Tag: borno

  • Six farmers beheaded in Borno

    Six farmers beheaded in Borno

    Six farmers at Dimge plantation, Mafa Local Government Area of Borno State, were beheaded by suspected insurgents at the weekend, it was learnt yesterday.

    An eyewitness, Jiddah Ahmad, said seven farmers were abducted from their farms; six  were slaughtered at a nearby bush.

    Ahmad, whose elder brother is among the slain farmers, added that two of the deceased were from Lawanti Gongulon in Jere, and the others from Masu community in Mafa council.

    His words: “My brother was in the farm with his colleagues when they were accosted by insurgents when they went to fetch water.

    “The insurgents shot my brother before beheading him and another farmer; an old farmer was freed.”

    A member of the Civilian Joint Task Force, Usman Muhammad, told News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the insurgents earlier slaughtered four farmers at the same plantation.

    According to him, the insurgents came on motorbikes.

    They forced the aged farmer to witness the murder and convey the message to families of the deceased.

    “We are currently seeking clearance from the military authorities to enable us to evacuate the bodies for proper burial,” he added.

  • Boko Haram beheads six farmers in Borno

    Boko Haram beheads six farmers in Borno

    The Islamic Boko Haram group has beheaded six farmers at Dimge plantation in the Mafa Local Government Area of Borno.

    The killing is the latest in a string of attacks in the violence wracked North-East, where more than 20,000 people have been killed in nine years of insurgency.

    The killing occurred on Nov. 19, while the farmers worked on their farms in the plantation, an eye-witness, Jiddah Ahmad, told our correspondent in Jere town, near Maiduguri on Monday.

    Ahmad said that the insurgents abducted seven farmers as they worked on their farms and slaughtered six of them in a nearby bush.

    Ahmad, who is a younger brother to one of the slain farmers, said that two of the slain farmers were from Lawanti Gongulon Village in Jere.

    According to him, the remaining four are from Masu Community in the Mafa Local Government Area of the state.

    “My brother was working in the farm together with other farmers. They were accosted by the insurgents when they went to fetch water at a river.

    “The insurgents shot my brother before beheading him and beheaded another farmer on the same spot while an old farmer was set free,” Ahmad said.

    A member of the Civilian Joint Task Force, Usman Muhammad, also told our correspondent that the insurgents had earlier slaughtered four other farmers at the same plantation.

    Muhammad disclosed that the insurgents came to the farm on motorbikes and attacked the farmers.

    He said that the insurgents forced an aged farmer among the abductees to witness the brutal murder of other farmers, telling him to convey the message to families of the victims.

    “We are currently seeking clearance from the military authorities to enable us to evacuate the corpses for proper burial,” he said.

    The military and police authorities have yet to make statements on the latest killings.

    The military authorities have said that they have completely degraded Boko Haram but the group has continued to pack bloody punches on a regular basis.

    Nigeria’s North-East has remained the hotbed of the insurgency, although other areas of the country, including Abuja and Lokoja have not been spared.

    NAN

  • Multiple bomb attacks kill 18, injure 29 in Maiduguri

    Multiple bomb attacks kill 18, injure 29 in Maiduguri

    The Police in, Maiduguri, Borno on Wednesday said 18 persons were killed in multiple suicide bomb attacks at Muna Gari community of Konduga Local Government Area.

    Mr Victor Isuku, the Police Public Relations Officer ( PPRO ), confirmed the attack in a statement issued in Maiduguri.

    Isuku said that the incident occurred at about 18:13p.m. when four suicide bombers detonated Improvised Explosives Devices ( IEDs ) strapped to their bodies.

    He disclosed that first explosion hit a congregation at a prayer ground while other explosives were also detonated at different locations in the area.

    Isuku explained that 18 persons including the four bombers were killed while 29 other persons sustained various degrees of injuries in the attack.

    “Today 15/11/2017; at about 18:13 hours, four suicide bombers, two male and two female, infiltrated Muna Gari community in konduga Local Government Area, and detonated IED strapped to their bodies at different locations.

    “The first explosion occurred at a prayer ground, while the other explosions occurred thereafter, all within the community.

    “A total of eighteen persons including the four suicide bombers, died in the multiple explosions, while twenty-nine others sustained various degrees of injuries”.

