Tag: Cameroun

  • Nigeria, Cameroun meet on Bakassi, Boko Haram 

     The issue of Bakassi and Boko Haram dominated discussions at a recent meeting between top government officials from Nigerian and neighbouring Cameroun, it was learnt.

    Cameroun President, Paul Biya, dispatched a three-man delegation to the country to discuss issues of mutual benefits to both countries.

    Dr Joseph Dion Ngute, Minister in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs led the delegation that was received by Mr. Geoffrey  Onyeama, Nigerian Minister of Foreign Affairs in Abuja.

    At a joint briefing at the end of their closed-door meeting, which lasted about 45 minutes, the visiting minister denied the recent report of massacre of Nigerians by Camerounian gendarmes.

    He said there was no iota of truth in the report, saying that Cameroun is a law-abiding country and no such thing would ever happen.

    He said: “ I was sent here by President Paul Biya to come and meet with the Foreign Affairs Minister of Nigeria to discuss a number of subjects that are mutually beneficial to both countries.”

    On the reported killing of over 97 Nigerians, the minister said: “We are also here to inform the government of Nigeria that a month ago, we had reports in the media concerning massacre of people in the Bakassi area.

    “We sent our administrators and we even asked Nigerian consul in Bua to accompany them. They went there and they realized that not a single person was touched, nobody was injured, nobody was killed and it was a fabrication which appeared in the media, which we don’t know why and for what purpose. But we came to reassure the government and Nigerian people that Cameroun is a law-abiding country and no such thing would ever happen under our watch. “

    On Boko Haram, he said both countries had been working perfectly to defeat the terrorist group.

    He said: “We came to discuss the situation in the North-Western part of Cameroun and North-Eastern  part of Nigeria concerning the fight against Boko Haram.  We are here to say that the two countries have been working perfectly in trying to make sure that this evil group is completely alienated.”

    He also denied the report that his country maltreated Nigerian refugees, saying that they had protested to the UN Human Right Commission.

    “ You know being a refugee is a very difficult condition. We in Cameroun are very sensitive to the issue. If you visit our own camp where we have about 60,000 refugees, you will see that they are being given the most humane treatment that we in Cameroun can give and can afford along with the UNHCR,” he said.

  • Disu warns Rohr on tactics against Cameroon

    Disu warns Rohr on tactics against Cameroon

    Tunde Disu, former Technical Director, Nigeria Football Federation (NFF), on Sunday warned Super Eagles coach Genort Rohr against wrong tactics against Cameroun in the Russia 2018 qualifiers on September 1.

    Disu told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos that the team’s tactical formation against South Africa in the AFCON qualifiers was wrong and should not be used again.

    He said that the Eagles loss to Bafana Bafana in the AFCON qualifiers was due to wrong tactical formation, adding that the Indomitable Lions of Cameroun would be more tactical.

    “The formation used by Rohr during the AFCON qualifier against South Africa is wrong tactics. He cannot use a supporting striker as an arrow head when using 4-3-3.

    “Rohr should know that Kelechi Iheanacho cannot spearhead attack, that is not his role and that is why he is roaming about during the match against South Africa without a shot at goal.

    “I want them to sit down and analyse the match themselves, that system is faulty because most teams can now predict the formation. If we use that selection and tactics, we will be embarrassed.

    “Rohr should align with the modern tactics of play rather than stick with the old play which will not benefit us. We are too predictable now.

    Disu said that the players at the disposal of Rohr were good enough to accommodate another formation which was less probable to opposing teams.

    “We cannot continue to use the 4-3-3 formation, it’s outdated and counterproductive. We should rather play 4-2-3-1 which is far better for the defenders.

    “The players determine the system and not the system that determines the players. It is better to have two defensive midfielders in front of the defenders, maybe if there is an overlapping one.

    “Playing 4-3-2-1 formation also means that we need intimidating strikers like the late Rashidi Yekini to torment the opposing teams. We have Gbolahan Salami before but I don’t know if he is not called.

    “The lone striker may be very tall and strong to hold the ball up as his midfielders while full-backs join him in attack. The striker could also be very fast.

