Lamido as unwarranted, outrageous and anti-democratic, the opposition said the allegation against the Jigawa ex-governor was frivolous.
    The statement said: “The true reason for his arrest, however, has to do with the forthcoming local government election in Jigawa State. The long incarceration of former Governor Gabriel Suswam is also linked to the forthcoming local government election in Benue State.
    “The APC led administration is fast losing the confidence of the people because of its non-performance, high handedness and lack of empathy for the suffering of the people.
    “The only option left for it is to prevent the opposition from effectively campaigning and mobilising the people for the elections. The whole strategy of the failed APC government is founded on the assumption that if there is no opposition, then they cannot be defeated.
    “Hence, the intimidation, harassment and incarceration of popular opposition leaders like Sule Lamido. We are aware that we in the opposition will be in for a hard time in the run-up to the 2019 general elections with more arrests and intimidation of our prominent leaders.”
    The party recalled what it described as inciting statements made by President Muhammadu Buhari shortly before the 2011 general elections, which resulted in bloodshed after the poll; but for which Buhari was not arrested by the then PDP-controlled Federal Government.
    It also noted Buhari’s statement before the 2015 general elections, where he threatened a repeat of the 2011 post-election violence by vowing that the “dog and the baboon would all be soaked in blood”.
    “For this statement and others as well, he was never invited, arrested or detained by any of the security agencies under the PDP administration. It was not a sign of weakness by the PDP-led government. It was in deference to freedom of speech, democracy and peace.
    “The APC has today unleashed the Nigerian Police, the DSS and the EFCC to harass and intimidate judges, opposition leaders, social media influencers/bloggers and other Nigerians that speak against the APC-led federal or state governments on fabricated charges just to cow them.
    “Lamido merely asked the people to defend their votes against rigging. How is that a crime? If you are not planning to steal the peoples’ votes, why should you be afraid if the people are advised to defend their votes? Of course, no thief would want the owner to guide his house against burglary.”

  • ‘N5.6b fraud’: EFCC detains ex-Niger Governor Aliyu

    ‘N5.6b fraud’: EFCC detains ex-Niger Governor Aliyu

    Former Niger State Governor Babangida Aliyu is being detained for alleged abuse of office and money laundering.

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) invited the former governor on Tuesday to reply to the allegations against him.

    Aliyu is said to be responding to issues isolated for him by a “crack team of investigators”.

    He has been grilled for more than 10 hours by detectives.

    The ongoing probe of the ex-governor has nothing to do with the petition to the EFCC by the Niger State Government on a N2.9 billion loan obtained in the twilight of his tenure.

    A source in the anti-graft commission said: “Specifically, the Chief Servant, as he was called in his days as governor, is alleged to have diverted N2 billion Ecological Funds for political purposes.

    “He is also alleged to have fraudulently sold the state’s stake in North South Power, the holding company for Kainji Dam. About 16 per cent of the state’s 26 per cent shares in the company was sold for N3.6 billion.

    “Of this, N1.090 billion was paid to the Government House and used for the 2015 elections, where Aliyu’s protégé, Nasko, ran unsuccessfully as governor.”

    The source gave the details of the EFCC’s investigation into the alleged mismanagement of the state’s Ecological Funds by the ex-governor.

    The source added: “Three companies were said to have benefited from the heist through contract awards. Among them  a company that is owned by a former government official, which allegedly got a contract for which it was paid N847 million.

    “Of this sum N800m was allegedly given to a former chief of staff who allegedly handed the money to the former governor.”

    A company  owned by a friend to Ibrahim Nasko, younger brother to a former Chief of Staff, Umar Nasko got N487m for a contract.

    “The money was paid to various Bureau de Change,  converted into dollars and handed to the former Chief of Staff( Nasko) who also delivered the money to Babangida Aliyu,” the official said, pleading not to be named because he is not allowed to talk to the press.

    “Secta Plus however executed the contract it received from the    Niger State Government.

    ”He is detained as there are several issues yet to be covered even though he has made useful statement.”

    As at press time, it was gathered that the ex-governor had an outstanding  case based on a petition by the state government on a last-minute N2.9billon loan obtained by his administration.