    Isuku said that the victims were taken to the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital ( UMTH ) and State Specialist Hospital for treatment.

    He added that police patrol and EOD teams were deployed to sanitize and render the area safe, noting that normalcy has been restored to the area.

    NAN

  • IPMAN lauds FG’s commencement of oil exploration in five states

    IPMAN lauds FG’s commencement of oil exploration in five states

    The Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria ( IPMAN ) in Kano State has commended the Federal Government for starting oil exploration in Sokoto, Benue, Borno, Bauchi and Nasarawa states.

    The IPMAN chairman in the state, Alhaji Bashir Dan-Malam, made the commendation while speaking to newsmen shortly after the Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the association in Kano on Wednesday.

    “The oil exploration which the Federal Government had started in five states mentioned above will ensure their economic growth and development and that of the country at large,” he said.

    The IPMAN chairman, who called for continued support to the NNPC, also applauded the Federal Government for sustaining regularity in petrol supply across the country.

    He said with the present administration’s commitment toward addressing challenges facing the sector and exemplary leadership of the NNPC Group Managing Director, Dr Maikanti Baru, fuel scarcity had now become history in the country.

    “Before now, people used to accuse marketers of fuel crisis in the country but scarcity of petroleum products has become a thing of the past due to the Federal Government’s commitment toward addressing the problems facing the sector,” he said.

    He said the present administration under President Muhammadu Buhari deserved to be commended for tackling the various challenges facing the oil and gas sector and ensuring steady supply of petrol in the country.

    He also commended the NNPC for planning to make available petroleum products, especially, petrol in  all the 21 depots ahead of the forthcoming Christmas and New Year festivals.

    “This singular action is worthy of commendation in view of what we used to experience in the past at the end of every year in the country.

    Dan-Malam said with the current positive development in the sector, the country would soon commence exporting petrol to other countries.

    NAN reports that the meeting was attended by members of the association from Katsina, Jigawa, Bauchi and Yobe states that made up IPMAN Kano unit.

    NAN

  • Army sets up board to probe shooting, death of officers at Chibok

    Army sets up board to probe shooting, death of officers at Chibok

    The Nigerian Army says it has has instituted a Board of Inquiry to unravel the circumstances surrounding the shooting incident that resulted in the death of an officer and a Senior Non-Commission Officer at Chibok in Borno.

    According to a statement issued by Brig.-Gen. Sani Usman the incident occurred on Sunday, where the officers were deployed.

    Usman said the BOI was expected to turn in its report and findings in one week.

    He said the Headquarters of 28 Task Force Brigade received a report at about 12.50 .m. on Sunday that a “staff was seen to be drunk and misbehaving to civilians.

    “An officer was despatched to the scene with a view to bring him back to base.

    “The officer did his best but the SNCO refused several entreaties to calm him and be disarmed by the superior officer.

    “Unfortunately, the Staff Sergeant shot the officer dead and then killed himself.

    “Their remains have since been evacuated to a military facility,” he said,.

    He said that the army “is a disciplined and professional force with zero tolerance for any acts of indiscipline and misdemeanor.”

    Usman described the death of the officer and the Staff Sergeant as “painful and a great loss to the unit and the Nigerian army.”

    NAN

  • Borno diaries (2)

    Borno diaries (2)

    As I travelled in and around Maiduguri, I could not but ponder on a new book about civilisation. The book, titled The Future is History, abolishes tomorrow. The author, Masha Gessen, does not say Monday will not lead to Tuesday, but that Tuesday will not improve on Monday.

    It brings us the German philosopher Hannah Arendt and, more potently, Friedreich Nietzsche who developed the theory of eternal return. Whatever we do, however fertile our efforts or audacious our innovation or noble our raison d’etre, no progress flashes on the horizon. For all the airplanes, internet, cars, or soft beds or the eternal chug of the electric grid, we shall wake up to have a Trump or a Putin, or an ISIS rampaging a region, or a Boko Haram in a storm of slaughter. We shine, but we are still savages.

