Tag: Gen. Ibrahim Babangida

  • Tinubu, NGF, Lalong fete IBB at 83

    Tinubu, NGF, Lalong fete IBB at 83

    President Bola Tinubu has congratulated former Head of State, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, on his 83rd birthday.

    This was contained in a statement by Chief Ajuri Ngelale, Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, yesterday in Abuja.

    He noted Babangida’s contributions toward the development of the nation, especially in infrastructure and other areas.

    Tinubu lauded the celebrant’s efforts in the completion of the Third Mainland Bridge, which at the time was the longest bridge in Africa.

    “The President acknowledges the role of General Babangida in the sculpting of modern Nigeria, and commends him for his services to the nation.

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    “President Tinubu wishes the former Head of State many more years in good health,” said Ngelale.

    Also congratulating the former president, the Northern States Governors’ Forum (NSGF), described Babangida as a bridge builder, a committed patriot and a charismatic statesman.

    This was contained in a goodwill message by the Chairman of the forum, Gov. Inuwa Yahaya of Gombe State, yesterday  in Gombe.

    He also praised the ex- military leader’s  courage, vision and exemplary leadership qualities, adding that, “his wise counsel continues to guide and inspire the new generation of leaders.

    “Babangida is a true asset to Nigeria, a source of inspiration for both established and emerging leaders.

    “His distinguished military and democratic credentials, steadfastness and remarkable statesmanship is worth emulating.

    “As a former leader and elder statesman, he has consistently made himself available to the younger generation, offering his wealth of experience, guidance and wisdom in critical moments.

    “Babangida is indeed a leader of immense influence and reach, a bridge-builder and a promoter of democratic ideals, serving as a rallying point for those committed to democracy,” the governor said.

    On his part the Senator representing Plateau South Senatorial District and former Governor of Plateau State Simon Bako Lalong in a statement by his spokesman Makut Macham, extended warm greetings to the elder statesman.

    Lalong said Gen. Babangida remains a strong figure in Nigeria because of his role in national development particularly through his patriotic service over many decades.

    He describes him as a person of immense love for Nigeria’s unity, peace and prosperity who galvanised the nation through many difficult moments while he served.

    Senator Lalong, acknowledged the continuous contributions of Gen. Babangida even in retirement where he has availed the nation his vast experience as well as deep knowledge at all times.

  • IBB mourns Former President Shagari

    Former Military Head of State, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, has expressed heartfelt condolences to the family of Alhaji Shehu Usman Aliyu Shagari, GCFR who died today.

    Shagari died at the National Hospital in Abuja , after a protracted illness.

    Babangida, one of the military officers that toppled Shagari’s government in December 1983, issued a statement of condolence, in which he also described Shagari as the “quintessential public servant who was “Beckoned to Serve”.

    Shagari was just three months old in his second term when the military officers removed him in a bloodless coup and cut short the Second Republic.

    “My heart and prayers go to his Family, the government and people of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the Sokoto Caliphate and Sokoto state”, Babangida wrote.0

    ”Nigeria and indeed Africa has lost a statesman and democrat whose wisdom, counsel, presence and experience and his sterling qualities of honesty and transparency are needed in these very trying moments of our national life.

    “President Shehu Shagari was a great patriotic leader and an accomplished gentleman, at first a teacher, an administrator, a technocrat and an honest decent unassuming simple Nigerian Leader.

    “He will be remembered for his tolerance and politics of peace without bitterness.

    ”President Shehu Shagari was a nationalist who never showed any discrimination due to ethnicity or religion and was a very dependable bridge builder.

    “To keep his memory alive Nigerian politicians and indeed all fellow Nigerians must put to practice all his ideals of peace and party politics without rancour, irrespective of any form of provocation.

    Babangida urged all persons vying for political offices to emulate him and keep alive the political principles of the late Turakin Sokoto.

    “I pray for the repose of his soul in Jannatul Firdaus. I pray that the entire nation, his Family, Sokoto State and indeed the Sokoto Caliphate will accept his passing with equanimity”, Babangida added. (NAN)

  • Kalu visits IBB over Buhari’s re-election

    Former Abia State Governor Orji Uzor Kalu was in Minna yesterday to convince former military President, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, to support President Muhammadu Buhari’s re-election.

    Kalu addressed reporters after a meeting with Babangida at his uphill home in Minna.

    He said: “I am in Minna to campaign for President Buhari because I have seen many members of Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) trooping in to visit IBB, and I felt we should not be left behind.

