Tag: borno

  • Governors meet under one forum

    Governors meet under one forum

    Outgoing governors, re-elected ones and their incoming colleagues yesterday met in Abuja under an enlarged forum.

    It was the first time the governors would be meeting in their numbers after the May 2013 disputed election of the Nigeria Governors Forum where the Rotimi Amaechi (Rivers) and Jonah Jang (Plateau) factions emerged.

    The meeting, which insiders said was a reconciliatory move by the governors, started at 8.30 pm at the Transcorp Hilton Hotel.

    Present at the meeting were governors of Rivers, Delta, Niger, Zamfara, Edo, Kwara, Osun, Kaduna, Borno, Kebbi, Akwa Ibom, Bauchi, Benue and Oyo.

    Others were Deputy Governors of Nasarawa, Imo and Kogi States and the Governor-Elect of Kano State.

    The meeting was still ongoing as at the time of filing this report at 10.05 pm.

     

  • Re-elected Senator,Zannah,dies at 60

    Re-elected Senator,Zannah,dies at 60

    The senator representing Borno Central,Alhaji Ahmed Zannah, died Saturday in Abuja. He was 60.

    The All Progressives Congress (APC) senator was originally elected on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in 2011 after defeating former Borno State Governor Ali Modu Sheriff,who contested on the platform of the defunct ANPP.
    Zannah was reelected in last month’s election only to succumb to stroke yesterday.
    He returned to Nigeria recently from medical treatment in London.
    He was a vitriolic critic of President Goodluck Jonathan over his poor handling of the Boko Haram menace in the Northeast which led to the dislocation and capture of a substantial population of his constituents.

    Senate President David Mark described Zanna’s death as a big blow to the senate and the nation.
    The Senate and the Chairman of its Committee on Environment and Ecology, Dr. Bukola Saraki expressed sadness at his demise.
    Mark in a statement through his Chief Press Secretary, Paul Mumeh, said Zannah’s death was one too many.
    He is the fifth member of the 7th Senate to pass on.
    The President of the Senate noted that Zanna was a gentleman who was very mindful of his legislative assignments and the welfare of his constituents and the nation at large.
    He said: “Senator Zanna’s death coming a few days after the demise of Senator Uche Chukwumerije is a big blow to the Senate and the nation. This is certainly not the best of times for us. These deaths in quick succession are heart breaking.
    “We cannot question the will of the Almighty. We can only ask that our Creator give us the fortitude to bear this sad loss and grant the deceased eternal rest.”

  • My worries about rescued women, children- Borno Governor

    My worries about rescued women, children- Borno Governor

    Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima has called for proper profiling of the rescued women and children from the camp of Boko Haram insurgents especially those who are pregnant.

    According to Governor  Kashim, the insurgents embarked on large scale rape of women in their captivity so as to raise more insurgents as their successors to continue their violent activities even after their parents death,.

    He said a  coordinated approach would have to be evolved by both the Federal and the State governments so as to break the anticipated genealogy of the insurgents.

    Governor  Shettima’s concerns  were made public  in a statement by  his spokesman Isa Umar Gusau on Monday in Maiduguri after a closed door meeting the governor earlier had with some government officials over the weekend in Maiduguri.

    The meeting followed the recent rescue of hundreds of women and children from the Sambisa Forest by the Nigeria Army as the onslaught on the Boko Haram insurgents intensifies.

    Shettima narrated that, the insurgents shared weird believes and ideologies amongst them that “whoever doesn’t share their ideology is an infidel and as such his wife and property can be freely acquired by the sect members with the wives serving as slaves that should satisfy sexual urge of their masters.

    “It  is also  held amongst the sect members that children fathered by them are likely to share their ideology later in life and succeed their parents in years to come and as such the circle will be maintained.”

    Part of the statement reads in full;  “I am happy with the recovery of hundreds of women and children, it is a thing of joy that they have been freed alive. However, I am also very worried about what the future holds for us if what I have gathered about these insurgents works according to their plan. I remember discussing this in an elaborate interview I granted to the Sunday Trust last year. These people (Boko Haram) have a certain spiritual conviction that any child they father will grow to inherit their ideology whether they live with the children or not. They also believe that whoever does not hold their ideology is an unbeliever that should be killed and rendered homeless and whatever belongs to him or her becomes a legitimate booty recovered from enemies. This booty includes women that are then allocated to ranking leaders of the sect as sex slaves.