    So, as the Northeast tries to wake itself out of a night of bloodshed and ruin, are we sure the future is not the past, the past of hordes raging with new-fangled weapons with plunder, rape and rapine. Or do we see progress that tracks only to the future and does not echo the Biblical, Solomonic line: there is nothing new under the sun?

    I thought about it more as we left a primary school set for commission at a place called Bulunkutu Talakawa. Governor Shettima of Borno was driving, and some young men flocked desperately to the front of the vehicle as security men tried to disperse them. One of the boys, a teenager, tall and athletic, bowed and put his hand in his stomach, signifying hunger.

    As he drove off, he said, “If we don’t take care of these people today, they will take care of us tomorrow.” He had said he planned to abolish the al majiri system, a practice that dates back over a century and started innocuously as a school for Islamic scholars.

    “The condition is not ripe to stop it. That is why I am focusing on education and infrastructure,” he said.

    Not far away, we had seen the Maiduguri Sheraton Hotel. It predated the settlement of the poor and Bulunkutu talakawa. It came into being in the pre-violence Maiduguri when it was an osmosis of investments and social joy. Now, it is in magnificent decay, the building standing high, bruised, discoloured, desolate and a monument to a balmy past. Boko Haram stormed and plundered and left it to the elements.

    But how do you create such dreams without resources? Hence, Gov. Shettima has triggered the beginnings of an industrial park that spans vast acres to tackle the agricultural and manufacturing aspirations of the region and the country at large. An impressive greenhouse complete with power, borehole, ventilation, solar panels, light control is in its advanced stages. Maiduguri had been the conduit for commerce with other parts of Africa, and the Lake Chad water shimmered for profits. I learned that Dangote’s business had lost some of its traction because of Boko Haram activities that shut the to and fro with other countries on the continent from Chad to Niger to even Sudan.

    The green house will revive not only the tomato cultivation and storage but will extend the value chain to the making of purees. Other crops will also open up. Over five thousand persons will find work there. There will also be plastic factory and solar panel plant, etc.

    “Most of the equipment for this park are already on ground,” said Ibrahim Ali, who is in charge of the park. In a testament to foresight, Gov. Shettima bought the equipment long ago because he knew the naira would crash. He never waited for the naira to cascaded from N165 to the depth of 300s to a dollar.

    I could not escape the sight of Bola Tinubu Court named after former Governor of Lagos and Jagaban Borgu. It is a secure, well-furnished 78-apartment affair and it takes care of doctors. It is one of the graces of the Shettima era, as he also pivots to healthcare. I saw a similar example in a proposed nursing quarters converted to NYSC apartments for youth corps doctors and nurses. The place is under armed protection and the youth corps doctors are the best paid in the country, receiving an extra N100,000 and the nurses N50,000. They all looked cheerful when we visited and the governor ascertained that they had all the facilities, including generators, working.

    Most of the major arteries in town are lighted at night, and roads are undergoing renewal and repairs. The story is told of the work of Bishop Hassan Kukah who had secured a philanthropic work for schools in the country from Jorge Alvarez, the founder of mobile carrier Telefonica. Bishop Kukah met with him in Rome after the telecom giant had asked the Pope to point out areas where he could pour his largesse as he had too much money. Kukah took him on and he travelled to Nigeria and offered to help build, in partnership with the Kukah Foundation, 40 primary schools. Ten of such schools are underway in Borno. I thought this was a great example of people who give back to others about whom they know nothing.

    Many of our well-heeled would rather build mansions, many of which rooms will crack from lack of human chatter or shuffling feet. They will find places to hide their money that cannot survive paradise, and wed their wards in hotels of outsized luxury. They die sung but ignoble. Alvarez disinvited himself to that party.

    As Gov Shettima notes, the IDPs on record do not tell the full picture. Many are too proud to live in camps. It means more resources are needed to lift that place, for Borno and for all of us. There are many young who did not join Boko Haram. We have to help them not to. Or, as Gov. Shettima warned, “we either help them or run out of the place.”

  • Borno school feeding: Students to monitor programme

    Borno State Government has said it will engage students as spies to monitor the quantity and quality of food being served to children in schools across the state.

    Gov. Shettima disclosed this at the inauguration of a Special Committee to take charge of feeding across 78 secondary schools in the state after uncharitable reports of diversion of food resulting to poor feeding in the schools.

