Tag: GOC

  • Taraba bloodbath worse than Boko Haram massacre, says GOC

    It was a black week for the Fulani in Gembu, Sardauna Local Government Area of Taraba State.

    An estimated 200 Fulani – men, women and children – have been reportedly killed, and many others injured, as the Mambilla community turned against their Fulani neighbours, whose militants, incidentally, had been terrorising and killing innocent rural farmers in recent times.

    Governor Darius Ishaku said “a lie’ caused the violence.

    About 20,000 cows, according to Senator Yusuf Yusuf (Taraba central), were killed and over 5,000 homes burnt while property, estimated to cost millions of naira, were looted or destroyed.

    All these happened after four days of hostilities.

    Those who managed to escape, some with injuries, have been kept in a secluded place as IDPs to shield them from further attacks.

    Sources said there are no adequate medical facilities to treat them.

    The Nation gathered that many people were killed in Nguroje (where the crisis started), Sabbal Gudali, Toffi, Mayo Daga, Mayo Sina, Tamiya, Kwara-Kwara, Tungan Lugere and Timjire. 10 people were killed in a Mosque in Wuro Ardo Musa, during prayer.

    A headmaster, his wife and seven children were reportedly wiped out.

    Languishing in agony, the victims describe the violence as “a well-organised ethnic cleansing against the Fulani in Sardauna, supported by some top government officials.”

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo ordered the deployment of soldiers in the state to halt the violence. He ordered police reinforcement, deployment of extra military battalion and personnel of Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) in the area after the crisis.

    Osinbajo commiserated with the affected communities and the state, and ordered the provision and delivery of relief materials to them. He also imposed a dusk to dawn curfew, with soldiers now patrolling the length and breadth of the area to maintain law and order.

    Security chiefs have temporarily relocated to the area to stop further killings.

    The General Officer Commanding (GOC) of the 3 Division of the Army, Brig-Gen. Benjamin Ahanotu; Commandant of the 23 Brigade, Yola, Adamawa State Brig-Gen. Bello Mohammed; Commandant of the 20 Battalion in Serti, Lt.-Col. Abdullahi Anwar and the Commissioner of Police Yunana Babas, have temporarily relocated to the area.

    Governor Ishaku has set up three committees to end the skirmishes. The first, raised at the beginning of the crisis, is headed by Deputy Governor Haruna Manu.

    Another 14-member committee is headed by the Chief of Mambilla. It has five members each from Fulani and Mambilla, one representative each from Kaka, Kambu, Panso and Igbo, whom the governor said have lived there for many years and will tell the truth if the indigenes refuse to do so.

    The third is the “Truth and Reconciliatory Committee” made up of religious leaders (Christians and Muslims). The committees are to chart the need to forgive one another and forge ahead.

    “I spoke with the Acting President on the intelligence and the cause of the crisis was a lie,” he said.

     

    Journalists stopped from visiting horrifying scenes

    Scenes of the carnage are so horrifying soldiers stopped reporters from visiting them. Gen. Ahanotu accompanied reporters to the scene but after seeing the horrific devastation on a motorbike, he stopped them (reporters) from gong further. The trip ended in Bang.

    Ahanotu simply told the reporters their reports may alter his investigation.

    “I was shocked with what I saw. Even Boko Haram did not slaughter women and children, but here, I have seen young children and pregnant women slaughtered because of hatred,” he noted.

    In Gembu, he told the Chief of Mambilla Shehu Baju that “the Fulani were mercilessly slaughtered along with their cows.

    “They (Fulani) are fellow Nigerians and indigenes of this area; they should be treated with dignity.”

    At a security meeting in the Government House, Gen. Ahanotu told Ishaku he had never seen such a gruesome devastation since he started his military career.

    According to him, there was serious detestation among the people and they only waited for the opportunity to unleash terror on their neighbours.

    “Leaders are not supposed to lie but in Gembu, the leaders are lying because of hatred for their neighbours,” he said.

    Gen. Ahanotu advised the governor to apply for the extension of military personnel in the warring area to forestall a retaliation.

     

    Minister knocks governor, Speaker

    The Minister for Women Affairs and Social Development, Aisha Alhassan, faulted Governor Ishaku and Speaker of the House of Assembly Abel Peter Diah, for the crisis.

    Alhassan, who addressed reporters in Jalingo, the state capital, accused the Ishaku administration of “fuelling the crisis by asking people to go and fight”.

    She said: “Ishaku has failed for failing to perform his primary duty of protecting lives and property. And it is unfortunate that people are calling for a state of emergency in Taraba.