    “African soccer is more physical and there is need for us to have a strong striker in the manner of Salami that can torment the defence of our opponent,’’ he said.

    Disu warned Rohr to be wary of Cameroun threat could pose to the Eagles’ qualification, adding that a loss to Indomitable Lions would close the qualification ticket.

    “I want the coach to be careful with the Cameroonians so that they will not scuttle our chances; any defeat to them closes the qualification ticket.

    “It does not matter where we are now because we won’t be begging Cameroun to lose any of their games after defeating us.

    “The Indomitable Lions are in form now and they are using the modern formation. Rohr needs to change that formation or else we will be out of contention.

    “To beat those indomitable Lions, a very good top 9 will be a good option and not necessarily to score goals but to torment the defence line and maybe to create chances for others,’’ he said.

    Disu said that other countries and clubs have been winning through the golden formation, noting that countries that had yet to play the style were lagging behind.

    “I want to give the example between Spain national team and the Germans. The Germans are more tactical in their formation and are not playing false 9 like their Spanish counterparts.

    “The golden formation continues to have the upper hands. In these cases, the opponent’s defense will be forced to fall back early, thereby leaving space for the offensive central midfielder.

    “Rohr does not need to inject fresh blood into the team but play within what he has to achieve better results. We are blessed with players that can suit the golden formation.

    “The coach should also have two options in which he can switch and Iheanacho should drop back for a strong striker for him to be effective,’’ he said.

  • Lagos APC celebrates as Lagos hits oil

    Lagos APC celebrates as Lagos hits oil

    With joy unspeakable full of glories and thanksgiving, Lagos APC joins millions of Lagosians to celebrate the emergence of oil in the land of aquatic splendor, and limitless opportunities.

    In a release signed by State Publicity Secretary Mr. Joe Igbokwe the Party says the long wait to join the club of oil producers in Nigeria has become a reality today Monday May 16 2016 and this is official.

    “ At a time Nigeria is being held hostage, with multi billion worth of our oil and gas facilities being blown up left and right with reckless abandon, turning the whole country into total darkness and causing the country to lose 800,000 barrels of crude oil daily, it is good news to have Lagos, the land of civilization to join the club of oil producing States”

    ” in the fullness of time we know that the wise and civilized Lagosians will never behave primitively like the economic saboteurs from the Niger Delta who militarize their environment, destroy oil and gas installations,put Nigeria in total darkness, destroy their environment, pollute their lands and waters, hurt their 13% derivation,and  render their own people jobless”

    “ Lagos economy has been on the rise since 1999, competing effectively with many countries in Africa including Cameroun, Ghana, Senegal, Cote’de voire and with the advent of oil fields in Lagos, we have no doubt that it will grow far bigger than these countries in few years to come”

    “This monumental achievement in Lagos has left a huge lesson that God has not finished with Nigeria as oil or gold can be found in any part of Nigeria irrespective of tribe, tongue, culture or tradition”

    “ Coming at a time when Lagos has recorded even a surplus in Revenue generation in the first quarter of 2016 , Lagos APC believes that His Excellency Governor Akinwunmi Ambode will leave an indelible mark, the type never seen in the history of Lagos.”

  • ‘Chibok girl’: Fed Govt sends delegation to Cameroun

    ‘Chibok girl’: Fed Govt sends delegation to Cameroun

    •Parents of abducted students to identify suspected suicide bomber
    •Self-confessed Chibok girl flown to Yaounde

     The Federal Government is sending to Cameroun immediately a delegation comprising parents of some of the girls abducted in Chibok, Borno State. They are to go and identify the self-professed Chibok girl suicide bomber arrested in the northern part of that country on Friday.

    The 15 year old girl and her female accomplice were apprehended by local self-defence forces in the village of Limani, in an area of northern Cameroun that has been the target of frequent suicide bombings in recent months moment before they could blow themselves up.

    The two carried explosive devices on their bodies.

    They are now being interrogated by Cameroun’s security agents who said they would contact their Nigerian counterparts with a view to ascertaining the ‘Chibok girl’s’ claim.

    Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to the President, Malam Garba Shehu, said that Women Affairs Minister Aisha Alhassan and the Nigerian High Commissioner in Cameroon have already swung into action and are receiving a lot of cooperation from the Cameroonian authorities on the issue.

    Shehu confirmed that one of the two girls indeed claimed to be among the abducted girls although there were doubts last night about the claim following fresh information from Cameroon that the two girls were aged about ten years.

    “One of the two is also believed to be heavily drugged and therefore not in full control of her senses,” Shehu added.

    The Nigerian High Commissioner in Cameroon, Ambassador Hadiza Zakari Mustapha is expected to seek permission to meet with the suspects.

    The Murtala Muhammed Foundation has offered to sponsor two parents from Chibok who have been selected to embark on the trip to Cameroon.

    The two are Yakubu Nkeki, Chairman of the Parents of the Abducted Girls from Chibok Association, and Yana Galang, the group’s women leader.

    “The Nigerian High Commission will receive the two and will facilitate their access to the two girls once permission to meet and verify their identity is obtained from the Cameroonian authorities,” Shehu said.

    Nigeria and the rest of the world, The Nation gathered on good authority in Abuja yesterday, are keen to hear revelations that may be made by the suspect if truly she is one of the 219 girls abducted by the terror sect, Boko Haram, from the Government Girls Secondary School, Chibok, Borno State in April, 2014.

    Government has been unable to establish the whereabouts of the girls which makes their rescue difficult.

    Well placed sources confirmed last night that the ‘Chibok girl’ was yesterday flown from Maroua in northern Cameroun to the capital, Yaounde for debriefing and identification.

    Abuja was however monitoring development last night.

    The Defence Headquarters was said to be waiting for information on the development from the Multi-National Joint Task Force of which Cameroun is a member.

    The source said: “From the situation report, the girl was taken to Salak Airport in Maroua from where she was flown to Yaounde for debriefing and proper identification.

    “The debriefing of the suspect will begin later today (last night). Apart from Nigeria, many countries are interested in the latest development.

    “The Federal Government is monitoring the situation in Cameroon to get the true picture of who was arrested.

    “All I can assure you is that a bilateral understanding will prevail at the end”

    A military source said the Camerounian military was yet to link up with the Multi-National Joint Task Force (MNJTF) with the appropriate communication.

    “So, the Nigerian military authorities cannot make any categorical statement. Even when we get information from Cameroun, we still have to verify it.”

    It is expected that the girl, if truly is among the missing Chibok students, will shed light on their abduction, their treatment by the terrorists, the fate of the other girls and the like.

    #BringBackOurGirls group which was set up to arouse public interest in the fate of the Chibok girls said yesterday in Abuja that it was expecting official information from the Federal Government on the matter.

    Spokespersons for the group- Aisha Yesufu, Oby Ezekwesili and Hadiza Bala Usman, said in statement in Abuja that they could not respond immediately to the news “conclusively until we have facts from the Nigerian government; from whom we requested and have eagerly been awaiting official information on the matter.

    “In the interim however, our thoughts are as follows:

    “The claim by the young woman that she is a Chibok girl should reawaken the Nigerian government to the zeal and commitment necessary for ensuring that they are rescued and brought back;

    “This development suggests that we now have a possible source of credible intelligence as to what transpired, where the others are, and other leads required to facilitate their rescue.

    “Regardless of whether she is one of our Chibok girls or not, our thoughts and sentiments remain the same:

    1. using children, girls who should be in school (or any humans at all) as suicide bombers is not only tragic and cruel, it is completely reprehensible and we denounce it;
    2. these children suicide bomber are themselves victims, and must be seen and treated as such;

    iii.         we all must hasten to free all those in captivity. For as long as they are with the monsters, we all are ourselves unsafe and equally in captivity;

    1. a few weeks ago, a girl suicide bomber did not detonate her device at an IDP camp because she knew her family was most likely in that camp, and she could not kill them.

    It is important to send out messages that counter the programming of the terrorists. This may help in empowering these victims from detonating the explosives and accessing help;

    1. this particular experience highlights the importance of building not only a regional coalition among neighbouring countries to counter terror, but a global one.

