Tag: Bombs

  • No more bombs, please

    No more bombs, please

    Of recent, the boys in the creek have been vociferous. They have been loud. They have been loquacious. They have got the elders talking. They have got government talking and explaining. They have got the economists panicking. They have got the citizens wondering what next and they have got Niger Deltans worried about where the next dynamite would detonate.

    It got me asking myself if the past was about to be repeated. At that time, dynamites were thrown. Grenades caused chaos. Gun shots rented the air. The victims were not humankinds but oil facilities; strategic ones for that matter. And the effects on oil production and export were huge and scary. The economy bled and needed oxygen to be on the path of recovery.

    President Muhammadu Buhari and his team put up their thinking cap. The grievances of those blowing up the pipelines must be addressed. His deputy, Yemi Osinbajo, got the matching order and from one creek to the other, Osinbajo preached the gospel of peace.

    He visited oil-producing communities, listened to the people and spelt out the Federal Government’s commitment as captured in the “New Vision for the Niger Delta”. The vision, he told them, has answers to the 16-point Demand Agenda submitted to President Buhari by the Pan-Niger Delta Forum (PANDEF) in November, last year.

    He promised that soon the Nigerian Maritime University in Delta State would commence operation. They also heard that additional N35 billion was approved for the Presidential Amnesty Programme. Osinbajo also told them of the approval for the establishment of Modular Refineries across the nine states in the Niger Delta. Another of the information which the Vice-President passed around was that work had resumed on abandoned projects in the Niger Delta, including the East-West Road.

    The government’s engagements with the Niger Delta and the Organisation of Oil Exporting Countries (OPEC) helped to raise oil revenues to the extent that external reserves grew by about $7 billion within six months. In that period, $87m was added to the Excess Crude Account and $250m to the Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF).

    The engagement with OPEC involved rallying the organisation and non-OPEC members to discuss stabilisation of the global oil market in Doha and in Algiers. This led to an exemption from the OPEC production freeze and led to a rise in oil prices to $55/bbl for the first time in 16 months.

    In July, PANDEF felt government was not doing enough on its 16-point demand. The forum spoke after its third General Assembly in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital, with the theme, “Appraisal of 16-Point Agenda: State of the Nation and the Way Forward for a Sustainable Peace and Development in the Niger Delta Region”. At that forum, the group also called for the implementation of the 2014 National Conference Report.

    PANDEF leader Chief Edwin Clark told the Federal Government that the patience of the youth of the region was running out.

    The Federal Government, he said, must raise a team to commence dialogue with PANDEF to ensure the sustainability of peace in the region. He added that the six states of the South-south were not part of Biafra as claimed by some of its agitators.

    The elder statesman decried the nonchalant attitude of the Federal Government in prevailing on the oil giants to relocate their headquarters to their operational base.

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson added his voice. Dickson told the PANDEF that the South-south governors, who he leads, were committed to working with them to promote and protect the interests of the region.

    Dickson said: “There are parts of this country that are very happy to promote crisis and spread propaganda about insecurity in our region as a deliberate strategy of weakening this region economically.

    “So, I want to use this opportunity to charge all our people-political, opinion and community leaders-to continue to work for a stable and prosperous Niger Delta because, in the end, whether we are able to bring prosperity and development to our people depends on the presence of security and stability.

    “I want to also use this opportunity to make the point again that militarisation of any community within any state in our region is not a solution. And in this Niger Delta, the battles to be fought are not the ones that tanks and soldiers should be deployed; the battles all of us should unite to confront and defeat in the Niger Delta, are the issues of environmental terrorism as I have always called it and the issues of gross neglect, under-development and lack of economic inclusion.”

    After that government had another engagement with PANDEF. That seems not to have helped. Now the Avengers are back. They said we should prepare for resumption of bombings of oil installations in the Niger Delta. Their grouse is about perceived lack of seriousness on the part of the Federal Government to end the woes of the people of the oil-rich region. They are also said to be unhappy that a meeting of the Pa Edwin Clark-led PANDEF was stopped by security agents.

    They also feel the PANDEF 16-point demand, which include relocation of international oil companies’ (IOCs’) administrative and operational headquarters to the Niger Delta, clean-up of Ogoni land and other communities affected by spill, prompt take off of the Maritime University and restructuring/funding of NDDC, have not been addressed.

    The co-ordinator of the Presidential Amnesty Programme (PAP), Brig.-Gen. Paul Boroh, wants the NDA to take the chill pill. He said the planned resumption of hostilities would be devastating to the nation’s economy. Pa Clark and Niger Delta Minister Usani Uguru Usani also toed a similar lane.

    The seeming impatience of the region and its people can only make sense when juxtaposed with its reality.

    Poverty walks on all fours in the midst of plenty. Degradation, rejection and desperation are not in short supply.

    There are houses made of wood, covered with palm frond, which the owners must change from time to time as they wither away. There are imageries of luxury here and there, but in short supply. It is something many hear about and see when the rich choose to throw their weight about.

    So many children could not go to school. But, do they really have any reason to be poor? I don’t think so. They were born into wealth. Not that their fathers were rich. What I mean by being born to wealth centres around the fact that the oil of Nigeria’s prosperity is drilled in their domain.

    A constant reminder of what this wealth can do is evident in the Residential Area or RA, as we are wont to call it, of the multi-national the government gave the licence to drill oil on its behalf. The homes of multitudes when compared with the RA cannot be described better than saying “heaven and hell, side by side”. The majority lives in hell; the minority in heaven.

    In some parts of the Niger Delta, they have, at no time seen night. The multinational operating in these areas have their flow stations so close to homes and send out gas flares throughout the day.

    So, the only way to differentiate between night and day is to check their wrist watches.

    In many towns, oil pipelines are not underground. They are in the open. And often they burst or are burst and our soils and existence are damaged in the process.