    “When crisis broke out in Takum, the governor’s home, he did not say anything. Now, there is crisis in Sardauna, he is not saying anything. People have asked me about my stand on the crisis and I told them to ask the governor.”

    The minister urged Ishaku to learn from Acting President Yemi Osinbajo, who is holding peace and security meetings with regional leaders to douse tensions caused by the separatist agitators and coalition of northern youth groups.

    According to her, Ishaku has failed so woefully that she would support the lawmakers should they begin impeachment move against the governor.

    “Let them impeach him (Ishaku), let the deputy become governor and if he fails too, he shall be impeached too. What we want is the person who will perform.

    “If the House of Assembly makes moves to impeach him, I will support them. He should work like a governor; Ishaku should wake up and learn from other governors who are performing.”

     

    Governor condemns violence

    Governor Darius Ishaku held a peace and security meeting when he returned from Germany. The crisis erupted when he was abroad.

    Ishaku condemned the violence on the Mambilla Plateau, after listening to stakeholders and security agents and offered his condolences to the affected community.

    He noted that the problem with Nigeria is that “we got independence on a platter of gold, so we don’t know what freedom and peace is.”

    Ishaku said the crisis was caused because of a lie, describing the incident as “a sad development.”

    He ordered security agencies to do their best to restore normalcy.

     

    Speaker’s defence

    The Speaker, Abel Peter Diah, denied giving land to his kinsmen. He debunked allegations that he sponsored his Mambilla kinsmen to grab land belonging to any Fulani.

    “I did not give anybody any land in Nguroje.

    “As the Speaker and being a Mambilla, I am not surprised by the accusation,” Diah said.

    He, however, called for peace.

     

    Cause of the violence    

    Commissioner of Police Yunana Babas said the crisis was an aftermath of a court case between two Mambilla men – Umaru Musa Moh’d Jidda and Hussaini Sule and a Fulani, Abubakar Rini.

    The Magistrates’ Court found Jidda and Sule guilty and remanded them in prison.

    He spoke at the state command headquarters and at the security meeting in the Government House.

    His words: “Their kinsmen started making calls to the complainant, threatening to burn down their houses and kill them if they did not go to court to release their detained kinsmen.

    “They actualised their threat when the court did not release Jidda and Sule. They burnt down houses and inflicted injuries on their victims.”

    Babas added that the Mambilla gave ethnic colouration to the conflict “by conspiring and mobilising their kinsmen for the dastardly acts that were recorded”. According to him, 18 bodies were recovered.

    The police boss faulted security agents, including the vigilante, for not doing their job because of tribal sentiments.

    He said the situation in Gembu is so complex and criminals took advantage to loot and worsen the destruction.

    Babas’s account corroborates eye-witnesses’ version of the cause of the crisis.

    But the Fulani Elders’ Forum said he downplayed the figure of casualties, saying over 200 Fulani have been buried.

    The forum alleged that a local militia was contracted to kill the Fulani and destroy their property, on the orders of the local government Chairman John Yep.

    The forum, in a statement, said the crisis began on June 16, when the militia protested the arrest of Umaru CID, a ring leader of the group in Nguroje, by security operatives over a land dispute.

    “On getting information about the arrest of the militia leaders, Yep immediately led some Mambilla youths to storm Nguroje, alleging that the arrest was instigated by the Fulani. This led to a total siege on Nguroje and its environs.”

    “While the assault lasted, Yep ran round villages to mobilise his kinsmen. He sold a dummy to his tribesmen and painted a wrong and malicious picture that his Mambilla kinsmen were being attacked by Fulani.

    “He made a personal radio message through the Taraba State Broadcasting Service (TSBS) Gembu Booster Station, calling on his kinsmen to execute the genocide on the station’s transmissions of Saturday evening and Sunday morning.”

    Sources said Yep’s phones were seized by soldiers when they discovered he was speaking with the perpetrators.

    Representative of the Fulani community at the meeting, Saidu Bawa, accused the Diah and Yep of poking the fire of war.

    Representative of the Mambilla community, the Wakili Mambilla Alhaji Zubairu, said the crisis erupted as a result of the arrest of Umaru CIB, a mambilla, for his alleged involvement in crime.

    Representative of the Miyatti Allah Cattle Breeders Association, Ahmadu Bello, accused the Speaker of sponsoring his men to grab lands belonging to Fulani.

    Former ambassador to Cameroun republic in his reaction, said the land in Gembu was owned by Mambilla people, being the first to settle on the Plateau.

    But of late, he said, Certificates of Occupancy were wrongly given to the Fulani when the government started sourcing revenue on their livestock.