    “The Nigerian government as a matter of urgency needs to swiftly act to ascertain the facts of this matter and make them public. It is getting to 24 hours since the news broke.

    “We need to know her name and identity, her parents’ names, where she is from, possibly extract DNA samples for quick testing and matching, etc.

    “This should be a wakeup call to the Nigerian government to adopt and utilise our citizens-developed tool the Verification, Authentication, and Reunification System (VARS) designed by our movement for such scenarios as these. This tool was accepted by the federal government on 8 July 2015 during our meeting with the president, but has not been deployed.

    “Likewise, the Missing Persons Register which would have been useful in tracking this young victim in order to commence her rehabilitation, reunification, and reintegration process with her family and community.”

    Each of the two girls in Cameroun were said to be carrying explosives weighing 12kilogrammes.

  • 4m hard-working Nigerians in  Cameroon, says Ambassador

    4m hard-working Nigerians in Cameroon, says Ambassador

    Nigeria’s High Commissioner in Cameroon, Ambassador Hadisa Mustapha has said there are four million hardworking Nigerians in the country.
    She made the disclosure onboard Nigerian Navy Ship (NNS) OKPABANA at the weekend in Douala, during a dinner with Nigeria’s contingent to exercise Obangame/Saharan Express.
    Describing as untrue the allegation of hostilities against Nigerians in Cameroon, Mustapha stated that the relationship between both countries have improved significantly since the conclusion of the rivalry over Bakassi Peninsula.
    “The seeming hostility against Nigerians in Cameroon are mere allegations. There are four million hardworking Nigerians here. We have professional Nigerians, business people and people in the car, spareparts businesses. We also have professional in the international organisations, teachers and clergymen.
    “As an Embassy, we get report on all issues concerning Nigerians and we have three missions here – two consulate and the High Commission.
    “I want to say that there is a lot of improvement in the situation with Nigerians. This started from the end of Bakassi. Definitely, there are a few issues and most have to do with immigration status of Nigerians.
    “I do not want to say it is trend that is so rampant or that it is an issue against Nigerians per se. Every country has its own policies and security measures. With the security challenges around, every country is trying to do its best to curb crime and criminality.
    “As a mission, we are very much in touch with our community. We meet with them often and whenever they bring their problems, we take the matter to the authorities and they listen to us,” she said.
    Mustapha commended the Navy for its participation in the exercise, noting that aside showcasing its military might, the ship has promoted maritime diplomacy.
    “This is the second Obangame Express I have witnessed. It is always nice to see our ship in harbour of a foreign country flying our flag. The exercise itself is very important for our military, particularly the navy to show we have full control of our maritime domain.
    “It is also a very good way of promoting maritime diplomacy. So, we are very happy and proud to have NNS OKPABANA here,” she said.

  • Cameroun dislodges Boko Haram from town hours after seizure

    Cameroun dislodges Boko Haram from town hours after seizure

    Cameroun army yesterday chased  Boko Haram terrorists out of the far north village of Kerawa a few hours after it was seized by the sect.

    “They pulled out after the troops arrived. There hasn’t been any more fighting,” a source said, while another said the  fighters  had “fled” to neighbouring Nigeria.

    A source close to the regional authorities said an unspecified number of civilians had been killed in the  assault.

    Kerawa, which has 50,000 inhabitants, is located in the Kolofata district, which has been regularly targeted by Boko Haram.

    There is a military camp inside the town, which was last hit by a double suicide bombing on September 3, which claimed at least 30 lives.

    Cameroon, Chad and Niger have formed a military alliance with Nigeria and Benin to battle the extremists, who this year declared allegiance to the Islamic State.

    The sect’s  grip on the region has suffered as a result of offensives launched by local armies.

    But the group maintains strongholds in areas that are difficult to access, such as the Sambisa forest, the Mandara mountains and the numerous islands of Lake Chad.

  • BOKO HARAM : Nigerian refugees in dire conditions in Cameroun

    BOKO HARAM : Nigerian refugees in dire conditions in Cameroun

    Ateba 1Simon Ateba who visited Cameroun reports on the lot of Nigerian refugees in the country.