    The people have shouted, protested and threatened violence over their fate, yet change has refused to come. It is as if the multinational also has another licence: to send them all to their early graves so that their leaders can have all the wealth for themselves, including the little they manage to spend on basic amenities.

    This environmental genocide, as some have called it, is having serious effects on the people. Strange diseases are killing the people. Pregnant women are developing strange allergies. Yet, health centres are ill-equipped to take care of their health needs. They have several people with aggravated asthma; there are increases in respiratory symptoms, such as coughing and difficult or painful breathing, chronic bronchitis and decreased lung function. Premature death is not uncommon.

    My final take: I join my voice with the trouble-shooters to say peace is all we need. With peace, a lot of things are possible, especially development of the spirit, body and mind.

    In the name of everything you hold dear, I beg you not to throw bombs at oil installations. Peace is all we need. Peace. And peace alone, guys! And to the government, hasten things up.

  • Heroic dogs killed in foiled Boko Haram attack

    Heroic dogs killed in foiled Boko Haram attack

    Two dogs Friday foiled an attempt by two suicide bombers to detonate bombs at the Moloi General Hospital in Maiduguri, the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reported.

    The foiled attack is the latest in a string of deadly attacks on soft targets by the Boko Haram group in the northeast, the hotbed of the Islamic insurgency.

    The Chairman of the Borno State Emergency Management Agency, Mr Fatomi Ahmed, said that the agency had deployed a rescue team to evacuate debris at the scene of the foiled attack.

    Spokesman of the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF), Malam Bello Danbatta, who also confirmed the incident, said that the dogs and the bombers died instantly in the attack but that no other life was lost.

    An eye-witness, Mr Rilwan Isah, told NAN that persistent barking by the two dogs prevented the suicide bombers from gaining entry into the hospital premises.

    He explained that the insurgents, a male and female, were attacked by the dogs, forcing them to detonate the explosives strapped to their bodies.

    Isah said that the dogs belonged to members of the CJTF and had been deployed to the area for rescue operations.

    The eye-witness said further that the dogs attacked the suicide bombers when the animals sensed that the two persons were strangers.

    Isah said that the explosion blew the suicide bombers to pieces and killed the dogs.

    “We heard the male suicide bomber shouting in his dialect and the dogs barking and going after them.

    “Only the suicide bombers and the dogs were killed in the attack,” he stressed.

    Insurgents have been packing bloody punches in Maiduguri and other northeast cities in recent weeks, although the military authorities had said that the group had been degraded.

    Thousands of lives have been lost in several communities in northern Nigeria since the insurgency started more than eight years ago.

     

  • Sect ‘uses iPads, laptops for bombs’

    Sect ‘uses iPads, laptops for bombs’

    Inspector General of Police Solomon Arase yesterday warned Nigerians to avoid the temptation of picking Ipad, phones or laptops not kept by them, saying terrorists now use those items to manufacture bombs.

    He spoke through a statement by police spokeperson Olabisi Kolawole.

    The police also yesterday paraded the suspects accused of being part of the gang that bombed Abuja suburb of Kuje and Nyanya at the Federal Special Anti-Robbery Squad (FSARS) Headquarters in Abuja. Explosive materials recovered from them were also showcased.

    Items recovered from them include: “Engineering textbooks, laptops, phone, face mask, funnel, text tubes, Ipad, 2 number plates, gloves, 27 pieces of detonators, and aluminium powder.

    Other items are: “Hexomine, hydrogene peroxide, sulphur powder, sodium azide plus nitrate, iron 11 oxide, soldering wire, sugar, litmus paper, sodium carbonate, thermometre, chlorate, filter paper, strings, potassium chlorate, 12 ready-made Improvised Explosives Devices(IED), and a full bag of fertilizer”.

  • Terrorists’ bombs don’t discriminate between religions or ethnic origins, says Osinbajo

    Terrorists’ bombs don’t discriminate between religions or ethnic origins, says Osinbajo

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has said terrorists’ bombs do not discriminate between religions and ethnic origns.

    He spoke yesterday at the 55th Independence Anniversary Interdenominational Church Service at the National Christian Centre, Abuja.

    According to him, a house or nation divided against itself cannot stand.

    He said: “Our nation is sharply divided for long along religious and tribal line. The moment we are divided against ourselves we can’t stand. We must also speak on the unity of the country. It will make a difference in the future of this country.

    “Our country’s major problem is that we play politics with everything. We play politics with religion, we play politics with tribe.”

    Stressing that when a bomb goes off in Potiskum or Maiduguri, it doesn’t ask questions whether the victim is a Yoruba or Hausa person.

    “We have seen Children and adults blown to pieces who are victims of insurgency. There were Christians, Muslims and those who do not profess any faith.”

    According to him, insurgency goes beyond the contest between Christians and Muslims.

    He said: “Jesus did not come to this world to celebrate religion, but for redemption. He came to make sacrifice for us. The message of Jesus Christ transcends religion. No matter what it is that we face, the answer lies in the love of Jesus Christ. That is what we see as Nigeria clocks 55.

    “We also expressed our condolences to the families of those who lost their lives in Mecca.” He added

    In his message, titled: ‘Making Nigeria work as a family’, the Catholic Bishop of Kafanchan, Bishop Joseph Bagobiri urged President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration not to use the institutions of government to revenge and carry out vendetta.

    He said: “If you are fighting corruption for the sake of corruption, Nigeria understands it. If we use EFCC, ICPC, CCB as instruments of revenge and vendatta, sooner or later we will not be able to get the desired peace.”

    The cleric advised the government to ensure that its policies have human face.

    He urged the government not to throw away the National Conference report midwived by the former President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration.

    He noted that God has kept Nigeria together despite threats and bobby traps by many people to dismember the country.