    According to the governor, some unsuspecting students will be  engaged  as spies who will be sending him messages via telephone and social media platforms to give hint on the quality of meals being served at dining halls.

    “Apart from approving funds, I will also help you to do your job. Do not feel that I am being suspicious. As you all know, I do visit schools but this time around, I will give some students (you will never know) my phone numbers to communicate directly with me to give me regular updates on the quality of meals they are being served henceforth.

    “You as committee members should address the principals and call them to order. I will urge you to directly procure the foodstuff and give it to the principals of our respective boarding secondary schools. And it is within your mandate to hire and pay the salaries of cooks where there are shortages of kitchen personnel.”

    “ I want all of you to work hard and identify some sacrificial lambs. I want you to deal with two or three principals who shortchange pupils in their feeding. As I have always said, education is very important to the development of any society and we owe an obligation to humanity, to posterity to fix public schools in Borno. ?With the way we are building schools, some people would feel we are crazy because they forget that Boko Haram has taken our education backward and created thousands of school aged out of school children.

    “We are buying lands, we are buying premises and building schools on them and we will make these schools function effectively,” the governor said.

     

  • Four suicide bombers killed, six farmers injured in Maiduguri

    Four suicide bombers killed, six farmers injured in Maiduguri

    The Police in Borno on Tuesday said four female suicide bombers were killed while trying to sneak into Maiduguri metropolis.

    The Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO) in the state,Victor Isuku, confirmed the incident to the News Agency of Nigeria in a telephone interview.

    Isuku said that the incident occurred at about 8:30 a.m. in Tomsu Ngamdu community on the outskirts of Maiduguri.

    He said that one of the suicide bombers detonated her explosive near a military check point, while the other one detonated hers at a Civilian Joint Task Force checkpoint, all killing themselves and injuring six farmers nearby.

    Read Also: Two suicide bombers killed in Maiduguri

    He said that the two other bombers were shot dead by security operatives before they detonated the bomb concealed in their body.

    “Police EOD teams have been deployed to the scene to sanitise the area,” the PPRO said.

    Breaking: Notorious armed robbers, cultists escape police custody in Bayelsa

  • Borno diaries (1)

    Borno diaries (1)

    When the plane landed in Abuja, I thought I would proceed alone. Maybe not alone. With a sprinkling of humans, four or five, who were on the flight with me from Lagos. As the air hostesses cleaned up the seats and floor, the whole interior felt like a ghost room, but perfumed, upholstered, lighted. I and the few other passengers who remained were like interlopers in a conclave of spirits.

    I remembered what a co-passenger sitting beside me remarked when I told him I was not disembarking.

    “I am going to Maiduguri,” I announced.

    His remark was wordless. A sigh. As he rose to leave, his tongue came back to him and said he left the city in 2000 and had never returned.

    Consolation came when head after head, torso after torso filled the aircraft aisle. Goodbye ghosts, welcome flesh and blood. And human chatter. Within twenty minutes, the seats were all but occupied. We were set to taxi to where many in the south and outside the northeast have avoided like a plague the devil leased to earth. The aircraft bobbed into the air and in another hour, we descended on Maiduguri, my first ever foray in that city. When a little boy, we had a family friend, who was like an auntie, who had lived almost all her life in the city before relocating south. We used to call her Sister Maiduguri.

    As I disembarked into the sultry city, my head bubbled with reports and pictures and legends about Borno. Boko haram in clear-eyed terror, babies without parents, widows, dilapidated infrastructure, deserted streets, markets in retreats, soldiers on high alert. Fear, blood, the augury of Armageddon.

    It did not take long to erase my anxiety. I looked at the eyes and body language of people around the airport. No self-awareness about safety, no furtive looks, no avoidance of touch, or shrinking from a straggle of people. My luggage came to me and the car rode into town. It was a Sunday. I asked my guide, “are those kids at school today?”

    “Yes, they are just closing,” he said, no rebuke in his eyes. Boys and girls walked alone, in twos, in groups. They were heading home from school. It was the main artery of the city. Lining both sides of the road were shops, offices, homes, including an estate I would visit with the Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima, in a few hours.