    As heavy rain fell on August 28, many refugees stood under a temporary shelter barely covering their heads and upper bodies at the Minawao camp in Cameroun’s far north region.

    Their legs were wet and stained as drops of water hit the ground and lifted mud onto them. They wrapped their arms around their chests to shield themselves from the pestering cold.

    The new sets of refugees had arrived from North East Nigeria where a Boko Haram insurgency had wreaked havoc since 2009, and their belongings were still scattered on the muddy ground as they waited desperately to be admitted into the unfenced camp located in the bush, seven kilometres from the nearest tarred road.

    It was a familiar scene to gendarmes protecting the camp and humanitarian aid workers catering for the ever growing number of Nigerians rendered helpless by the insurgency.

    That insurgency has killed more than 23,000 people since it began six years ago and displaced 2.3 million others in Nigeria, Cameroun, Chad and Niger since May 2013. In the past five months alone, 500,000 children have been uprooted, bringing the total number of minors on the run in Nigeria and neighbouring countries to over 1.4 million. Many of these children are out of school.

    Collapsed business and lives

    Worse, trade is almost nonexistent, farmers are unable to tend their fields, and business activity in the region has virtually collapsed.

    As the violence persists, fathers, mothers, children of all ages and families of all economic backgrounds flee from towns and villages under attacks and attempt to cross the Nigeria-Cameroun border.

    Those who are successful arrive there tired, sick, hungry, thirsty and desperately looking for help.

    ateba 3

    The displaced persons first spend weeks or months in Camerounian villages or towns along the border and then trek for several more weeks or even months to reach the Minawao camp where 96 percent of the population comes from Borno State, two percent from Adamawa State and another two per cent from elsewhere.

    There at the Minawao camp, stranded in the bush of Cameroun’s far north region, and surrounded by a hostile environment with a weather that easily switches from too hot to too cold, about 45,000 refugees live in makeshift shelters, 70 kilometres from the border with Nigeria in the district of Mokolo, the department of Mayo-Tsanaga.

     

    The refugees, most of them women and children (53 percent of the population in the camp consists of women, while 61 percent are children under the age of 18 years of age) arrive with no money, food, water or even clothes other than the ones on their backs. On arrival, it takes them many days to be screened before they are admitted into the camp and several more days to receive their first ration of food, water or medication as many arrive there sick.

    They wait for many more days to receive utensils, blankets and any other basic thing from the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR), which has run the camp since 2013. Until that happens, they fend for themselves or hope that those who have been in the camp for a longer period will share from their little leftovers, if there is any.

    Living at the edges

    The location of the unfenced camp makes many refugees fear possible attacks from wild animals or even from potential invaders as the camp has only one police post with about ten gendarmes protecting tens of thousands of people.

    Because instability has persisted in North east Nigeria for six years and many areas had fallen into the hands of Boko Haram for a long time, the health system has nearly collapsed and many of the refugees had been living without proper medical care for years. They arrive sick and in need of medical checkups. As newcomers flock in, the pressure on the health services at the Minawao is increasing.

    In August, about 2,671 women had serious medical complications while 1,007 persons who were living with various disabilities had no wheelchairs and walking aids, hearing and vision aids, artificial limbs and surgical appliances as well as communication aids.

    There were also no elastic stockings, appliances for colostomies, some types of trusses or wound dressings, urinary catheters, pressure relieving cushions and mattresses or continence pads for people with disabilities.

    The main hospital in Mokolo district where the camp is located did not have equipment to cope with patients with special needs nor were there qualified medical personnel to efficiently monitor the 269 refugees who have been suffering from mental illnesses.

    There were also in the camp more than a thousand elders with various health challenges. With the rainy season, overpopulation and scarce water, there were fears of a cholera outbreak.

    As at August, the camp had two health centres with not many beds and one maternity unit. It had only 2,555 toilets for all the refugees. This had some health implications, especially because each refugee has right to only 17 litres of water every day to drink, cook, wash and bath.

