Tag: borno

  • Six-year-old pupil memorises Qur’an in one year

    Six-year-old pupil memorises Qur’an in one year

    Decades ago, getting Islamic education required a huge sacrifice, especially for those who want to memorise the Holy Qur’an. One had to go as far as Borno State in the Northeast. Not any more.

    Six-year-old Salim Abdulkareem from Zaria memorised over 77,000 words from the holy book in one year.

    Little Abdulkareem, who started Qur’anic school in May, last year at Prof. Ango Abdullahi International School, Zaria, completed and memorised it before last May. He told The Nation that his ambition is to become a medical doctor.

    Abdulkareem said: “I want to become a medical doctor and my ultimate goal is to contribute to national growth and development of my dear country. If my dream is actualised, I want to assist people by treating those who come to me with sicknesses.

    “I will be happy, if my dream comes true. However, I believe with dedication, commitment and encouragement from my parents and my teachers, I am sure of becoming a doctor,” he said.

    On his challenges, Salim said his major one was the routine of waking up in the night for Qur’anic recitation and memorisation.

    It will sound so strange to somebody who knows the formalities, intrigues and difficulties in memorising the  holy Qur’an, because it takes some people many years to complete it.

    Mallam Hamza Jibril, the Administrative Officer of the boarding section of Prof. Ango Abdullahi International School, explained some of the methodologies adopted by the school.

    He said: “Salim was brought to this school by his parent in May 2016. His father, Prof. Abdulkareem S. Ahmed, is a lecturer at Chemical Engineering Department of Ahmadu Bello University (ABU), Zaria.

    “When Salim was admitted into this school, he did not know the Qur’anic alphabet not to talk of how to recite the Holy Qur’an. We, therefore, had to coach him from the scratch.

    “His father gave the school authority all rights over the child, sometimes, the father doesn’t allow Salim to go home for holidays. He would insist that the pupil be allowed to be engaged in some lessons.

    “This is what made him exceptional among his colleagues. Salim had completed his memorisation last April and just as I have told you, he was brought to this school in May, last year. In view of this, he had completed memorisation of the holy Qur’an in less than one year.

    “Despite that he had finished the memorisation by last April, we realised that his memorisation required some touches or corrections, and to God be the glory, we have succeeded in making all the necessary corrections,” he said.

    Jibril added that Salim’s classmates have also completed the school, but they were still being supervised and corrected where necessary, so that they will be able to complete their memorisation before the stipulate two years.

  • Service chiefs relocate to Borno

    Service chiefs relocate to Borno

    Service Chiefs have relocated to the theatre of operation against Boko Haram in compliance with Acting President Yemi Osinbajo’s directive.

    Prof. Osinbajo gave the directive last week following the resurgence of Boko Haram activities.

    A statement from the Defence Headquarters last night indicated that the service chiefs had started operating from Maiduguri.

    The statement by Director of Defence Information, Major Gen. John Enenche said: “In compliance with the recent Presidential directive by the Acting President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo SAN, GCON, to service Chiefs to move to Maiduguri, the epicentre of the North-East Counter Insurgency and Counter Terrorism Operation, the Service Chiefs have commenced the Command and Control of the Operation from the Military Command and Control Centre in Maiduguri.

    “In this regard, the Chief of Defence Staff held a Briefing session with the Chief of Army Staff, Chief of Air Staff, the Theatre Commander and Senior Principal Staff Officers of the military high command at the Military Command and Control Centre on 1st August 2017, on the reviewed strategic direction and operational plans, in compliance to the directive of the Acting President.

    “This move and action are expected to give impetus to the military effort in the North-East Operations. Consequently, the Defence Headquarters hereby appeal to the public and people in the areas affected directly by the negative acts of terrorism and criminality, to come forward with credible information that will further assist the security and response agencies to tackle this menace.

    “It is necessary to point out some of key information required which include the following: a. Terrorists sleeper cell locations b. Terrorists concentration areas and outpost locations c. Collaborators and informants to the terrorists

    1. Suspicious isolated settlements and camps outside normal living areas.

    “The Armed Forces of Nigeria reaffirms its commitment to ensuring that peace and tranquillity are restored to the North-East. Thus the cooperation of the general public, particularly those in the affected areas is highly solicited. “

     

  • U.S to train NSCDC operatives on counter-terrorism in Borno

    U.S to train NSCDC operatives on counter-terrorism in Borno

    The U.S says it will train and provide technical support to personnel of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) to enhance its operations in the counter-terrorism campaign.