    According to him, some powerful people and institutions in the country have been promoting sectionalism.

    He said the struggle for Nigeria’s survival should be uppermost in the hearts of all Nigerians and not the supremacy of one religion above the other or one political party above the other.

    “We need Nigeria first before all the other things we are fighting for,” he said

    Bagobiri regretted that some Muslims have been using intimidation and violence to attack Christians.

    Christians, he said, have held the key to peace in the country as they have remained calm in the face of provocation.

    “If there is a Christian militia in Nigeria, it is Christians that will first rise up to condemn it. So we want to ask Muslims to put their house in order.”

    He urged for all hands to be on deck to build a nation that is truly a family free from discrimination and marginalisation.

    He prayed for a nation where every ethnic group can produce a Supreme court justice without discrimination.

    The 1st Scripture Reading was taken from II Chronicles 7:1-14, the 2nd Scripture Reading was taken from I Corinthians 12: 12-30.

    Prayers were said for the Nigerian nation, security and economic challenges, peace and development of the country.

  • Police discover bombs in restaurant

    Police discover bombs in restaurant

    The police in Owerri, the Imo State capital, averted yesterday a disaster, following the discovery of Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) at Kilmanjaro Fast Food.

    The bombs were reportedly planted by suspected terrorists.

    The discovery, which threw the city into pandemonium, occurred about three months after an attempt was made to blow up the Winners Chapel, Owerri branch.

    The incident was foiled by the police.

    The explosives, which were hidden in air condition units at the lobby and the kitchen close to gigantic gas cylinders, were defused by the Bomb Disposal Unit of the Imo State Police Command, which sealed off the building.

    Speaking with reporters on the scene of the crime, Commissioner of Police Abdulmajid Ali said: “We received a call about 21.30 hours that bombs were uncovered at Kilmanjaro Fast Food. Men of the Bomb Disposal Unit moved in, discovered the explosives and defused them.”

    Dismissing allegation of terrorists’ attack, the police chief said the manager of the eatery, who might have alerted the police, was called by unknown persons, who demanded millions of naira, saying they had planted explosives on the premises and would detonate them if he did not meet their demand.

    Ali added: “It was not a terrorists’ attack because Boko Haram insurgents will not demand money. We are investigating the incident.”

    He urged residents to be calm, assuring that the police would provide security during the Yuletide.

    The police commissioner enjoined the people to be security conscious and offer information that would assist in fighting crime.

  • Police allay fear of bombs in Lagos schools

    Police allay fear of bombs in Lagos schools

    •Residents jittery over large presence of cops

    Contrary to widespread rumour, the Lagos State Police Command has said that there is no bomb scare among Lagos residents.

    The command stated this in reaction to the widespread rumour that members of the dreaded Boko Haram sect had planted a bomb at Government Senior Secondary School, Agege, a suburb of Alimosho Local Government Area of the state, on Friday.

    Four other schools, namely Government Junior College, Girls Senior High School, Girls Junior High School and Government Junior Comprehensive College, were said be located within the premises.

    Four police vans occupied by heavily armed policemen were stationed in front of the school when our correspondent visited.

    Combat-ready mobile and regular policemen were also seen at strategic corners in the area.

    In spite of the foregoing, however, the Police Public Relations Officer of the command, Ms Ngozi Braide, who spoke with our correspondent on the phone, said there was no iota of truth in the rumour.    “I am not aware of this. There is no iota of truth in the story,” she said.

    Asked why such a large number of armed policemen were stationed in front of the school, she responded: “The presence of policemen in the area has nothing to do with any bomb scare. I am not aware of any bomb scare and there is no iota of truth in the story.”

    An official of one of the schools, who pleaded not to be named, said they were shocked when they saw a large number of armed policemen in their premises. He said the police teams arrived the area as early as 7 am.

    He said: “We were surprised to see such a large number of policemen in the school. They came as early as 7 am. When they arrived, we approached them to know what their mission was.  They said they came to inspect and secure the area.

    “After that, they went round each of the five schools in the premises. They interacted with all the principals and allayed their fears,” he said.

    He hinted that there was no apprehension among the students because the authorities kept the information from them.

    “There was  no anxiety whatsoever in the school because the authorities did not divulge the information to the students. If they had been told about it, they would have been terrified and would not have been able to settle down to study all through the day.

    “In fact, there would have been pandemonium in the school. To the glory of God, academic activities went smoothly all through the day, and as you can see they are still oblivious of why the policemen are here,” he added.

    A student, who identified himself simply as Ade, said he was not aware of any plan to attack the school. But he said he was surprised to see a large number of policemen around the school.

    He said: “I wasn’t aware of any Boko Haram issue, but all of us were really wondering why such a huge number of policemen came around.

    “We never had such in the area. The usual thing was for a patrol van to be seen moving about in the area.”

    Some residents of the area, who spoke with our correspondent, said they were apprehensive when they woke up to see a large number of armed policemen.

    A food vendor, who gave her name as Abibatu, said: “Nobody would see such an unusual development and not get disturbed. There must be something unpalatable whenever you see armed policemen in that manner.

    “We were locked up in fear for several hours before we were told that they came because there were rumours that Boko Haram were planning to attack the schools.

    “ We pray that God will never allow that to happen and also appeal to the government and security agencies to be on the alert.”

    Another resident who gave his name as Tunde Aliu, said the presence of the police made him to shudder.

    “I was scared when I came out and saw a large number of policemen on our street. We have never seen that number of armed policemen before in this community. I recovered from the shock  not quite long ago.

    “It was a good thing that they responded promptly even though the story ended up as rumour. It is an issue that must not be treated with kid glove because we have heard of such terrors being unleashed on innocent children in the north.”

    A trader who gave his name as James Obi said: “ I thought the governor was coming to the area when I saw the number of armed policemen that came to the area this morning. It was unusual to find such here. It is only when the governor is passing that you see such in this area.”