    But once I met my host, Gov. Shettima, who was driving his car himself in a convoy, we set off to my pet curiosity: schools. Our first visit was at the Yerwa Government Girls Secondary School. The girls knew he was coming. As soon as the gates flung open, a chant exploded into the air: “Baba oyoyo, baba oyoyo.” The girls, all swathed in hijabs, in their hundreds splashed around the vehicles and security had to plough a path for the governor. He had brought some supplies, food and drinks, for the school. He met with the head prefect, Aisha Alhaji Ibrahim, and wanted to ascertain that meals came to the students. He gave his direct phone number to the ward and asked her to convey to him update. He warned the staff not to interfere with her on pains of official repercussion.

    It is a boarding school, but beside the gate 60 classrooms were under construction to be fitted with air-conditioners and tiled floors. It is one of the evidence of a city and state on the rebound after years of rapine and dislocation from the militants called Boko Haram.

    I reflected as we left the school full of ecstatic young females what happened just a few years ago. Then Governor Shettima had lamented how even the Maiduguri Airport was like a minefield, where the hoodlums bested our soldiers and the ragtag army had hoisted its flags in about two-thirds of the state. That was the Jonathan era. Enter Muhammadu Buhari, and the army has pounded the terror band back to the forest. The city, not completely immune from the irrational work of the suicide bomber, has enjoyed far-reaching relief that it can put up and secure a place like Yerwa Government Girls Secondary Schools.

    Other secondary schools like this are erupting all over the state. The other that caught my fancy has not yet been named.

    “We are trying to get either German Chancellor Angela Merkel or Michelle Obama to come and commission it when it is ready,” said Governor Shettima. Whoever comes will have it named after her. It’s another girls’ schools. Walking through the premises brought to mind the tragedy of the Chibok girls. The classrooms are being fortified with bullet-proof doors and windows. Inside the air-conditioners will be supported by ceiling fans. The hotels are at advanced state of construction including the hostels, dining block and kitchen, all bullet-proofed. Gov. Shettima wants it ready for inauguration in January for 1,300 students.

    Primary schools also are getting attention. In one of the poorest areas of the city, a school was ready for inauguration. Located in an area called Bulunkutu Talakawa, it is a project of partnership with SUBEB as well as corporate concerns like SEC and even Oando. It has a capacity for 300 pupils but will take off with 210, 90 for nursery and 270 for primary. Setting up the school is one thing, rallying the young in the area to attend is another. All facilities are ready, including chalkboards, furniture, teachers, toilets. Gov. Shettima has made available 100 bags of rice, beans and cooking oil available for feeding.

    While undertaking his pre-inauguration inspection, he observed that the walls were not high enough and not even barbed. Criminals could scale to plunder and murder. So, he ordered crowing the walls with barb wires as pre-condition for take-off. As we drove out of the school, a huge number of lads and girls lined the street. Even the school did not have the capacity to cater for the needs of the area. It is called Bulunkutu Talakawa because it is the hovel of the poor. Another area is called Bulunkuta Abuja where the relatively comfortable live. Along the road, the governor’s fears were confirmed with idle young men sitting  on high walls not far from the school.

    Not far away was a primary school the Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo, had supported with all the facilities of a modern education for a school for orphans. It is walled in, with sober painting, secure doors and windows. In another part of the city, a CBN complex has been acquired by the state government and converted into over 400 units of flats, both two and three bedrooms. Occupants must adopt an orphan as condition. Schools are under way on an adjoining land to cater to the estate.

    The IDPs are being accommodated in this schools as way to bring back a city and prostrate people back to life.

  • Paedophiles on the prowl

    Paedophiles on the prowl

    Nigerians woke up last year to the bizarre news of women and girls in Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camps in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states being turned into sex machines by depraved camp officials who insisted on having canal knowledge on them before they are given the basic items they are entitled to. Few months after the ugly trend was reported, a more disturbing form of sexual perversion is said to have become commonplace in Yobe State. Wealthy and influential homosexuals are sexually assaulting young boys and initiating them into the bestial practice, INNOCENT DURU reports.