    The Minawao camp was established in 2013 to house up to 20, 000 people escaping Boko Haram violence in North east Nigeria, but with no end to the conflict in sight, there were, as at August 18 this year, 44, 889 Nigerian refugees crowded in the camp and sharing 11,954 shelters.

    A minimum of four persons were sharing each shelter, but about 5,000 refugees still lived in classrooms and community shelters, and many displaced persons remained stuck in border towns and villages with no international help.

    ateba 2

    Between January and August, more than 22,000 new refugees had already been registered, and by the end of the year, it is projected that the number of refugees in the camp may shoot beyond 50,000 people.

    And as more people troop into the Minawao camp and the surrounding bushes and classrooms, the needs of these new arrivals are growing fast but the availability of basic services such as the provision of water, sanitation, education and food is shrinking and the living conditions of refugees are worsening.

    Médecins Sans Frontières, for instance, is struggling to bring in new staff to give more consultations, vaccinations and treatments.

    Education is also provided in dire circumstances. The camp has two primary schools with 24 classrooms for over 6,000 (out of 11,000) children between the ages of six and 13. There are also about 2,000 students in secondary school between the ages of 14 and 17.

    Camerounian curriculum, not Nigerian, is taught as there is scarcity of good teachers who could provide education in English. Teaching equipment and learning materials such as exercise books were also missing and the number of classrooms is not enough.

    The 79 unaccompanied children who lived in the camp as at August 28, away from missing or dead parents were also a concern to humanitarian workers.

    For now, the capacity of the Minawao camp has reached its limits and new needs have been created.

    The fresh needs include the construction of shelters at a new camp to decongest Minawao and accommodate newcomers, the deployment of more security operatives from the current single security post, the supply of more water as well as the implementation of new measures to prevent cholera outbreak among others.

    These challengers are worsened by the dilapidated road between Zamai, the nearest town, and the camp. Many trucks had broken down along the way with provisions in them and many humanitarian aid workers had been stranded and forced to turn back as they were trying to reach the camp. The road is often over flooded during rainy seasons and our correspondent had to be carried by two men to cross some parts of that road.

    The increased needs, however, require enormous resources. But money is what is lacking the most, UNHCR says.

    In its “2015 Refugee Response Plan” interagency report, made available on  August 9, and which covered the period between  July 20 and 26, 2015, the UNHCR and partnering agencies disclosed that out of 62.7 million dollars needed to tackle the refugee crisis in Cameroun, only 29 percent of the cash has been made available.

    “What is really worrisome is that despite the growing number of refugees and their needs, donors do not seem to understand the urgency,” an official said.

    This reporter’s investigation was cut short when he was arrested on August 28 and kept in a cell for three nights and day on suspicions that he was a spy for Boko Haram.

     

    *Investigation carried out with funding from The International Centre for Investigative Reporting (ICIR Nigeria) and Ford Foundation

     

  • EFCC: Insurgents fund activities in Nigeria, Cameroun, Chad, Niger through illicit funds

    The Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), yesterday accused insurgents of funding terrorism in Nigeria, Chad, Niger and others through illicit cash.

    He added that the laundering of illicit funds from Nigeria to other borders dropped from $9.9billion in 2013 to $807,585,061.70 in 2014.

    He said the war against terrorism can only be won with  improved financial intelligence gathering by the anti-graft agency and other law enforcement agencies.

    Lamorde spoke in Abuja at the opening ceremony of a five-day inter-agency training programme on Cross Border Financial Investigation,  organised by the United States Department of Homeland Security, for  officers of the Nigeria Police Force, (NPF) Nigeria Immigration Service(NIS), the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS),  National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) and the EFCC.

    He said: “The EFCC, in collaboration with the Nigeria Customs Service and the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency, NDLEA, have in the last few years taken very bold steps to check illicit movement of cash across our borders. Operatives stationed at major international airports across the country have intercepted millions of dollars in cash, which were not declared to customs by their owners.

    ”This measure accounted for the significant drop in currency outflow outside Nigeria in 2013, as currency declaration dropped from $9,926,739,648.00 to $1,324,045,617.00. There was a further drop in 2014 as currency outflows recorded an all- time low of $807,585,061.70.