     

     

  • Police uncover bombs in Winners’ Chapel

    Police uncover bombs in Winners’ Chapel

    THE police yesterday in Owerri, the Imo State capital, uncovered Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) at the auditorium and the car park of the headquarters of the Living Faith Church, popularly called the Winners’ Chapel.

    The bombs were said to have been planted by suspected terrorists.

    The discovery prompted the bomb disposal unit of the police command to shut the church and order worshippers to relocate to another place for the Sunday service.

    Police spokesman Andrew Enwerem said the IEDs were discovered by their men following a tip-off by the security guards attached to the church.

    He said the explosives were already primed and could have detonated during the service, but for the prompt action of the police.

    “The bomb disposal unit has removed the IEDs and defused them. It has also searched the church and the premises to ensure that no more bombs are there. It could have been a disaster, but for the prompt arrival of the police,” Enwerem added.

    He said six people have been arrested and are assisting the police in their investigation.

    Police Commissioner Mr. Abdulmajid Ali corroborated his statement.

    When our reporter visited the church located on Winners’ Avenue, off Port Harcourt Road, Owerri, it had been reopened, but the gates were manned by stern-looking policemen, who frisked the worshippers before they were allowed in.

    One of the security guards, who preferred anonymity, said: “We are grateful to God for saving our lives. We did not know when or how the explosives were planted. But the three bombs that were discovered were found at strategic locations on the church premises.”

    The source, who decried power outage in the area, said the suspected terrorists, who planted the explosives, might have done so under the cover of darkness.

    His words: “When we came to church on Saturday evening to prepare for the Sunday service, we saw an unusual object hidden under one of the chairs in the auditorium. We observed it and discovered that it was a primed IED. We then alerted the police.”

    Efforts to speak to the senior pastor of the church, Pastor Ayodele Moses, were abortive, as security guards did not allow reporters access to him.

    The Brigade Commander, 34 Artillery Brigade, Owerri, Brig.-Gen. Lanre Bello, said the explosives could kill many people at a time.

  • Kano’s day of blood and bombs

    Kano’s day of blood and bombs

    Survivors relive suicide bombing at motor park

     

    AFTER the initial shock, survivors of Monday’s Kano motor park suicide bombing relived their ordeal yesterday.

    Ahmed Abubakar Warawa, 58, who sells caps, suffered second degree burns when a Lagos bound luxury bus was attacked. He is on admission at the Murtala Mohammed Specialist Hospital. He told The Nation how he dashed to the New Road Motor Park in Sabon Gari after being informed that his third wife was seriously ill and needed to buy some drugs. He had no money.

    He rushed down to the motor park, with the intention of selling some caps to get money for the drugs.

    According to him, he was beside the Lagos-bound luxury bus, negotiating with some would-be customers when suddenly he heard a loud sound, accompanied with smoke, which engulfed the entire area. Moments after, he found himself on a hospital bed, with burns on his two legs and face.

    “Now, my situation is pathetic. I have no money to take care of myself and my sick wife. I have three wives and eight children. How do I cope with feeding them? I am in serious agony, which these heartless people have put me into,” Warawa said.

    Another victim, Abdulazeez Rimin Kebe, who works in the motor park, was writhing in pains, at the hospital. He said: “The people that put me in this agony I am passing through, without offending or knowing them, will surely get the wrath of God because, for now, I cannot explain my condition.

    “I have lost my nose. There is a deep gorge in my stomach. I am placed on drip. I am feeling the pain. I may die any moment from now. Only God will avenge what these people have done to me. I will never forgive them. “

    Emmanuel Bassey, 27, who works at Ezenwata Transport Service, also on admission at the hospital with multiple fractures on his left leg, said: “Our luxury bus was beside a Lagos-bound bus. Suddenly, I saw a Golf car on top speed heading towards our direction, applying its brakes. All I heard was an explosion and I found myself in the hospital. All I can remember is that four of my friends I was standing with are now dead.”

    Another victim, simply identified as Emeka, who works with the ill-fated Gobison Luxury Bus and now on admission at Dala Orthopedic hospital, said he was discussing with his friends and manager, close to where the bus was parked.

    “We saw a white Golf car and we thought that the occupants were to deliver some parcels for courier. Within the twinkle of an eye, the car parked beside our bus had moved and all what we heard was a loud sound, which lifted us up and the bus was engulfed in fire.

    At the Dala Orthopedic Hospital, about 20 victims of the suicide bombing are on admission. Those with multiple fractures were transferred from the Air Force Specialist Hospital to Dala. Those with minor injuries have been treated and discharged from the hospital.

    The Kano State Government has promised to pick up the bills of the survivors.

    After visiting victims at the various hospitals, the Deputy Governor, Dr Abdullahi Umar Ganduje, who represented Governor Rabiu Musa Kwakwaso, described the attack as “barbaric, criminal and anti-Islam”, stressing that the perpetrators are not representing any religion.

    Ganduje said: “We have been working round the clock to ensure that those injured victims are saved and we are also doing our best to make sure that are safe and alive, by the grace of God.”

    “We have been going round to assess the situation and condition of those in the hospitals and the medical doctors have been given adequate instruction to save the lives of the survivors by putting in their best in this situation for speedy recovery.”

    He added: “Government is determined to ensure that these victims are safe. This incident is unfortunate. You can see that it is a calamity. Those who committed this crime are barbaric and criminals and it’s a condemnable act. They are not representing any religion; they are just on their own. Islam doesn’t allow this kind of act and it is condemned by the Holy Quran.

    “This kind of attack exposes the disadvantage of having a motor park in the heart of the city. You are aware we are creating a mega motor park and it will be a modern motor park with facilities and security.”