    “The sect leaders make very conscious effort to impregnate the women, some of them, I was told even pray before mating, offering supplications for God to make the products of what they are about doing become children that will inherit their ideology. After getting their captives pregnant, they keep them to allow the pregnancy mature to an extent of say four or more months to make abortion difficult or impossible for the women due to life threats in carrying out abortions at that level.

     

    ”They abandon the women afterwards to go and give birth anywhere else. In most cases, the women return home or get helped by traditional birth attendants. I wouldn’t be surprise if in some cases, some of the women deliver in captivity and the children grow to four or five years since the sect have been operating for years, perhaps the Sambissa camps might have been in existence since 2009 or afterwards. The sect is known to usually have medical teams and make shift clinics for treating injured men and other health challenges. I do not have any official information yet regarding these issues but I have read from some online media houses that many girls were rescued with visible pregnancy and some with newly born babies.  Of course, I expect our security agencies to establish the paternity of all children recovered from interactions with the victims and other forms of investigation.

    “My major concern is how we as stakeholders from the Federal and State Governments will manage women that might be affected. I am seriously worried with the fact that most women tend to hate and abandon children they deliver from rape. Now, the problem is that these children could go to the streets unattended to;  they then lack access to food, healthcare and education. The result is that they could indeed inherit their fathers somehow. We also don’t know whether the sect members would after putting a woman in the family way, identify them with particular communities and put a mechanism to monitor the children and whisk them away in future.

    “So, after establishing the paternity of the children and background of those pregnant where any is found to be pregnant, the Federal Government will have to work with State Governments whose citizens are affected, so that we get the involvement of medical and psychosocial specialists as well as child welfare experts so that we deal with the situation by properly documenting these kids without getting them stigmatized, monitoring and working towards raising these kids to become educated future leaders without the slightest ideologies of their fathers in order for us to cut the circle being envisaged. We can achieve this in order to safeguard the future of our communities. We must show love to these innocent children as much we should support the innocent mothers. This is equally in our enlightened self  interest,” Shettima  was quoted saying.

     

     

     

  • Borno hails military for rescuing abducted women

    The Borno State government yesterday hailed the military for rescuing about 500 children and women abducted by suspected Boko Haram insurgents in Sambisa Forest.

    The military, last week, rescued the women in batches, following an operation in the forest.

    Governor Kashim Shettima, in a statement in Maiduguri, the state capital, by his Special Adviser on Communication, Mallam Isa Gusau, described the military operation as gratifying.

    The statement said: “The operation is gratifying, regardless of whether or not the rescued women form part of the over 200 students abducted by insurgents at Government Secondary School, (GSS), Chibok, on April 14, 2014.”

    It added: “The lives, safety and wellbeing of residents of the state are of equal importance to us and as such we celebrated the news about the rescue with so much excitement in a manner we would have celebrated if the military succeed in freeing the Chibok schoolgirls.”

    The governor urged the military to sustain the tempo by freeing other abducted persons from the forest.

    Shettima hoped that the military would also rescue the abducted Chibok schoolgirls within a short time.

    Also, the Borno State government has said it had deployed social workers to the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps to tackle rising cases of trauma and psychiatric problems among displaced persons.

    Dr Muhammad Ghuluze, the director, Emergency Medical Response Department in the Ministry of Health, spoke with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Maiduguri on the deployment.

    Ghuluze explained that the objective was to assist the displaced persons, who suffered trauma due to the activities of the insurgents.

    The doctor said the ministry had established clinics in almost all the IDP camps.

    He said the ministry also deployed doctors, nurses, midwives and other health workers to ensure proper management of the clinics.

    Ghuluze said: “We have already set up medical clinics in 18 of the 21 IDP camps in Maiduguri, with the aim of providing medical services to the displaced persons.

    “We mobilised social workers, including psychiatric doctors, to the clinics after we discovered the high rate of psychiatric disorders in the camps.

    “The social workers will co-exist with the other medical and health workers in the clinic for effective service delivery. The idea is to provide easy access to those in need of such services.”

    He said the ministry had ensured regular supply of drugs to the clinics.

    Ghuluze said: “We have been supplying drugs to the clinics for treatment of minor ailments. The camps workers have been empowered to refer patients requiring further attention to the Specialists Hospital for treatment free of charge.”

    He said the ministry had also distributed thousands of insecticidal-treated mosquito nets to the IDP camps to protect them from malaria.

    “We have distributed Insecticidal Mosquito Nets to all the IDP camps as part of the Roll Back Malaria programme.

    “Once, a camp was set up by the government, we simply supply equal number of mosquito nets to the IDPs in the camp.”