    “It is not impossible that other factors contributed in forcing the drop. Perhaps this training will offer us an opportunity to determine these other factors that could have been at play.

    “Nevertheless, our target is to minimize, if not completely eradicate the incidence of illicit cash movement, bearing in mind the implicit danger to our collective health as a nation.

    The EFCC chairman said the only way to tackle terrorism  is to deny insurgents of illicit funds.”

    He added:  “A reputable strategy to fight insurgency is to deprive the insurgents of funds, because there is no dispute that illicit funds movement across borders fuels organized crimes, including terror attacks and insurgency in Nigeria.

    The Deputy Chief of Mission, United States Embassy, Maria Brewer said that the training programme will expose participants to new trends and techniques in combating economic and financial crimes.

    ”Since economic and financial crimes is a global phenomenon, the training will focus among others, on taking away proceed of crime, because when you take away the money, you take away why people do crime,”she said.

    The Commander of Narcotics, Alhaji Hamisa Lawal,  represented the NDLEA boss.

    Highpoint of the ceremony was the donation of a high-tech counting machine to the EFCC. Brewer made the presentation on behalf of the U.S. government to assist the EFCC and the country fight corruption.

     

  • No nation can beat terror in isolation, says Buhari

    No nation can beat terror in isolation, says Buhari

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Wednesday night said that Nigeria and neighbouring countries must stand together to defeat the terrorists group, Boko Haram in the sub-region.

    He made the remark at a state dinner in Yaounde, during his two-day working visit to Cameroon.

    Buhari said that countries in the sub-region cannot afford to falter in their resolve to get rid of the evils of terrorists.

    He said: “We recognize that none of us can succeed alone. In order to win this war we need the collective efforts of each one of us, standing together as a formidable force for good, to defeat and end these acts of terror against our people.”

    He also informed guests at the dinner hosted by President Paul Biya that the security situation in the region presented an opportunity for Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Benin to work together for their common security, peace and socio-economic development.

    “Let me assure all of my relentless pursuit of all possible means to safeguard Nigeria’s territorial integrity, protect the lives and property of our citizens as well as my commitment to continue to collaborate with Cameroon and our neighbours, within the framework of the Lake Chad Basin Commission.

    “The Federal government of Nigeria is committed to respecting international norms to resolve this matter and to restore normalcy to all the affected areas as soon as possible,’’ he said.

    Buhari, who had earlier on his arrival on Wednesday held a closed-door session with his host, thanked President Biya for providing refuge to Nigerians who had fled their homes because of the insurgents.

    He also commended Cameroon for its support to Nigerian military and security personnel in the fight against terrorism and offered his condolences to the families of the victims of terror in both countries.

    He also announced Nigeria’s willingness to expand economic partnerships with Cameroon, through increased joint ventures in infrastructure development, transport and commerce, among others.

    Buhari welcomed the achievements so far recorded by the Nigeria-Cameroon Joint Commission and all the landmark agreements signed between both countries.

    Describing the relations between both countries as excellent, he recognized the roles played by past and present leaders and Nigerian citizens in sustaining friendly relations with Cameroon.

    Biya, while congratulating President Buhari for a successful inauguration into office, said that Buhari’s electoral victory has provided an opportunity for him to preside over the “destiny of Nigeria.”

    He said: “Mr President, a dark cloud is looming over our countries even as we welcome you; we are facing the same threat, which may rock the foundation of our two nations.

    “This danger bears the name of Boko Haram, its atrocities and crimes are jeopardizing peace around Lake Chad and especially in our two countries.

    “The number of dead and victims are rising, economic activities have been crippled in affected areas, the number of refugees and displaced persons are ever increasing.

    “We cannot allow this cancer to spread, we must pool our resources and forces and share our experiences,’’ he said.

    President Biya, who reaffirmed Cameroon’s commitment in the fight against terror, welcomed the “fresh push” on economic ties between both countries through easing of trade.

    “I strongly believe in your readiness to work towards that goal and your visit to Cameroon as well as the discussions we have had have strengthened my conviction.” he said