    The representative of Tabita Fluka accused the government of negligence, adding that the state was informed ahead of time when tension began to brew but it did not bother to put a quick response.

    He added that it was wrong to have a Wikilin Mambilla in Nguroje settlement, when there was a substantive Galadima Nguroje.

    “Some Mambilla youths have constituted themselves into a lawless group, formed by the council chairman John Yep, who calls himself Mandella, who gloats he must collect all Fulani lands. You cannot arrest any member of the youth group.”

    According to the representative of the DSS, Shehu Saulawa, the crisis should be traced to the attitude of the political elites of the area. They don’t talk the truth.

    “They need to speak the truth for the problem to be addressed,” he said.

    He hinted that the problem in Gembu has been compounded by politicians such that at the moment you will not even arrest youth.

    He warned of a possible reprisal and urged the government to intervene urgently.

  • Buratai lauds theatre commander, GOC on Boko Haram

    Buratai lauds theatre commander, GOC on Boko Haram

    The Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai, has commended the Theatre Commander, Operation Lafiya Dole, Maj.-Gen. Lucky Irabor, for his efforts in the ongoing war against Boko Haram terrorists.
    Buratai gave the commendation while inaugurating the newly refurbished Wolf Officers Mess of the Nigerian Army in Maiduguri yesterday.
    He also commended the General Officer Commanding (GOC), 7 Division of the Nigerian Army, Brig.-Gen. Victor Ezugwu, for living up to expectation concerning the anti-terrorism war in the North-East.
    “I want to acknowledge the Theater Commander who has been quite dynamic in mobilising all troops under him.
    “I also want to commend the GOC, 7 Division of the Nigerian Army, for his courage and dedication to duty in the ongoing operation,” he said.
    The COAS, while also commending the GOC for upgrading the mess, said he was happy to be present at the inauguration of the renovated mess.
    He said he was sentimentally attached to the mess being the venue of his decoration as a captain.
    “I want to commend the GOC and the officers of the 7 Division for uplifting the standard.
    “It was on this mess that I was decorated with the rank of a captain after been promoted from a lieutenant,” he said.

  • GOC: insurgency will be defeated in 2017

    General Officer Commanding (GOC) 1 Division in Kaduna Major-General Adeniyi Oyebade has said insurgency will end in 2017.

    He spoke yesterday while decorating 10 promoted senior officers – Brig.-Gen. Yusuf Brown, Brig.-Gen. Abdul Khalifa Ibrahim, Brig.-Gen. Ibukun Olu Adewa, Brigadier General Olufemi Olatunbosun Oluyede, Col. Michael Ede Eiom, Col. A. A. Akinrinmade, Col. Usman Musa, Col. Oba Agbabiaka Aminu, Col. Gabriel Olufemi Olorunyomi and Col. Mukhtar M. Mata.

    Gen. Oyebade said the officers deserved to move to the next rank, adding that they will get more responsibilities, especially against operations in Northeast.

    “As you know, we are conducting operations all over the country, so it is a good thing that the Army has selected these officers for 2016. I urge them to remain steadfast, dedicated, committed and loyal to the constituted authority of the land and ensure that the effective command of troops is strictly and effectively carried out.

    “I have no doubt that they will do well in the future task.”

    Commenting on the fight against insurgency in 2017, he said: “Insurgency will be defeated; they have been effectively degraded, what we have now are just suicide bombers, which is normal.

    “I am sure that even in Eastern Europe they still have those problems.

    “But we will continue to do what we have done this year, with much more improvement and commitment.”

    The GOC assured Nigerians, especially those in the North, that the Army is effectively on ground, without fear or favour, to perform its duties within the ambit of its rules of engagement and strict adherence to human rights.

    Speaking on behalf of the decorated officers, Brig.-Gen. Yusuf Brown thanked God, the chief of Army staff and GOC for their promotion.

  • GOC: we arrest Boko Haram suspects in Lagos daily

    •Army probes alleged coup plot

    The Nigerian Army yesterday said suspected Boko Haram insurgents are daily arrested in Lagos and Ogun states.

    General Officer Commanding (GOC) 81 Division, Gen. Isidore Edet stated this during an interdenominational church service at Saint Charles Lwanga Catholic Church, Ikeja Cantonment, to mark the Army Day celebration.

    He said the army is investigating an alleged coup against the government, warning soldiers to be mindful of the things they say and do.

    “That is why we are asking soldiers to be on the alert. We have reasons to be on the alert more than before when we fought Boko Haram fiercely.