    Mr Michael Bonner, the Senior Police Advisor U.S. Embassy, stated this when he visited Ibrahim Abdullahi, the state NSCDC Commandant in Maiduguri on Tuesday.

    Bonner said that such support had become necessary in view of NSCDC’s contributions in promoting national security, especially in the protection of critical infrastructure.

    “Absolutely, when you talk about safety and security in Nigeria, the primary concern is the North-East, and the state that needs attention the most right now is Borno.

    “It is a great opportunity to meet NSCDC officers and hear from you how the U.S can assist you?

    “We are also planning to train the NSCDC personnel on post-bomb blast investigation techniques.

    “We have already put in place some courses that will run strictly for the NSCDC on critical infrastructure protection. “The course is designed to train about 25 officers of the NSCDC who will also train other officers of the command.’’

    According to him, we are also looking at providing a joint training for the NSCDC and the Nigeria Police Force.

    “The training includes counter-terrorism techniques to enable you to identify potential threats and protect people in soft targets as well as prevent terror attack,” he said.

    According to Bonner, the NSCDC plays a vital role in community policing, in view of its closer ties with people in the society.

    He said that the U.S. Embassy would liaise with some humanitarian organisations to assist the command improve its operations.

    Responding, Abdullahi said the command had recorded significant success toward providing civic protection in the state.

    He recalled that at the beginning of the Boko Haram insurgency, personnel of the command were not allowed to carry arms, noting that the trend did not deter them from their duties.

    The NSCDC commandant said that the command had recorded successes in various operations against the insurgents in the state.

    “We have arrested a lot of high profiled Boko Haram insurgents, their food and fuel suppliers, we also intercepted some cow rustlers and recovered a spiritual Book which the insurgents used to hypnotise new recruits,” he said.

    According to him, the command has deployed personnel to some of the liberated areas and University of Maiduguri.

    Abdullahi added that the command had also resolved more than 15,000 cases under its dispute resolution exercise.

    The commandant listed lack of patrol vehicles and obsolete equipment as some of the challenges being faced by the command.

    He stressed the need to rehabilitate offices of the command vandalised by the Boko Haram insurgents in the 27 local government areas of the state.

  • Restructuring fever

    It seems everyone in Nigeria is talking about restructuring these days, as if it is a silver bullet to end all contentions and achieve the ultimate synthesis.  The Chairman of the Northern Governors Forum,   Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima, captured the various campaigners and the range of the campaigns: “We have witnessed in the last few months, all manner of political agitations, ranging from the sublime to the ridiculous. While some arguably more moderate and mature voices have advocated for the scrapping of the 1999 Constitution and a return to the 1963 Republican Constitution with its emphasis on regionalism, others have called for the practice of “true” or “fiscal’ federalism. Yet another group is aggressively seeking to commit the nation to adopt the Report of the 2014 Constitutional Conference as the authoritative basis for discussing restructuring, while at the extreme end of the scale, we have the champions of a separatist agenda who are hell-bent on balkanising the country.”

    Interestingly, Acting President Yemi Osinbajo said the Federal Government was following the nationwide fever: “We are looking at all contributions made by Nigerians across the country. Very soon we will come out with policies to address the call for restructuring of the country.” It is noteworthy that the ruling party, the All Progressives Congress (APC), on July 19 formed a nine-member committee headed by Governor Nasir el-Rufai of Kaduna State to come up with a response to the issue.

    It is striking that another committee was created on July 28 by the 19 Northern states “to collate the views and comments of the people of the Northwest, North-central and Northeast ahead of any conference on the restructuring.” This committee is headed by Governor Aminu Waziri Tambuwal of Sokoto State.

    As things stand, it is predictable that there will be other committees on the restructuring controversy set up by other groups to take a position on the increasingly divisive subject.    In the storm, there are many loud voices that seem to miss the point. For instance, the former APC Interim National Chairman, Chief Bisi Akande, said:  ”The 1999 Constitution is Nigeria’s greatest misadventure since Lugard’s amalgamation of 1914. The constitution puts emphasis on spending rather than making money, thereby intensifying the battles for supremacy between the legislature and the executive while the judiciary is being corruptly tainted and discredited. The constitution breeds and protects corrupt practices and criminal impunities in governance. The 1999 Constitution can never be beneficially reviewed and the ongoing piecemeal adjustments or amendments can only totally blot the essence of national values and accelerate the de-amalgamation of Nigeria. All the angels coming from heavens cannot make that constitution work for the progress of Nigeria. It should only be scrapped as bad relics of military mentality; and it ought to be temporarily replaced with the 1963 Republican Constitution to enable a transition for the writing of a suitable constitution.”