    “I have come to have a heart-to-heart talk with the former President and convince him why he should support Buhari to finish his second term. His reaction was blue and white, we have discussed and he said he would think about it and this is a positive reaction.”

    Kalu hinted that he has been in and out of the country soliciting support for President Buhari’s re-election, even as he appealed to Nigerians to give Buhari a second chance as a cohesive country needs continuity in government.

    He added: “President Buhari is already in half time now, he has played four years and in soccer, you have 90 minutes game, he has played 45 minutes and we are appealing to Nigerians to give him another 45 minutes to play. It would make more sense and would be very nice.”

  • Nomadic education, 30 years after

    Three decades after nomadic education was established to provide learning for itinerant cattle breeders and constantly moving fishing communities, the programme faces a myriad of challenges including poor funding, low pupil enrolment,

    When it was established 30 years ago, the National Commission for Nomadic Education (NCNE) was expected to cater for the educational needs of the socially excluded, educationally disadvantaged and migrant groups in Nigeria. Then military president Gen. Ibrahim Babangida (retd) had observed then that the nomads had very little access to basic education through the conventional education system as a result of certain occupational and socio-cultural peculiarities.

    Among these groups were nomadic cattle breeders as well as migrant fisher communities and farmers whose activities were dependent on the movement of waters.

    Because of their constant movement in search of pastures for cattle or in search of water for fishing and dry season farming, government observed that their children’s participation in existing formal and non-formal basic education was abysmally low.

    The nomadic education programme was therefore aimed at providing functional and relevant education that will facilitate integrating the nomads into the national life and equipping them to make favourable contributions to the nation’s socio–economic development.

    Thirty years after the programme was inaugurated, analysts wonder if its goals are being met. Though records from the NCNE headquarters in Kaduna indicated that the programme currently has 578,374 pupils, 14,776 teachers and 44,484 graduated pupils, a nationwide survey conducted by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) revealed that the success of the programme was being hampered by a myriad of problems including the dearth of funds and teachers.

    Other bottlenecks include insufficient infrastructure as well as persistent herdsmen/farmers clashes and cattle rustling that had sent herdsmen consistently scurrying to safe zones.

    Desertification has also consistently thrown migrant fishers and farmers back and forth, making it difficult for teachers to package an organised syllabus for the pupils.

    In the Northwest, for instance, NAN found that the survival of the 918 nomadic schools spread across its seven states was being threatened by a massive dearth of teachers and infrastructure.

    Aside the very negligible number of teachers to teach the 171,611 pupils, NAN found that the schools were offering voluntary services with the pupils casually strolling into the classes whenever they wanted.

    In Kaduna State, 80 per cent of teaching and learning in the existing 318 nomadic schools occur under trees due to massive shortage of infrastructure.

    According to Malam Ibrahim Parah, coordinator of nomadic education in the state, there are no adequate classrooms and basic infrastructure for teaching and learning, forcing most of the schools to use tree shades as classes.

    He said that teachers were grossly inadequate, blaming it on the interior location of the schools.

    “Very few teachers are ready to work in the rural areas. Some simply appear and disappear from the bushes where the schools are located,’’ he said.

    According to him, another challenge is convincing the nomads on the importance of educating their children, since most of them still view western education as a waste.

    “There is also the problem of massive withdrawal, especially of the girl-child, who is constantly being withdrawn and given out for marriage, leading to low completion rate.

    “Another problem is the protracted communal conflicts across the country which have forced nomads to always migrate to safer areas thereby abandoning areas where schools were built to educate their children,” he added.

    The coordinator, however, disclosed that in spite of the challenges, the state enrolled 47,146 pupils as at 2017. Of the number, 18,960 are females, he added.

    Parah said that the first six nomadic education schools established in 1989 were located in Lere, Birnin Gwari, Kagarko, Sanga, Kachia and Igabi local government areas, saying that some of the pupils had moved to tertiary institutions and obtained various certificates.

    One of such old pupils, Malam Haruna Bunkau, who currently holds a National Certificate in Education, lauded the nomadic education programme, but called for massive campaign to generate funding for nomadic schools and convince nomads to fully embrace formal education.

    “With education, the lives of the nomads, especially Fulani herdsmen, will witness a turnaround for the better,” he said.

    In Kano State, Alhaji Rabi’u Harbau, Director, Nomadic Education, urged government to recruit Fulani teachers to teach in the existing nomadic schools.

    Harbau noted that although the curriculum of the schools was written in Fulani language, there were no Fulfulde teachers to drive the teaching and learning process.

    The official said that 60 per cent of the nomadic schools in the state were established by the Nomads, who provided free lands, built classes and sourced voluntary Fulani teachers.