    The state government had said: “The attention of the Niger State Government has been drawn to the continued denial, in the media, by the officials of the past administration that they obtained a loan of N2.9 billion on the eve of their departure.

    “The government will allow the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to do its job, as the case was already before it. It is  important to ask some significant questions on the activities of the past administration.

    ”For instance, the government in the statement wondered why would the then Secretary to the State Government (SSG) denied collecting N600 million only to later admit that he collected the sum of N612 million for ‘general’ security during the last senatorial bye-election in the state.

    ”Was the money actually budgeted for, and was it used for the purpose intended? Why were the said funds given to the SSG; was he the Chief Security officer or INEC?”

    ”It is obvious that these government officials have chosen the hard way rather than the easy one, and the hard way they will get,” the government assured.

    Also in August 2015, the  House of Assembly passed a motion directing Governor Abubakar Bello to probe the administration of  Babangida Aliyu.

    The Assembly’s  motion was moved by the member representing Bida II Constituency, Mohammed Haruna.

    The motion listed 22 activities of the past administration that should be investigated.

  • Aliyu eyes league title with Kano Pillars

    Aliyu eyes league title with Kano Pillars

    Enyimba midfielder Razak Aliyu has said he hopes to also win the Nigeria league with Kano Pillars after he agreed personal terms to join them.

    The Kaduna-born defensive midfielder spent four years at Enyimba during which time he won the league championship.

    “I have agreed personal terms to join Kano Pillars. In my four years at Enyimba, I won the league, Federation Cup and played on the continent. I also want to do same now with Pillars,” he said.

    Aliyu is one of several players from Enyimba who plan to reunite with coach Kadiri Ikhana at four-time champions, Pillars. The others are Chinedu Udoji and Emmanuel Anyanwu.

  • PDP crisis: Ex-minister, Aliyu, seek shift of convention

    PDP crisis: Ex-minister, Aliyu, seek shift of convention

    A group within the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), led by former Niger State Governor Babangida Aliyu, has called for the postponement of the party’s national convention, scheduled to hold in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, on May 21.

    Rising a meeting yesterday, the group, under the aegis of Concerned PDP Group, condemned developments within the party, particularly the process that led to the zoning of the chairmanship position to the Northeast.

    After the marathon meeting in Abuja, the group decided, among others, that the procedure and conduct of the congresses nationwide were flawed with resultant disaffection and disagreements.

    It said: “Furthermore, the current zoning formula for the position of national chairman, as adopted by only one-third of the National Executive Committee (NEC), is inconsistent with the original PDP principles.

    “In consonance, therefore, the group unanimously resolved as follows:

    Call for the postponement of the national convention and appeal to the leadership of the party to revisit these fundamental issues to enable the party to organize and conduct a more cohesive and acceptable national convention to avert the situation whereby aggrieved members may be compelled to organize parallel congress/convention.

  • Bello: I’ve no intention of shielding Aliyu from probe

    Bello: I’ve no intention of shielding Aliyu from probe

    Niger State Governor Abubakar Sani Bello has said he has no intention of shielding former Governor Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu from probe.

    He added that progress is being made in the investigation of most of the actions of the last administration.

    The governor said the state expected an inflow of N700 million as part of the recovered funds looted by the previous administration.

    Bello, who reacted to the allegation that he shielded the former governor from probe, said his administration could not arrest any person without evidence.

    According to him, most witnesses disappeared after being asked to produce evidence.

    The governor, who promised that the people would be informed of the recovery of the looted funds, said the Finance Committee did not give its report after the three months deadline given it because it discovered new discrepancies everyday.

    He said the state is working to improve the Internally Generated Revenue (IGR), as the money coming from the federal allocation can no longer sustain it.

    Bello said: “We must put our heads together to see how we can improve on our income. It has become clear that we cannot survive on the monthly statutory allocation from Abuja. In doing that we are looking at the Board of Internal Revenue. We are trying to enact laws to allow us get the revenue of the sectors, which needs laws to be enforced. We have made draft to the Law Reform Commission. So that is a top priority.

    “We cannot carry out development without money, and for us to get money, we have to work hard and look at the new sources to create revenue. We want to depend on our Internally Generated Revenue. Whatever comes from Abuja is just to augment it. For now, we are augmenting from IGR.”