    Taking the same path, the Yoruba Council of Elders (YCE) argued: “A constitution that virtually neutralises the local government system, which is the nearest to the people has invariably consigned the people to irrelevance and put development at the grassroots in reverse gear. A constitution and system of government that continue to explore natural resources to enrich the ruling class at the expense of the people cannot endure. This constitution compels corruption. Our country is presently confronted with daunting challenges of increasing youth unemployment, which is fueling insecurity, kidnapping, armed robbery and separatist agitations. These challenges clearly show that Nigeria’s problems are foundational and structural, therefore, constitutional. Unending piecemeal amendments of the 1999 Constitution cannot work. It will merely be postponing the doomsday. The constitution must be discarded, and the 1963 Constitution and the resolutions of the 2014 National Conference should be used as a template for a new ground rule, which will be submitted to the people in a referendum.”

    Arguments for restructuring the country in specific ways tend to downplay perhaps the most fundamental requirement for reform, which is the human factor. It goes without saying that no constitution is self-operating, meaning all constitutions depend on operators for success or failure. This reality is so real that any argument for restructuring that fails to take cognisance of it is so unreal.

    The country’s political evolution shows that the constitution may not be the most problematic problem. When those empowered to operate the constitution use their powers to cripple the constitution, the resultant failure cannot be the fault of the constitution.

    The people may well have issues with the current constitution because there will always be constitutional issues needing resolution; but there will always be further issues to resolve after resolution. A constitution is necessarily work in progress because of social dynamism. It is a contradiction to have an unchanging and unchangeable constitution in a changing and changeable social context. Any restructuring of the country must, therefore, be informed by the reality of contextual changeability.

    It is easy to identify the critical importance of the human factor in the operation of the country’s constitution; it is difficult to make the human operators of the constitution do so with utmost good faith. In the final analysis, the kind of restructuring that will advance the country’s interest is an ethical question.

    There is a tragic aspect of the restructuring debate, which is that it represents a primary moral failure. Without sounding romantic, the ultimate restructuring must happen in the mind. It is obvious that the mind is where the unprogressive operation of the constitution begins, and the mind is where it will end.

    Restructuring became a hot front-burner issue on account of unprogressive governance, meaning that if the country’s political operators got governance right the idea of restructuring that is spreading like a dangerous fever would perhaps not have been presented so explosively.

    The questions are: If the constitution is operated with good faith, and that is possible, will the grounds for extensive restructuring still exist? Is the elevation of form over content, which the restructuring debate implies, a necessary condition for progress? Is the moral content of political leadership in Nigeria irrelevant to the campaign for restructuring?

  • Osinbajo orders continued search, rescue missions in Borno

    Osinbajo orders continued search, rescue missions in Borno

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo has condemned the appalling ambush, attack and abduction of soldiers and civilians on duties at the Lake Chad Basin Frontier Exploration.

    The terrorist attacks had resulted in a number of deaths of hardworking and innocent Nigerians, and abduction of some Nigerians.

    In a statement by the Senior Special Assistant on media and publicity, Laolu Akande, the Acting President while noting that the objective of the patriotic exercise was to open up new areas for oil exploration for the common good of all Nigerians, commiserated with the families, relatives and associates of those who lost their lives in the despicable onslaught.

    He also wished the injured persons speedy recovery.

    The statement reads: “The Acting President after an emergency meeting with the Military chiefs on Thursday issued fresh directives to the Nigerian military and all security agencies to immediately scale-up their efforts and activities in Borno State in order to maintain a strong, effective control of the situation and secure lives and property.

    “While commending the military for the progress already recorded with the rescue of some of the abducted, Prof. Osinbajo has also ordered the continuation of search and rescue missions to locate and ensure the freedom of all remaining abducted persons as soon as possible, using all available and expedient means in the circumstances.”

    Justice, the Acting President said, would be pursued for the victims and against those who engage in the unacceptable, criminal and terrorist conduct.

    Acting President Osinbajo also paid tribute to the resilience, courage and bravery of officers and men of the Nigerian Armed Forces for their gallant endeavours and sacrifices for the peace, security and territorial integrity of the country.

    He eulogized the Nigerian soldiers who have paid the ultimate price in the mission and others linked to the current insurgency.

    Osinbajo gave assurance that the welfare of the families of the soldiers will be prioritized.