    “As at 2017, we had 338 Nomadic Primary Schools across 41 Local Government Areas out of the 44, with 72,578 pupils comprising 41,966 boys and 30,612 girls,’’ he said, adding that there were 1,417 teachers out of which only  22 are females.

    Harbau called on the Federal Government to provide adequate funds for implementation of the programme, training and retraining of teachers, provision of infrastructure and other necessary facilities.

    In Kebbi, where 11,383 nomads have been enrolled in the 118 Nomadic schools across the 21 local government areas, the major concerns there included enrollment, retention, substitution and completion.

    According to Usman Aliyu, Coordinator, Nomadic Education, parents still have the habit of refusing to send their children to school, while some withdraw theirs using flimsy excuses.

    “We have about 118 Nomadic schools, 11,383 pupils, including 7,064 males and 4,329 females across the 21 local government areas of the state,’’ he told NAN.

    The Kebbi State Chairman of Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association, Alhaji Muhammad Dan-Ali urged the state government to establish a nomadic education agency to handle nomadic education.

    “What we have in the state education system is a unit for nomadic education. We need an agency saddled with responsibilities of taking care of nomadic schools to broaden the focus,’’ he said.

    He urged the government to revive the mobile tents system for the use of nomadic schools, and called for the employment of adequate Fulani teachers.

    “The teachers we have in the schools cannot speak Fulani language; most of our wards don’t know how to speak Hausa and English language. Clearly, it is difficult for teachers and pupils to communicate, making teaching and learning simply impossible.

    “The books are in Fulani, but the teachers are not Fulani and do not know the language, how can they teach our wards?” he wondered.

    In Katsina State, the government recently constructed 10 nomadic primary schools following the agreement reached with repentant cattle rustlers in Safana, Batsari, Danmusa, Jibiya local government areas.

    The state Coordinator, Nomadic Education, Malam Suleiman Umar, told NAN that the state has 82 Nomadic Primary Schools with 21,550 pupils and 400 teachers across the 34 local government areas.

    Umar called for regular training of teachers, provision of instructional materials to enhance teaching and learning in the schools, and provision of motorcycles to supervisors.

    But for Alhaji Samaila Modu, Executive Director, Zamfara State Agency for Nomadic Education, the best way to promote nomadic education is to establish grazing reserves where nomads would be domiciled.

    “When the nomads get settled in cattle reserves, their children will have the chance to acquire formal education,’’ he opined.

    He said that the agency had 62 nomadic schools, but that 18 had been temporarily closed down due to insecurity, adding that there were 6,504 pupils comprising 4,065 males and 2,439 females.

    Modi said that the greatest challenge was that of shortage of teachers and insecurity.

    Malam Abdulsalami Idris, State Secretary, Miyetti Allah Cattle Brides Association, however, called on governments to provide amenities like clinics, water and roads, to Fulani settlements, to prevent them from migrating.

    He also called for deployment of mobile schools to encourage nomads to attend them.

    The programme has, however, gone far in Sokoto where a secondary school has been established for nomads at Dalijan in Kebbe Local Government.

    According to Alhaji Aliyu Abubakar, Executive Director, Sokoto State Agency for Nomadic Education, the school was established in 2017.

    He said that the agency currently runs 80 nomadic primary schools with a student population of 12, 500 and 185 teachers across the 23 local governments.

    “We record an annual enrollment of nearly 3,500 pupils, with about 900 graduates each year,’’ Abubakar told NAN.

    He pointed out that frequent movement of the herdsmen and relocation of their settlements had necessitated a scheme of transfer and acceptance of pupils.

    The official explained that the scheme was designed to cushion the effect of the trans-human nature of the nomads which oftentimes disrupted the smooth flow of the system.

    Abubakar held the view that integrating Qur’anic education into modern primary school system could further boost nomadic education because most parents’ preferred religious and moral instructions for their wards.

    He also called on the government to recruit more teachers for the agency in the light of the increased population of pupils.

    In some states in the north-central, NAN also found that the nomadic education programme was recording some appreciable progress, but with similar drawbacks like dearth of funding, teachers and infrastructure.

    In Plateau, Prof. Mathew Sule, Executive Chairman, State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB), told NAN that there were 136 nomadic schools across 15 Local Government Areas, with 720 teachers handling 29,791 pupils.

    He said that state government’s funding efforts were being supported by the NCNE, adding that the schools adopt multi-grade teaching approach which combines pupils of different grades in a classroom.

    From the Northeast, NAN gathered that insecurity, under-funding and apathy by parents were the major obstacles militating against the effective implementation of the nomadic education programme.