    ‘’Almost on a daily basis, we arrest Boko Haram members in Lagos. They have seen that the war is being won so they are running. The army in conjunction with other security agencies arrest them almost daily.

    ‘’Initially, they deny when we ask them questions, but when we profile them, they start revealing where they fought, how they killed soldiers, how they detonated bombs in post office, Maiduguri, and so on.

    ‘’By this, we do what we need to do by sending them to the higher authorities to do what the laws and the constitution of Nigeria says it will do with them. So, you must be on the alert and watch out for strangers who may stroll into the barracks. Ask them questions and report such persons to security agents to know the person’s mission.”

    ‘’Many of our colleagues have died in this war against Boko Haram. Some of them, we have seen their graves and some we did not see. So, we have every reason for those that are still alive to thank God for giving us victory against Boko Haram.

    ‘’So many others are amputated, some are even using crutches because they fought against Boko Haram so that we would have one country. About a year ago, we were the object of public ridicule, those of us in uniforms, if we talk, the public will say go and fight Boko haram and stop making noise.

    ‘’But we thank today that the Almighty God, who trained our hands for war, has taken the shame away. And now, the Nigerian people are proud of us again as their soldiers, saying we are in the front line.”

    Sounding a strong warning to officers and soldiers on the alleged coup, Edet said: “Within the military where there are rumours of coup, whether they are perceived or real; soldiers should be careful in the company they keep and the things they say. “Army is investigating the coup rumour. Even during military rule army investigated to know the veracity of coup rumour.

    “Be watchful of the people that come to our barracks and enter our mess. Be careful what they say because when people want to plan such things, they come into our barracks and incite soldiers.

    “Be careful of such people and report them. Do not allow yourself to be in their company because you may be in the wrong place.

    “Even in your telephone conversations you should be careful. Whatever you say on air is being monitored and being collated. We expect a 100 percent loyalty. Avoid the company of people who come with misguided utterances against the government.”

  • Boko Haram: Air and ground operations have improved, says GOC

    •10, 000 soldiers promoted in Yobe

    The General Officer Commanding 3 Division Nigerian Army Brig. General Mohammed Adbullahi Aliyu has said that the bureaucracy once associated with air operations and ground troops in the fight against Boko Haram has long been removed and the operations are quicker, more effective and responsive at the moment.

    The GOC while briefing journalists in Damaturu, the Yobe State capital, as part of his working tour, noted that all Brigade Commanders in the Northeast could make direct calls for air assistance in any part of the region in the event of any Boko Haram attack unlike in the past where long protocols must be observed before a pilot flew to a troubled area.

    Brig. Gen. Aliyu also spoke on the effort the military is putting in place to ensure that displaced people are returned to their liberated communities without recurrent attacks from the insurgents.

    He noted that about 400 soldiers had been deployed to Yobe State to ensure that commercial activities return to the liberated areas, especially the Damaturu/Buni Yadi/Biu road which had been closed from public travel for more than year.

    After assumption of office, Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai, declared the road open to motorists but many refused to ply the road except security agencies that relocated to Buni Yadi.

    Speaking on the recent pockets of attack in Yobe, the GOC who is in charge of the Tactical Command, Damaturu explained that his troops have been generally on top of the situation, adding that the insurgents failed to wreak greater havoc because of the flow of useful information from the general public which he maintains is key to the success of the fight.

    He disclosed that the Boko Haram terrorists that attacked 120 Batalion at Goniri on January 15 this year were pursued to the villages of Ajgin, Talala and Kafa, while about 14 Boko Haram terrorists were killed on the same day in Churokusko in Tarmuwa Local Government of Yobe State with different kinds of ammunitions recovered, including six AK-47 riffles, three IEDs, four 36 handheld grenades, one GPMG, four magazines and 382 Rams of 7.62 mm (NATO).

    In another attack in Babangida village on Sunday morning, the GOC said that the terrorists attacked a police station and took off with two Hilux vehicles belonging to the police. They also burnt down the Airtel telecommunication mast in the DPO’s compound.

    The GOC regretted that the attack on Babangida must have been aided by collaborators in the village, noting that the “Headquarters of 3 Division Civil Military Coordination Cell (CIMIC) is working hand-in-hand with the state government to sensitise the locals in order to discourage the collaborators aiding BHTs in achieving their aims”.

    Speaking on the morale of soldiers in the theater of operation, Brig. Gen. Aliyu disclosed that about 10, 000 soldiers have been given special promotion for exemplary fight against the insurgents in the state, with 1, 500 awaiting promotion.

  • Why Command schools have more contract teachers, by GOC

    The General Officer Commanding (GOC) 81 Division of the Nigerian Army, Maj.-Gen. Edet Isidore , has explained why there are more contract  teachers in Command schools.