    Commissioner of Police Musa Daura, initially said 22 people had been confirmed dead and 65 injured. But he later raised the figure to 41 in a statement.

    There were 21 bodies at the Murtala Muhammad Specialist Hospital and 20 more at Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital, said rescue officials. They are also treating 41 and three injured respectively.

    The injured suffered varying degrees of wounds.

  • TWITTER ABUSE: Osaze bombs West Brom again

    TWITTER ABUSE: Osaze bombs West Brom again

    West Brom striker Peter Odemwingie has once again taken to Twitter to criticise the Premier League club.

    The 31-year-old’s latest outburst follows his appearance as a substitute in Albion’s goalless draw at Stoke on Saturday.

    Odemwingie has made only four outings from the bench for the Baggies since his move to QPR fell through as the transfer window closed in January.

    The Nigerian famously drove down to Loftus Road on January 31 but was barred from the stadium and was forced to return to West Brom before hitting out at his club in a series of tweets. He now appears to be unhappy with his situation at The Hawthorns once again and was busy tweeting on Sunday afternoon.

    Odemwingie tweeted: “Keeping me on the bench now is worse than what they did on the 31st. New advisers told me to say it’s all my fault ‘cos its better for me. If they like they shouldn’t even give me 10 mins to play. Threatening to ruin my career? Career I closed already last summer? No harm to me.

    “Want to treat me like an average player. The abuse and praise I get, is it average? So get some extra from me too. Former Albion sporting director in the presence of the new and Manager apologised to me in private. Publicly not good? Come under my cloud.

    “Drive was lunacy? Missing in the training section that day also lunacy? They forgot to complain about that though ‘cos they knew were I was. Things have almost got back to normal till Peter spoilt it again. What’s normal? We see things differently obviously.

    “Has anyone seen me give interview to clubs website for a year now? What about an interview in match day magazine? I am on my own there. Was ready to give half of the contract there and earn less to make it happen. Forcing a move really is when you want to leave for free.”

    Odemwingie continued his tweets after a 44-minute break with an apparent reference to the salary of one of his team-mates.

    He tweeted: “One senior player in presence of the captain and few other seniors last season. 40 a week. If he’s on that I should be on 80. #talksbehindback. More reasons? Should still remain loyal? Even if it sounds childish. It’s a lot. People I should trust normally. Holding meetings.

    “Before that I was a proper gentleman in the team and trusted everyone. I tried to leave quietly didn’t work. A normal team will never let a player who acted like I did come back. My friends there remained friends. The few wish to but can’t talk Now let them hold another meeting. Please let it not involve more than players and coaches. SC doesn’t let them in our meetings now. Proof. The meeting to help me out this time so I don’t disturb please. Club will back you as usual as you are more in numbers. Why keep me still?”

  • Inside the killing fields of Kano

    Inside the killing fields of Kano

    Kano is breathtaking for once and only once; just past noon, while you are perching in the heart of the city centre, in a plane. In that space and at that hour, you get to see what the founders had dreamed many years before: pearl of the north, melting pot of commerce and culture, and long, open avenues forking into an ancient and yet metropolitan paradise – all within the shining veins of a city with warmth like the return of better times.

    However, cruising through the city, you get to see the perversion of that dream. Living in Kano is like sleeping in the folded petals of a poisonous flower. Ask Hafiza Shema, a traditional bone-setter. “Life in this place has become very dangerous. Death is around the corner everywhere you go,” she said.

    But for patronising fate, Shema would be dead by now. According to her, she was billed to visit the state’s immigration office to see the mother of one of her patients but had to make a quick detour to resolve a family dispute. According to her, people don’t get to have a good night’s sleep anymore. “We all sleep with one eye open these days. Everybody is afraid of what might happen to them even while they sleep,” she said.

    At least, she still gets to sleep. Chidi Okaghie never gets to sleep. According to him, the fear of bomb attacks keeps him and his household awake most of the night, everyday. “I lost my uncle in the January bomb blast. He was the one that invited me to this town after I completed my national service in Bauchi. He gave me a house, gave me a job and later set me up. He gave me everything. Now, he’s dead and I can’t even understand why he deserved to die. We could not even get his body to give him a decent burial. We knew he was killed by the bomb blast because we saw the remains of his briefcase very close to the scene of the blast. He didn’t deserve to die like that. There is no more peace and quiet in this town. Everybody wants to leave,” he said.

    But many are already leaving. Kano State has suffered a record high death toll and human casualties as a result of sporadic bomb attacks and gun violence in recent times. On January 20, this year, a series of coordinated attacks on security institutions and federal establishments left over 200 persons dead. In the wake of the attacks, not a few residents of Kano, natives and immigrants alike, fled the city. While many natives fled to seek safe haven with close and distant relatives in neighbouring states, immigrants to the state – from the Southeast, South-south and Southwestern parts of the country to be precise – relocated to their home states.

    The situation has deteriorated with every subsequent attack by the Boko Haram sect and every gun battle between it and the security forces in the state. Just recently, the sect took out a number of telecom masts in the state. The attack caused adversely affected major telecommunication companies in the country with masts scattered across Kano and other affected states in the country’s northeast.

    An atmosphere of fear prevails among the city’s residents as random attacks and mafia-styled executions render the render the city uninhabitable. For instance, tragedy struck recently as four men shot dead a member of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), his wife, three – year old daughter and his crippled brother staying with him. Police sources disclosed that the four men arrived who arrived on two motorcycles allegedly invaded the home of the NSCDC officer in Hotoron Gabas district, locked the entire family in a room and shot them dead.

    However, not too long ago, the Joint Task Force (JTF) discovered a bomb depot during an early morning raid at Tudun Bayero by Tamburawa in Dawakin Kudu Local Government Council, few kilometers away from Kano metropolis. Shortly after the operation, Bassey Eteng, Director of State Security Service (SSS) in Kano, revealed that three suspected members of the Boko Haram sect were arrested during the operation that lasted several hours.