    He added that the continued influx of displaced persons into the camps had led to scarcity of the nets.

    “We have noticed inadequacy in the distribution of the mosquito nets due largely to the influx of new persons into the camps.

    “We have taken notice of the problem for immediate action,” the permanent secretary said.

  • Rescue of abducted women is gratifying – Gov Shettima

    Rescue of abducted women is gratifying – Gov Shettima

    Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima has said that the news of the rescued women from Bomo Haram detention is gratifying even if they are not the Chibok school girls.

    Gov. Shettima who spoke through his spokesman, Isa Gusau, in Maiduguri noted that his excitement of the news will be the same when the army will succeed in freeing the Chibok girls.

    He said, “The lives, safety and well-being of all citizens of Borno ‎are of equal importance to me.  I celebrate this news about the rescue with so much excitement in a manner I would celebrate when the military succeeds in freeing the Chibok schoolgirls are very dear to me.”

    The statement reads; “I was so full of excitement, gratitude to God almighty ‎and commendation to our gallant armed forces for this great humanitarian feat. For me, the lives, safety and welfare of all citizens of Borno State are of equal importance. These rescued women are daughters, sisters and perhaps also mothers whose lives are important not just to their loved ones but also to me as Governor of Borno State whose mandate is to cater for the welfare of all those living in any part of Borno State regardless of who they are, their faith, gender, age, geopolitical origins and other background elements.

    “They are important to us and words cannot explain how pleased we are. We are very particular about Chibok schoolgirls because of the peculiar manner in which they were kidnapped and how that kidnapped has redefined the Boko Haram insurgency.

    “The Chibok schoolgirls are very dear to my heart because they were kidnapped while they were in school. Their kidnap is very symbolic because their kidnappers are opposed to western education especially female education. The entire world especially myself, is desperate about the rescue of the Chibok schoolgirls in order not to allow the ideology held by the insurgents to thrive and to encourage education which is the foundation of any human or society that seeks to develop. However, this rescue is also very dear to me. I am as pleased as much as I would be when the Chibok schoolgirls are rescued by the special grace of God.

    “I am very optimistic, prayerful and supportive of the military’s ongoing rescue and counter insurgency operations. We won’t give up on the Chibok schoolgirls like I said two weeks ago. No sane parent gives up on a missing child. I have daughters and I know the love of a parent to the girl child.

    “For now, it is better to allow the military handle things, conduct their investigations and ascertain the identity of those rescued but irrespective of the identity of the girls, we are very happy they have been rescued whether they are citizens of Borno or anywhere else. I kindly urge the media to refer to the military for updates on the matter so that there are no mix-ups at any point. I kindly call on all citizens of Borno and other fellow Nigerians to pray for our armed forces and volunteers to succeed so that good will triumph over evil.

    “We have abiding faith in God that he will see us through these times and we shall overcome the temporary but traumatic moment of grief. God will set Chibok girls and all Nigerians free from fear and the brutality of Boko Haram Insurgents and others in their league.”

  • Large turnout of female voters in Yobe, Borno

    Large turnout of female voters in Yobe, Borno

    There has been high turnout of female voters across Yobe State for the governorship and house of assembly polls.

    Though the general turnout is averagely low, our correspondent observed that most of the voters seen on queue were females.

    Some of the INEC officials explained that the turnout will improved as the accreditation progresses, attributing the turnout to bad weather.

    “You can see, it’s too early to say there is low turn because the people are yet to come out. The weather is also bad today,”  the official said.

    Voters accreditation however  started early in most of the polling stations visited at the IDPs voting camps in Damaturu, Tarmuwa and Dapchi local government areas.

    Accreditation began at about 8.00am in some of the polling station.

    In maiduguri, the Borno State capital, accreditation is going on peacefully with voters queuing up for accreditation.

    Many people were pleased with the efficacy of the card reader as against the last election.

  • Military sack insurgents from Alagarno forest

    Military sack insurgents from Alagarno forest

    The Nigerian Military on Tuesday morning sacked Boko Haram terrorists from the Alagamo forest in Borno.

    This is contained in a statement issued in Abuja by the Acting Director of Army Public Relations, Col. Sani Usman.

    “This morning, troops of the Nigerian Army along with support from the Nigerian Air Force, cleared the last camp of Boko Haram terrorists in Alagarno forest located between Kaga and Daboa local government areas of Borno, which link Yobe and Gombe States.

    According to NAN, the key terrorists’ camp within the forest includes; Falluja and Timbuktu camps have all been cleared.