    He also commended the diligence of the management and staff of the NNPC, and the lecturers/consultants from the University of Maiduguri in pursuing Federal Government’s resolve to grow the nation’s current crude oil reserve base through potential exploration in the Lake Chad Basin.

    He said that the government will by no means be dissuaded.

    He said: “Some of these extraordinarily selfless Nigerians from the NNPC and the University Of Maiduguri put their lives on the line that we and generations to come will enjoy the resources of this land.  We will never forget that sacrifice”

    Even though pockets of terrorists have been launching attacks recently in Borno State, the Acting President assured the people of the State, the region and all Nigerians, that the Federal Government is not only on top of the situation, but will define the end of the atrocities by both winning the war and winning the peace in the North-east.

  • 8 killed, 14 others wounded in suicide bomb attack in Borno

    8 killed, 14 others wounded in suicide bomb attack in Borno

    No fewer than eight persons were killed  and 14 others sustained in Friday night suicide bomb attack in Dikwa Local Government Area  of Borno.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the incident occurred on Friday when two female suicide bombers hit an Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camp in the area.

    The Chairman of the council, Alhaji Rawa Modu, confirmed the incident to newsmen in Maiduguri on Saturday.

    Modu, who visited some of the victims, said that the suicide bombers infiltrated into the camp and detonated explosives.

    “Two female suicide bombers attacked the 24 Housing estate at about 9: 30 p.m on Friday.

    “Seven persons died on the spot and one other died in the hospital, while 14 other persons were receiving treatment at the Specialist Hospital, Maiduguri.

    Modu said that the council had distributed metal detectors to members of the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF) to enhance security at the camp.

    The Police and military authorities were yet to comment on the incident.

  • Starving in plain sight

    Starving in plain sight

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Not your typical cash palliative

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

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

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

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

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

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

     

    Bad roads, lean harvests, other calamities

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

     

    Giving returnees a humane welcome

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

     

    Millions face starvation as relief funding depletes

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Subsequently,  she pawned it off at a paltry fee.

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

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

  • Four killed in suicide bomb attack near Maiduguri

    Four killed in suicide bomb attack near Maiduguri

    Four people have been killed in a suicide bomb attack at Mandirari Village in the Kondugu Local Government Area of Borno, the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports.

    An official of the Borno State Emergency Management Agency, Malam Bello Danbatta, who confirmed the development, told NAN on Thursday that the attack occurred late on Wednesday.

    He said that the agency had since deployed its rescue team to the village, which according to him is near Maiduguri, the Borno capital.

    Danbatta said that the team had also evacuated people, who sustained injuries in the attack to the Maiduguri Specialist Hospital for medical attention.

    The attack is the latest in an increasing spate of deadly attacks in the war-wracked North East, the epicentre of the Boko Haram insurgency, which commenced in 2009.

    A resident of Mandirari Village, Malam Jubril Modu, who claimed to have witnessed the attack, said that four female suicide bombers were involved in the attack.

    He said that the bombers were intercepted by members of the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF), when the insurgents were trying to infiltrate Mandirari Village.

    Modu said that one of the insurgents detonated an explosive strapped to her body, making the device strapped on two other suicide bombers to detonate.

    “The bomb blew up the insurgents into pieces. One member of the CJTF and three others sustained injuries in the blast.’’

    Modu explained that the fourth suicide bomber threw away the explosive device on her body and fled.

    “A team of the CJTF member is searching for the fleeing suicide bomber,” he stated.

    A member of the military task force, who spoke to NAN on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to speak on the issue, also confirmed the attack.

    The officer said, however, that security had been beefed up in the area.

  • Shettima advises governors against wealth accumulation

    Shettima advises governors against wealth accumulation

    Gov. Kashim Shettima of Borno, has advised governors in the country to focus on enhancing the well-being of the masses rather than accumulating wealth for themselves.

    The governor gave the advice on Tuesday in Abuja at the 2017 graduation of Internally Displaced Girls under the Organisation of Female Students Scholarship Scheme.

    The 73 graduating girls were sponsored by the Girl Child Concern (GCC), a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), in collaboration with the Borno Government, and were selected in from secondary schools in five Northern states.

    “The most important yard stick has to do with the quality of governance; there is more to leadership than primitive capital accumulation.

    “No matter how much you accumulate beyond a certain point, it’s just a number,” the governor said.

    He said that unless something was done fast to address the plight of the common man, “what awaits the country will be worse than the Boko Haram insurgency”.