    According to the SSS director, “The operation was successful. We were able to discover 12-primed bomb cylinder, 12 hand held improvised explosive devices, army uniforms, some face masks, 10 electronic detonators, AK47 rifles, two pump action, submachine gun and seven bags of urea. Intelligent information also indicates that plans of these people were to launch attacks on Sallah day. Investigation is still going on.”

     

    Perversion of Kano city

    Life in Kano city has taken a turn for the worse. Until the first multiple bomb blasts rocked the city, residents lived without fear of being blown apart by deadly bomb devices. Today, however, every little sound causes the residents to scamper about in panic. The violence has virtually snuffed the once boisterous city of life. Residents lament total collapse of almost every industry in the city as a result of the violence and curfew imposed by the government. The usually busy streets are now deserted as early as 6.00pm. “We have no choice but to close our shops and hurry home. Nobody wants to be harassed or molested by the soldiers on the street. Even with proper identification they still go ahead and molest innocent citizens. And if you are unfortunate enough to be outside seconds after Boko Haram strikes, they won’t ask you questions, they will simply shoot you,” said Bauwa Abubakar, an animal feed dealer.

    Ayisatu detests the brazenness and force with which security agents extort money from motorists at the security checkpoints. “Rather than focus on catching miscreants, they run the checkpoints like toll gates forcing everybody to pay before passing through,” she said. This causes many of the residents, motorists in particular, to dread plying the major routes where the security operatives are stationed.

    The commercial business sector in the city has nose-dived. Banks, saloons, shopping arcades and even the local markets, to mention a few, are taking the heat as they are forced to offer skeletal services. Traders at the popular Kurmi market, for instance, lament very low patronage. This, they attribute to the declining number of patrons that visit the market.

    Reality, indeed, corroborates the traders’ complaints. For instance, the 600-year-old Kurmi market, fabled for its labyrinth of skinny alleys lined with stalls crammed with every imaginable object and enterprise, is in the throes of a record lull. Vendors and shop owners at the market blame it on the violence. Some of them, however, accuse security operatives of scaring away their customers by their overzealousness and transferred aggression on innocent citizenry in the wake of any Boko Haram attack.

    Local artists and traders at the dye-pits equally complained of their inability to make sales. Many of them complained of having lost their most loyal customers, most of whom have relocated from the city to neighbouring cities and their home states in the wake of the violence.

    Muhammad Usman lamented the departure of two of his best customers from the Southeast. According to him, both of them have fled the city with their families. “They used to place orders and buy from me in large bulk, so that they can retail it in their shops and white collar offices but now they have left the city. Our people (Kano indigenes) are not really as crazy about our products as the Yoruba and Igbo people…these days, we barely make enough to feed,” he said.

    Corroborating him, Khadijatu, a tailor, and Idris Shekana, a cloth beater, painted vivid imagery of the economic downturn with words. Shekana lamented that he never though he would see the day that his business would suffer a decline. “And it’s all because of these stupid bomb blasts,” he said.

     

    Impact on agriculture

    The violence has also affected the state’s trade in Kola. The upsurge in violence has made it difficult for farmers in Kano to market their produce due to persistent insecurity in the capital city. Consequently, lots of Kolanut remain unsold, according to Yaya Haliru, a Kolanut trader. Although many farmers in the state were expectant of a bumper harvest this year, many of them dread the situation whereby they won’t be able to find any market for their crops. “If the current situation persists, it will severely hamper crop sales for many farmers,” stated Anid Bako, a large scale grocer.

    The crisis in the North has forced some of the crop farmers and pastoralists to abandon their lands and relocate to the neighbouring countries of Niger, Chad and Cameroun. In March, the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) said about 65 per cent of northern farmers had migrated to the South because of the insecurity they faced.

    The agency warned that the country faced a famine by the end of this year because most of the small-scale farmers and mechanised farmers in the Nigeria’s northeast are threatened by terrorist attacks. “The attacks on these farmers who produce beans, onions, pepper, maize, rice, livestock and catfish in the Lake Chad area for the southern states, have forced them to migrate since the Boko Haram insurgency broke out in Borno State in July 2009,” it said.

    A countrywide food crisis, therefore, looms, considering NEMA’s disclosure. Since most of the foodstuffs consumed and traded in Nigeria are grown in the north, the agency warned about an impending famine. Incessant bombings and other violent attacks on local markets perpetrated by both the Boko Haram sect and Nigerian armed forces pose grievous risks to northern farmers, livestock breeders and dealers in farm produce, forcing them to migrate to new locations far from their farmlands, while placing additional burden on the transportation of food and farm produce to other states.

    Consequently, prices of foodstuffs have skyrocketed, particularly in the southern part of the country. The influx of migrants to the less volatile northern states and the south has made rental accommodation expensive, just as several families have been rendered homeless, and without medical assistance. The forced movements and relocations have devastated communities and disintegrated key social ties and networks. Though difficult to measure, communal support networks and social capital lost as a result of the forced disintegration of communities also comes into reckoning, according to Victoria Ohaeri, Executive Director at Spaces for Change, a non-governmental organisation.

    “It’s a very sad situation. Kano used to be revered as the commercial capital of northern Nigeria, now we are known for violence and bloodshed. We no longer have the groundnut pyramids and our kolanut business is in the doldrums. I can’t remember the last time I saw our youths gainfully engaged plucking groundnuts or picking kola. All they do now is carry guns and bullets about. Many of us have fled the city. Many are still preparing to flee…I moved my family to Ibadan (Oyo State) in November last year. I stayed back because of business but now I have no choice but to relocate with them,” lamented Danladi Abu, a commercial transporter.