    The statement said so far, a lot of recoveries including armoured fighting vehicles and computers were made.

    It added that troops were now mopping up the general area and that more details of the operations would be disclosed later.

  • Borno: Scores killed in Boko Haram attack

    Borno: Scores killed in Boko Haram attack

    Suspected Boko Haram gunmen opened fire on villagers and torched a number of buildings in a new attack in northeast Nigeria, witnesses said Monday.

    Resident Ahmad Ali told AFP that roughly two dozen assailants stormed the village of Kwajaffa on Sunday evening and ordered residents out of their homes.

    Residents thought the Islamist insurgents “were going to preach and leave”, but in fact they “opened fire on the crowd,” Ali said.

    Ali said the death toll likely passed two dozen but no other eye witnesses could be reached immediately to confirm the figures.

    “They then went on setting fire to homes, burning half of the village before they left,” he added.

    Kwajaffa lies in the southern part of Borno state, one the regions hit hardest during Boko Haram’s deadly six-year uprising.

    Details of attacks often take time to emerge, given the poor communications infrastructure in the embattled region.

    Babagana Mustapha said a relative who fled the attack in Kwajaffa arrived at his home in southern Borno’s commercial hub of Biu, 35 kilometres (22 miles) from Kwajaffa, at 11:30 pm on Sunday.

    This relative reported similar details concerning the attack, including a number of casualties, Mustapha told AFP.

    Nigeria’s military – backed by forces from Chad, Niger and Cameroon – has claimed huge victories over Boko Haram in the northeast over the last two months, retaking a series of towns and villages previously under rebel control.

    But experts have warned that hit-and-run attacks by the group could increase amid the added military pressure.

    The Islamist militants killed seven people going to a market in southern Chad on Friday, and then set improvised landmines on the road close to the Nigerian border.

     

  • Borno pastor : I didn’t beg Oritsejafor over N7bn bribe

    Borno pastor : I didn’t beg Oritsejafor over N7bn bribe

    Borno State-based Pastor Kallamu Mus-Dikwa yesterday accused the wife of Christian Association of Nigeria’s (CAN) President, Pastor Ayo Oristejafo, of lying against him that he came to beg her husband over the alleged N7 billion collected from President Goodluck Jonathan ahead of the presidential election.

    Pastor Dikwa had accused CAN of collecting N7 billion from President Jonathan to purportedly campaign against the All Progressives Congress (APC) presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, in the rescheduled elections.

    The cleric, in a telephone in Kaduna, said he had not “set his eyes on the CAN president for over a year now, let alone going to beg him as claimed by his wife”.

    He also denied meeting Pastor Oritsejafor’s wife, challenging her to tell the world where and how he met her husband to beg for forgiveness over what he said he had no regret over.

    The pastor urged the CAN leadership to “as a matter of urgency resign peaceful and sin no more and stop tarnishing the image of Nigerian Christians”.

    He called on “real men of God to come forward and dissolve the CAN leadership before it was too late”, if it refused to abide by his appeal.

    The cleric noted that he was not surprise at the antics of the wife of the CAN leader to blackmail him since other means to arm-twist him to meet the CAN president had failed.

    Dikwa added: “I have not seen Pastor Oritsejafor for the past one and half years. They are the ones that have been sending emissaries to me for settlement, but I have always refused to go.

    “The wife (Oritsejafor’s) is lying. I have never seen Ayo’s wife in my life. They have used the DSS (Directorate of State Service) to force me to write statements. They are lying against their spirits and their God.

    “Let them bring witness (proof) that I went to beg Ayo. Is it in Abuja or Warri?.

    “They have been sending men of God to me for settlement. The CAN’s North Central Zone Chairman, Yakubu Pam, even told me that I should go and meet Ayo and that he talked to him. But I refused.

    “Many of them (Christian leaders) have been calling me asking me to meet the CAN leader and settle. And I said what for? In fact, they said I should not talk again and that they know that all I have been saying is true.

    “Even they have called me, requesting that I denounced that they collected money and that they are going to give me money. But I refused.”

    Dikwa warned the president-elect, Gen Muhammad Buhari, to be wary of the CAN leadership.

  • APC wins Borno

    The result of the presidential election in Borno State has shown an overwhelming victory for the All Progressive Congress (APC).
    Gen. Mohammed Buhari scored 473,543 while  President Goodluck Jonathan of the PDP trailed behind with with 25, 640‎.
    The results were announced by State Collection Prof. Yaganami Karta of the University of Maiduguri‎.