    Correspondents, who went to Borno, Bauchi, Adamawa, Gombe and Jigawa States, found that the programme had either been completely abandoned, or skeletal.

    Mr Muhammad Bello, National Secretary, Pastoral Reserves, an NGO, has accused governments in some northern states of not showing enough interest in the programme, adding that constant farmers/herdsmen clashes were also frustrating the nomadic education scheme.

    In Gombe, Hajiya Zulaihatu Madugu, Director, School Services, told NAN that there were 77 nomadic schools with 19,882 pupils and 383 teachers.

    She said that schools located within the outskirts of Gombe metropolis had been upgraded to conventional schools, adding that more teachers were being deployed to ensure adequate teaching staff.

    Madugu lauded the introduction of school feeding programme by the Federal Government, saying that it had encouraged herdsmen to send their wards to the nomadic schools.

    Alhaji Musa Hardo, Secretary, Bauchi State Agency for Nomadic Education (BASANE) decried the poor state of nomadic schools.

    “Most of the schools operate under trees and make-shift structures provided by their host communities. There are 402 schools with 1,174 teachers and 68,000 pupils, but very few of the schools have one or two classrooms,’’ he said.

    He said that 265 pupils recently fled into the state from Zamfara following the violence there, adding that their presence had overstretched the little facilities in the schools.

    The situation appeared rather better in Jigawa where NAN learnt that government had voted N50 million to execute capital projects, train and retrain teachers, and provide uniforms for the nomadic school children.

    Alhaji Ali Manu, Executive Secretary, Jigawa Agency for Nomadic Education, who disclosed this, said that the state government had established 323 nomadic schools in the past 19 years.

    He said that 20 additional schools would soon be established to cater for the growing numbers of nomadic children, adding that the schools were fully equipped with furniture, instructional materials and teachers.

    However, Alhaji Ya’u Malammadori, former chairman of Jigawa Chapter of MACBAN, said that he was not satisfied with the implementation of the nomadic education programme in the state.

    “Most of the teachers don’t come to school because no one monitors them. Government must intensify supervision to check truancy,” he said.

    • Ephraims Sheyin of News Agency of Nigeria wrote the article few teachers and dearth of infrastructure.
  • DSS asks Afegbua to report today

    DSS asks Afegbua to report today

    THE Department of State Security (DSS) has asked spokesperson to former military president Gen. Ibrahim Babangida Mr. Kassim Afegbua to report again to its Abuja office today.

    Afegbua’s lawyer Dr. Kayode Ajulo said his client was interrogated for hours by DSS operatives and directed to report at the Abuja headquarters of the agency “to conclude the chat” today.

    Afegbua arrived at the DSS’ expansive complex near the Presidential Villa in Abuja just before 12 noon yesterday.

    Yesterday evening, reporters’ wait near the DSS headquarters went unrewarded as Afegbua’s chat with DSS operatives became much longer than expected.

    The lawyer had written a letter to the DSS Director-General, querying the unexplained nature of the chat invitation on Wednesday night.

    The IBB spokesman was declared wanted by the police over a statement issued on behalf of Babangida calling on President Muhammadu Buhari not to seek re-election.

    It was learnt that the police later apologised over the invitation.

  • IBB to youths: Be involved in national development

    IBB to youths: Be involved in national development

    Former military Head of State, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida (rtd.), on Friday admonished youths and other Nigerians to be involved in all policies and programmes that could enhance national development.

    Babangida stated that national development is a collective effort, which must be supported by every Nigerian irrespective of religious or political affiliation.

    He said this when a non-governmental organization, Forward Nigeria Group (FGN) led by its National Coordinator, Barr. Alex Edim presented him an award as the ‘Father of nation building, at his hilltop residence in Minna.

    According to a statement issued by the group in Abuja, Babangida appreciated the gesture and admonished the FGN to collaborate with other progressive-minded organizations and contribute to the socioeconomic growth and unity of the country.

    He commended the formation of the group promised to monitor closely its activities in achieving the desired goal of moving Nigeria forward.

    The former Head of State said: “I commend you for the laudable efforts to move Nigeria forward and I promise that I would closely monitor your activities from now on.”

    The FGN National Coordinator eulogized the former president, enumerating his various achievements while in office.

    Edim said: “Nigerians can not forget your impact on the nation and the various agencies you established whose impact was felt all over the nation. From MAMSER, DIFFRI, FRSC, Peoples Bank, Better Life for Rural Women and others, the nation is steel feeling their impacts till today.”