    A ruinous health challenge and warped moral behaviour could soon become the lot of many underage boys and girls in Yobe State. The Nation gathered that for some time now, many children in the state have become easy prey for homosexuals and paedophiles. It was learnt that many boys in the state have had their natural sexual nature distorted by ravenous homosexuals who deploy their time and resources hunting for the innocent children and devouring them at will.

    Findings showed that young boys are not only sexually assaulted, they are also initiated into the unwholesome practice by the perpetrators who are said to be wealthy and influential men in the society. Key government officials who swore to promote the wellbeing of citizens are also involved in the despicable act, according to the state police command.

    Homosexuals, especially the malleable children lured into the act, medical experts say, may experience anal tears, and it is only a matter of time that every boy involved in the practice suffers such avoidable health challenges and walk about with stitched buttocks.

    Odious silence

    But in spite of the worrisome dimension the problem has assumed in the state, the attitude of the people is to keep mute over it. Our correspondent observed that the influential people involved in the act might have muzzled the people so much that many of them approached for comments were not willing to do so. Even those who had earlier indicated their willingness to speak on the matter ended up withdrawing into their shells.

    That, however, was not the case with Baba Ale Mijinyawa, the Executive Director of North East Youth Initiative for Development, who said his open condemnation of the act has exposed him to threats from the perpetrators.

    Mijinyawa said: “We really have the challenge of homosexuality in Yobe. The problem is that most of the people involved are well to do. The only cases that are reported are those of people that are poor. Even when wealthy people are taken to court, they are discharged.”

    Reliving some of the ugly incidents, the vocal activist said: “In Portiskum, a 40-year-old man raped two 10-year-old boys. Some community leaders in the area told the parents of the raped children that they could pursue the case to any length but they (community leaders) would be there to defend the perpetrator of the act. The offender is somebody that the people know so well because he is wealthy.

    “Twelve cases of homosexuality were reported to me, and all of them involved minors. There are some groups who are in prison right now because they were sentenced to five years imprisonment each.  There is another two sets; one was sentenced to two years imprisonment while the other was sentenced to three years. Others are still in court. The boys will tell you that they are not doing it alone.”

    Mijinyawa added: “We have some groups of tricycle drivers in Yobe. There is a group of wealthy men who often lodge these boys in a hotel for a week. Each of the wealthy men would then go one after the other to sleep with the boys for one week. After seven days, the boys will be provided with new tricycles. I said this even on the radio.

    “Some Muslim scholars spoke against the act and the perpetrators went to them and warned them to stop doing that. The perpetrators have godfathers.”

    Mijinyawa said he had been speaking against the act at the risk of his own life. “I do have radio programmes where I speak against the practice, but some people have warned me against what I am doing. But I don’t really care because I have only one life to live. For me, the best thing is to always speak the truth,” he said.

    Concerned citizens

    A prominent indigene of the state, who asked to be identified only as Hajia for security reasons, corroborated Mijinyawa’s account, regretting that many innocent boys who were initiated into the act are now initiating their peers and practising sodomy with impunity.

    She said: “We now have a lot of children engaging in this unholy act. Some are reported and others are not. Some parents don’t want the issue to be discussed openly. The truth is that some people initiated these children into the bestial practice.

    “A man recently molested 11 boys. He was arrested, prosecuted and convicted. The man is from Gadaka where homosexual cases are very high. Cases of homosexuality among the youth are promoted by highly placed people in the state. Such cases are not reported.

    “One of the victims is my neighbour, but I can’t go on giving details for security reasons.”

    The Chairperson of International Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA), Barrister Aisha Godowoli, told our correspondent that her organisation facilitated the conviction of the man that raped 11 boys.

    “FIDA facilitated the prosecution of the man that assaulted many boys. He was sent to seven years imprisonment by the Magistrate’s Court. As a mother, I feel so bad to hear such things. These are things that were happening outside but are now right here in our midst,” she remarked despondently.

    The Director of Citizens Rights in the state’s Ministry of Justice, Sale Dibo Gadaka, confirmed the menace of homosexuality in the state, but he said the government was on top of the situation.

    Sale said: “We have been prosecuting homosexuals. We have even got convictions against some of them. The development is worrisome, but we in Yobe State are trying our best. I think the number is reducing. I cannot tell you that influential people are behind the practice. All we do is that once a suspect is arrested and we have evidence against him, we take him to court. If you want to know this, ask the police.