    According to him, this is violence that cannot be separated from poverty, and a hopeless, jobless, ill-educated and ill-paid young man is the most dangerous.

    Shettima stated that it was the responsibility of governors to enthrone good governance by “wearing their thinking caps” and working for the people.

    He, therefore, stressed the need for governors to create more jobs, invest in education and create work space and work stations for the next generation of youths.

    He said that there was nothing special about oil as it would soon go into extinction, noting that human resources was the most important and should be developed.

    The governor, however, said that there was need for Nigerians to unite to fight the country’s common heritage and challenges.

    He noted that women and children bore the brunt of insurgency, adding that the Boko Haram sect had so far created 54,911 widows and 52,311 orphans in the state.

    This, he said, was according to World Bank, European Union and the Presidency’s official figures.

    “These are official figures, probably the unofficial figure may be twice this number.

    “The truth is that we either take care of these orphans or 10 years to fifteen years from now, they will be the monsters that will drive us out of this land,” he said.

    According to the governor, some elite and political bigwigs are already afraid of visiting rural areas to meet with common men for fear of being molested.

    He added that there was presently a palpable content against the elite glaring on the faces of most common men.

    He decried the state of public schools in the country, particularly in the North, saying that security and feeding in most of the schools was nothing to write home about.

    Shettima stressed that unless the country´s leadership began to think toward improving the lot of the common man and working for the people, the situation would deteriorate.

    Earlier, Dr Mairo Mandara, Executive Director of the GCC, said the girls were another success story of the country´s fight against insurgency.

    This, she said, was so because the girls dared where others failed and got what others were abducted for.

    Mandara described the girls as “a cohort of brave, fearless, active and informed girl mentors” empowered with life skills who would encourage others to remain in school.

    She added that the centre had concluded plans to establish a Girls´ Academy in Borno with learning activities taking off in September, 2017.

    Mandara said that GCC was also setting up a skills acquisition centre for teaching construction skills in collaboration with King Muhammad VI of Morocco.

    She said that Borno Government had already provided a land for the project, adding that discussions for the setting up of the centre had reached advanced stage.

    Most of the girls who spoke to NAN expressed happiness on their freedom and graduation and prayed to God to bless the GCC and Borno Government.

  • Two insurgents killed in failed attack on IDPs camp in Borno – Police

    Two insurgents killed in failed attack on IDPs camp in Borno – Police

    The Police in Borno on Monday said two Boko Haram suicide bombers were killed in a failed attempt to attack displaced persons camps and University of Maiduguri.

    A statement signed by DSP Victor Isuku, the Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), said the suicide bombers were killed by security operatives before they hit their targets.

    “On Sunday at about 2115hrs, a suspected female Boko Haram terrorist, took advantage of the darkness of night and attempted to gain access into Dalori 2 IDPs camp through the rear perimeter fence.

    “Fortunately, she was sighted by vigilant security personnel on duty and chased.

    “In an attempt to escape arrest, she hurriedly detonated the IED strapped to her body, killing herself alone.

    “The impact of the explosion destroyed a portion of the IDP camp fence.

    “In the early hours of today (Monday) at about 0400hrs, a male suicide bomber attempted to gain entry into the premises of University of Maiduguri.

    “On sighting the presence of security personnel deployed to the University on duty, he hurriedly detonated his IED, killing himself alone near the BOT building,” Isuku said in the statement.

    The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), had earlier confirmed that two suicide bombers attacked Dalori 1 and 2 IDPs camps in Maiduguri.

    In a statement issued to newsmen, the agency said four displaced persons were killed and 15 others wounded in the attack.

    It said that a male suicide bomber infiltrated into Dalori 1 camp and detonated the explosive strapped to his body and killed four persons.

    “Two persons died on the spot while two others died at the hospital,” it said, adding that 15 others sustained injuries in the attack.

    The statement added that a female suicide bomber was shot by security men when she attempted to cross the perimeter fence at Dalori 2 camp.

    “A female suicide bomber was spotted by security agents while trying to cross the fence.

    “They shot her and the explosive device strapped to her body detonated, and blew the woman into pieces,” the statement said.

    It said that another female suicide bomber was intercepted and killed by vigilance group at Gate 3, University of Maiduguri.

    A member if the Civilian Joint Task Force  (CJTF), Abdullahi Muhammad, said the woman detonated the explosive when she was stopped by their men on duty at about 7:45 AM.

    He said that the woman killed herself and one member of the vigilance group sustained injuries in the attack.

    The injured victims were referred to Special Hospital, Maiduguri for treatment.