    Plight of women, children and vulnerable groups

    Ohaeri, a former Programme Coordinator with the Social and Economic Rights Action Centre (SERAC), alleged that women, children, youths, the elderly, and other vulnerable individuals and groups have all suffered disproportionately from terror-linked molestation in the ancient city of Kano. According to her, fear of stigma, compounded by religious prejudices has encouraged a culture of silence and unwillingness of victims to speak out and name culprits.

    True; the dusk to dawn curfews imposed on Kano has severely limited women’s access to healthcare and productive economic opportunities. Many pregnant women cannot access healthcare at night when they suddenly go into labour, forcing them to have homebirths manned by unskilled neighbours, attendants and local midwives.

    Mothers are only able to take their sick children to the hospital for treatment during the day, totally depriving the sick and wounded of their rights to access emergency assistance at all times of the day. Nearly all the privately-owned heath institutions have closed shop, leaving residents to their own devices and often inadequate options of medical treatment particularly when such treatment is needed most. Several residents and children either shot or wounded during the routine gun battles between the Boko Haram sect and the JTF have suffered avoidable deaths as a result of inadequate access to emergency medical services. In Kano, frequent bomb explosions have led to a situation whereby most hospitals are constantly filled to capacity, while morgues have no more spaces to accommodate the increasing number of dead bodies.

     

    A history of violence

    The first host-settler violent eruption in Kano occurred in 1953 following northern opposition to the Southern motion in 1953 for Nigeria’s political independence in 1956. The northern representatives believed that the country was not yet mature for self-rule. The South decried this refusal in disparaging language and booed Northern representatives on the streets of Lagos. The campaign for independence sparked off riot in Kano. The rioters attacked Sabon – Gari and at the end, about 35 people were declared dead, while 251 were wounded. In the January 1966 coup d’ tat led by an Igbo major, eminent politicians and high – ranked military men mostly from the North were killed. The North perceived this development as an attempt by the South (Igbo) to dominate them and the promulgation of decree 34 for unification of Nigeria by an Igbo general confirmed their fear. On March 29, 1966, the rioters again attacked Sabon-Gari. The counter coup d’ tat of July, 1966 produced similar attacks in other Northern cities killing thousands of settlers in the state.

    After 1966, conflicts between the Kanawa and the settlers became more religiously defined. The 1980 Maitatsine riot and the 1996/97 Shiites attacks on orthodox Muslims were intra-religious conflicts with some political undertones between the fundamentalist religious groups and orthodox Muslims in Kano. Kano had played host to many Islamic fundamentalists scholars from Chad and Cameroon from the 1940s. Several clashes between them produced hundreds of casualties. In severe cases, death tolls were high. Intra-religious riots scarcely spread to other parts of Kano.

    The 1980s and 90s were periods of inter-religious violence as well. Nigeria opened up to fundamentalist Christian groups in the 1980s. Many of them are found in Kano and their activities, especially their mode of preaching, are often considered provocative by the Muslims. Eruptions were moves to check their excesses and ascendancy of Christianity. The fagge crisis of 1982 was aimed at preventing the reconstruction of a dilapidated church located close to a mosque. Also, the Muslims, in 1991, detested the tone of advertisement for Reinhard Bonnke’s crusade. More so, the permission given to Bonnke to preach in Kano could not be reconciled with the government’s refusal to allow Sheikh Deedat from South Africa into Kano for Islamic revival. Riot broke out October 13 as soon as Boonke arrived in Kano. The1991 riot marked a watershed in the history of conflicts in Kano. For the first time, the Southerners launched counter – offensive against their host. Again, both Christians and Muslims from the South were attacked unlike before when such attacks were restricted to the former. A riotous situation in 1994 following the beheading of an Igboman, Gideon Akaluka, by the Shiites for allegedly desecrating a Koran was quelled by the government.

     

    Rise of Kano as a cosmopolitan city

    Kano, one of the largest advanced cities in Nigeria, started around seventh century as a settlement of immigrant Abagayawa blacksmiths, who came to mine iron from the iron stone outcrop of Dalla hill. The Maguzawa immigrants, led by Bagauda, conquered the settlement around 11th century and established a formidable political entity. The construction of city walls from 1095 was completed in the 12th century. Rimfa extended it by 54 per cent in the 15th century to accommodate immigrants from Borno and North Africa.

    Kano’s exposure to various cultures explains its early liberal policies towards strangers. The emergence of a distinct Kanawa identity was a consequence of massive migratory trends and mixture of diverse social groups. The Kanawa (Kano indigenes) engaged in long distance trade, pilgrimage and warfare. Islam was introduced in Kano in the 14th century by the Wangarawa traders from Mali. It became the official religion of the state in the 15th century. Kano played host to a number of Islamic scholars whose activities facilitated the overthrow of the Maguzawa. The city was also a major trading post in the trans-Saharan trade. Kano skirmishes with the Kwararafa led to the assimilation of Kwararafa slaves into the Kanawa society. It as well played host to war captives after the Fulani Jihad. Thus, unlike most cities in Nigeria that assumed their cosmopolitanism sequel to colonial migrations, Kano’s cosmopolitan outlook dates back to its formation stage. By the 16th century, its population was 74,000.

    The emergence of central political authority in Kano was closely associated with the foundation of birni (city) Kano itself. This was like other Hausa states were the birane (cities) where the centers of political authority. These cities developed as a result of immigration of diverse groups who have no kinship relationship and were integrated gradually displacing authorities whose power depended on kinship loyalties.