    “I can’t also provide answer to whether it is true that some homosexuals use their influence to get away from justice. It is the police that can give you that answer because they are the ones investigating. Ours is to prosecute.

    “When the police have done their work and the file comes to us, we go to court with it. Many have been prosecuted for homosexuality.

    “The laws we are working on is to take care of the damages done to these children. They are supposed to be compensated.”

    War against menace

    The spokesperson of the Yobe Sate Police Command, Jafiya Zuberu, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), said the police had left no breathing space for homosexuals in the state.

    He said: “We have been arresting and prosecuting homosexuals. We have reduced the menace to the barest minimum. For some time now, we have not received any such case. But some months back, there were cases like that. Most of the offenders were arrested, investigated and sent to court for prosecution.”

    Zuberu denied that influential offenders use their positions to evade justice. He said, however, that high profile individuals were involved in the crime.

    He said: “One or two cases reported involved persons holding sensitive positions in the state government, but we don’t know the motive behind it. The police are part of the ongoing advocacy. I have a number of television and radio programmes on NTA, YBC and YTV for sensitization.

    Anxiety over raped minors

    Aside from the menace of homosexuality in the state, cases of raped minors, The Nation gathered, is also assuming a geometric progression in the state.

    Speaking on this, Mijinyawa said: “The rate of child abuse here is very high. The one that is very common now is the rape cases involving minors. The percentage of victims below eight years is very high. I would put it at 70 per cent.

    “Many adults are raping small children. As I am talking to you now, we have a case of an adult who raped a four-month-old baby. The challenge of neglect is so high.”

    He blamed the rise on the culture of silence among the people and the judicial system.

    He said: “We have this challenge of silence culture. People don’t want to speak out because of stigmatization. Some people want to speak out but the problem that they are having is the justice system. The legal system is not helping matters.

    “Some parents would report the case and start going to court. Later on, you would hear that the perpetrator has been sentenced to one year or two years imprisonment. In some cases, the perpetrators are given fines of very small amount of money. This makes many people to lose interest in speaking out or choose to leave things in the hands of God.

    “I must tell you that the issue of rape is rampant in Yobe State. This year alone, my organisation has handled over 90 cases. Some have been sentenced, some cases are still in court while some chose to settle out of court. The perpetrators agreed to marry their victims. Some of the victims are about 17 years.”

    FIDA boss Godowoli also attested to this, saying: “Cases of older people sleeping with minors are becoming rampant.

    “When I went to FIDA office which is opposite the SSG’s office to pray, there was somebody who came to complain on behalf of his sister, a nine year-old-girl. She used to go to her neighbour’s house to play.

    “One day, she went there as usual, not knowing that her kid friends and their mother were not at home. She went in and was just playing when the breadwinner of the house brought out a knife, threatened to kill her and raped her.

    “Thereafter, he warned her never to tell anybody about it or he would slaughter her. He did the same thing to her thereafter, but unfortunately for him, the wife came and caught him in the act. It was the wife that blew up the matter. He has been arrested and now going through prosecution.

    “The rape of minors in IDP’s camp is reducing because of the resettlement process. We still have cases of rape in places where they have been resettled.

    Why perpetrators engage in unholy act

    Asked what he thought was the reason why adult men rape minors, Mijinyawa said: “I believe the perpetrators of these acts are doing it for rituals. I think some of them belong to secret cults and some are doing it because they want to be rich. I don’t think there is anything they are getting from the act in terms of physical enjoyment. There are so many prostitutes or those you can give money to sleep with. So, why would somebody be having sex with minors?”

    For Godowoli, it could “have something to do with poverty, rituals, secret organisations and cultural beliefs.”

    Efforts at curbing sexual perversion in Yobe

    Checks made by our correspondent revealed that the war against sexual perversion in the state is being aggressively championed by both the state government and private organisations, including international organisations like UNICEF.

    According Godowoli: “Earlier on, these cases were not brought to the open because of stigmatization. But we decided to do vigourous sensitization in 2015 through 2016. That was when we had most of these cases coming out. We went into schools and were always in touch with the House of Assembly.”

    The state government, according to Godowoli, is really playing its role in all this. “Last year, we started our advocacy for the passing of the Child Rights Act. The act has a problem with being passed in the north. Later, the Ministry of Women Affairs said we could pass it but that we should make some amendments that would be in line with our customary differences.

    “The problem we have is the word right. Islam wise, they will tell you which one is oyinbo telling us about the rights of our kids? They will tell you they know the rights of their kids. Even the Christians and traditionalists will tell you the same.

    “Later, we advised that we should drop the word ‘right’ and use something else. The House agreed to this and now we have a bill. UNICEF supported the Ministry of Justice to come up with a bill we call the Child Protection Law, which is exactly Child’s Right Act.

    “It is going to be passed any moment from now. It is going to be an executive bill. It will be taken to His Excellency who will pass it to the House of Assembly. In all the processes, the House was involved. So it will be easier when it comes to passage.

    On his part, Mijinyawa said: “Series of advocacy is being carried out. We go to primary and secondary schools to educate them on gender-based violence and other issues which they were not conversant with.

    “Many primary school teachers are being trained by UNICEF and another group on the issue of protection. Here they have protection desk officers in all schools. They are to observe and attend to children who have any form of fears.

    “It is the almajiri (beggar) children who are in real danger because they are out to beg. Begging outside, someone could tell them to come and do this or that for them, and they will innocently oblige them because they want to get food or money.

    “The Catholic Relief Centre is trying by providing food which the scholars cook for the children. This prevents the children from going out to beg. This is a great achievement I would say, but it is not happening in every part of the state.

    “The state government is also trying to have a modern Islamic boarding school where they are feeding the children in the school. With this, the children don’t have to go out and beg. But it is not yet in place.

    “We have an advocacy group working with tricycle riders. We told them this is what is happening to your people, so try and see how you harmonise them. Every two months, we speak with them to know their problems and how to tackle them.”

    Sale, the Director of Citizens Rights said: “We are currently working on a bill for domestication of child abuse, and the moment we finish it, we will send it to the House of Assembly. We have Child Right Act which is from the Federal Government. We want to domesticate that law to suite our environment in Yobe State.

    Medical, legal experts speak

    Reacting to the years of imprisonment that some the offenders were reportedly given, a Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Chief Ladi Williams, said they fell short of what the law prescribes.

    He said: “It is an offence punishable by 14 years and it was unanimously passed into law by both Christian and Muslim legislatures.

    “Two years imprisonment is too short for that kind of offence- sodomy. If you know that you will serve 14 years imprisonment, you will not go about looking for a man’s ass to burst. The law should be enforced judiciously. Imagine having a son that you asked to go and get a job somewhere and the man would begin to run after his ass! That is very bad.

    “It is a mandatory 14 years sentence. The extant law now is 14 years imprisonment. You are asking me why offenders could be given two, three or seven year jail term for such an offence? Don’t you know our judges? Only God knows what happened.”

    Explaining the health and psychological effect of the act on the young victims, a public health physician, Dr Rotimi Adesanya, said: “Homosexuality has a lot of medical consequences. These include HIV, hepatitis and all other sexually transmitted diseases. Homosexuals are prone to having all these.

    “If the children are coerced into having such sexual relationships, it will affect them psychologically and emotionally. They will not be able to do well in their endeavours. Victims of homosexuality may have anal tear.

    “Rape of minors has both medical and legal consequences. Rape is even worse. Apart from those diseases that I mentioned, raped children pass through psychological trauma which may affect them for life.

    “It will affect their emotions, their intelligence, academic performance will drop. They will not be able to concentrate in whatever they are doing. They will have low IQ and they always have what we call post traumatic syndrome. After such incident, they will not be able to sleep well.”

    The physician advised: “Victims should always seek medical help. Most of them would need rehabilitation. They are seen by psychologists who will counsel and encourage them.

    “Medically, doctors will do several tests which will include HIV, Hepatitis and treat those infected. When minors are raped, it destroys the reproductive system of some of them and their urinary system.

    “Some of them have tear and urine would be leaking from their body. When some of them get pregnant when they are very young, their reproductive system would be affected and this affects the bladder. There could be a tear in the bladder and as a result, urine will be leaking from their private parts.”