    It has been postulated that political authority in Hausaland evolved from farming family groups whose farms were very close to their homes and they were separated by waste-lands. These separate settlements were called kauyuka or unguwoyi (Kauye, unguwa). It was further suggested that authority was of two types, family and communal. The communal authority was vested in the sarki (ruler) which was recognised for specific purposes, especially farming which was the backbone of the economy. The sarkin noma (king of farming) coordinated all the farming activities including the religious rituals for rains. The head of the family unit regulated all other affairs not related to agriculture. The kauye was a collection of these independent family units gidaje (Gida) each headed by the maigida (family head). The society expanded as a result of immigration of families who were not related to each other unguwoyi and kauyuka merged and became towns garuruwa (Gari). The community leader of the gari was known as sarkin gari who was assisted by ward heads masu unguwanni (sing. Mai unguwa). As the town developed the authority of the sarki became expanded beyond the farmland with diminishing emphasis on kinship since most of the immigrants were not related.

     

    The birni (city) evolved from the gari (town). The birni of antiquity was cosmopolitan; it was an urban center with a considerably large population of diverse groups who lack kinship relations with one and the other. Economic factors were responsible for the growth of birane (sing. Birni) of ancient Hausaland, because only buoyant economy could support a large population. Agriculture supported by fertile soil was the mainstay of the economy. The iron industry also supported agriculture by producing farm implements. Dutsen Dala, which was an iron site, was the foundation of Kano the greatest of all Hausa birane. Birnin Kano became the nucleus of fertile kasar (country of) Kano. Trade and religious attraction was contributed to the growth of kano. Dutsen Dala and Kurmin Jakara both located in Birnin kano were centers of iskokai (spirits) adored by the ancient Hausas. Barbushe the first known Sarkin Kano was a chief priest of Tsumburbura which were also iskokai. For any birni to flourish, it needed security thus another very important feature of any birni of ancient Hausaland was the ganuwa (city wall) which was a fortification. It has been suggested that this security of the birane was an essential element in their emergence as centers of “unusual political power.” The emergence of states in Hausaland appeared to have been linked with the foundation of birane as these centers of political power.

     

    The lost economy

    Kano was a major producer of groundnuts. In fact Kano produced about a half million tons which was about half of Nigeria’s groundnut production. Oil replaced agricultural commodities as the main source of foreign exchange and government revenue.

    The oil boom of the 1970’s made the government to neglect agriculture. Many of the rural dwellers rushed to the cities in search of “greener” pastures now they are fleeing the city for fear deadly bomb blasts.

    Commercial activity in Kano received its first encouragement with the establishment of Kurmi Market by Sarkin Kano Muhammad Rumfa in the 16th century. Subsequent leaders made contributions to the emergence of Kano as a leading commercial center in Africa. For example, the first two Emirs of Kano, Sarkin Kano Ibrahim Dabo and Sarkin Kano Sulaiman in the 19th century encouraged traders to move from Katsina because of Maradi raid. This was one of major contributing factors that made Kano the richest province in the Sokoto Caliphate.

    The Jihad leaders of the caliphate encouraged Kolanut trade and Kano was the greatest beneficiary with an annual turnover of about $30 million. Kano merchants were also very innovative and they were able to integrate commerce and craft industry during the pre-colonial period thus making substantial contribution to the prosperity of the province. Kano was producing an estimated 10 million pairs of sandals during that period because of economic harmony. Sarkin Kano Alhaji Muhammadu Sanusi established the Bompai Industrial Estate which was the first of its kind in the state through a loan guaranty that was later used against him by the Northern Regional Government.

    Kano State is the most important and largest commercial centre in Northern Nigeria. With about 10 million people, it provides a stable and continuous market for both manufactured and semi processed goods. The volume of trading activities conducted on daily basis in the markets, notably Muhammadu Abubakar Rimi Market (Sabon-Gari), Kwanar Singer, Kantin Kwari, Kurmi and Dawanau signify the state’s great potentials as a market for various products.

    In addition to the large and unique markets, Kano is also blessed with plentiful and various kinds of agricultural products which provide huge raw materials for Agro-Allied industries.

    Agricultural products like Maize, Guinea Corn, Rice, Cotton and Groundnut are readily available to serve as raw materials for oil milling, flour and textile industries. Other agro based raw materials are Gum Arabic, Livestock, Hides and Skin, Cowpeas, and Citrus fruits.

     

    A governor and his heartfelt promise

    Worried by the wanton destruction of lives and property in the state, the Kano State Governor, Rabiu Kwankwaso, has promised to ensure peace and stability in the state. His reassurances come at the heel of government officials’ and clerics’ conference to pray for peace in the state.

    The prayer gathering which was held in the wake of the January bombings, attracted some 200 Muslim clerics and political leaders to a mosque in the palace of the Emir of Kano, Ado Bayero, for special peace prayers.

    “I will pray to God that we should never re-live the catastrophe that resulted in the deaths and maiming in our city…We are working seriously to ensure peace in Kano State, and by the grace of God. I want to assure you that we have seen the first and the last of these attacks in Kano State. Kano will not explode again,” promised Governor Kwankwaso.

    Despite his heartfelt prayer, by 5:30 p.m. every day, the ancient city of Kano goes berserk with impatient motorists making hurriedly for home; the air simmers like draft from a stubborn harmattan fire and that is just the subtle city war renewing itself for another day. Unlike the major gun wars and bomb attacks, it is comparatively light on actual violence but intense with dread and bad feeling.

    You have to be pathologically insensitive not to sense the impacted rage and despair, impotent gnawing resentment that has turned Nigeria’s “Centre of Commerce” into a bloody battlefield.

    There, every bomb blast and gunshot reverberates in the hearts of the natives months after the last boom had gotten silent. Nothing so horrible ever happens in Kano that’s beyond prayer and cheap consolation.

    You did either meet an optimism that no violence could daunt or cynicism that eats the cynic empty every day until it turns hungry and malignant on whatever it could, for a bite. A skilled psychiatrist would call this “lashing out,” but the average Kano resident would call it “survival.” The people are so traumatised that these days, they talk as though killing a man was nothing more than depriving him of his vigour. Thus is the tragedy in Kano.