    Edet, who addressed reporters after the 50th anniversary of the Command Children School, Yaba, Lagos, at the AN Barracks, said Federal Government’s embargo on employment informed the development.

    According to him, it was the responsibility of the Ministry of Defence to employ teachers for the schools.

    But, following the economic realities in the country, an embargo was placed on recruitment.

    Edet said the Army, in order to sustain the high quality of education in Command schools, resorted to engaging contract workers, since the Education Corps lacked the financial capacity to engage permanent workers.

    He said: “The news that most of the permanent teachers will soon be retiring is not true. I want to put it on recird that permanent teachers of this school or any other Army school are recruited by the Ministry of Defence.

    “As you know, there is an embargo on recruitment because of the state of the economy. So, the Army cannot recruit anybody. But to augment the permanent teaching workers employed by the Ministry of Defence, the Army employed temporary workers, which is within the limited resources available to the Corps.”

    The GOC hailed former pupils of the school for refurbishing its library.

    He  urged them to give  the school a facelift.

    Edet also praised the first indigenous Education Corps Commander, Maj.-Gen. Olufemi Olutoye (retd), who is a traditional ruler in Ondo State, for the legacy he bequeathed to the school.

    He said: “At the time he pioneered this school, he was not an Education Officer. As an Infantry Officer, after his training at the Staff College, he was posted to Lagos and mandated to establish this school.

    “He did it so well and this school has produced so many distinguished men and women who have contributed immensely to the development of the country.

    “I believe it is the mental strength – values for hardwork, self-discipline and integrity –  that has been the underlying philosophy of education in this school.

    “It is these same values that have the underpinnings of the success of the pupils that passed through this school.

    “So, I want to congratulate you individually and collectively for your achievement in your different fields of endeavour.

    “Those values, which enabled and underpinned your successes, I believe, should still be the values within which this school should continue to function.

    “With this, I really want to commend the ex-pupils of this school for the efforts they have made by renovating and re-equipping the school library, which will be inaugurated soon.

    “The school’s golden jubilee should create a platform for ex-pupils to reconnect and rekindle past relationships, to network and collectively build and raise the school to high standards.’’

    Maj.-Gen. Olutoye said the Command schools were meant to provide alternative quality education for children and wards of military officers.

    He said: “The whole idea was to provide an alternative school that would give quality education to children and wards of military officers.

    “As a parent, I am proud of the successes of the products of this school and wish it many more years of progress.’’

  • New 82 Div GOC takes office

    New 82 Div GOC takes office

    The new General Officer Commanding (GOC) 82 Division of the Nigerian Army Brigadier General Ibrahim Attahiru has taken office in acting capacity, urging his commanders to prioritise capacity development of troops.

    He observed that the 82 Division is a peculiar one that has the capacity to fight both on water and land.

    Attahiru spoke at the handover ceremony held at the GOC’s Conference Room, Headquarters, 82 Division Complex in Enugu.

    The new Chief Dragon further reiterated that his administration would  focus on training and retraining of troops with contemporary equipment and would create situation awareness within 82 Div Area of Operational Responsibility.

    He described the mantle of leadership that came to him as an act of divine providence.

    He also enjoined officers and soldiers of the Division to tender their maximum and unflinching support in the renewed effort intensified against crimes and its related offences within 82 Division’s AOR.

    Attahiru further noted that the outgoing GOC was a mentor and worthy of emulation by all following his achievements and developmental strategies witnessed by the Division since he assumed duty emphasising that the standards set will never be forgotten in a hurry.

    The outgoing GOC 82 Div Maj Gen Shehu Yusuf thanked officers and soldiers of the Division for their relentless effort which made his tour of duty a complete success.  He called on them to remain steadfast and also extend similar loyalty,  to his successor.

    He described the new GOC as a seasoned infantry officer who has sufficient understanding and knowledge of the Division’s Area of Operational Responsibility.

    Yusuf while congratulating the new GOC for his appointment also said that he was particularly happy that the new GOC is coming from 13 Brigade Calabar where he had also earlier commanded before becoming the GOC 82 Division stressing that he is fortunate and knows him to be very hard working senior officer.

  • ‘54 Boko Haram suspects arrested in one year’

    A former General Officer Commanding (GOC) 81 Division, Gen. Obi Umahi, has urged his successor, Gen. T. I. Dibi, to avoid the assumption that Boko Haram insurgents are not within the command’s area of responsibility.

    Umahi said the Army division arrested 54 suspected Boko Haram members within a year when he held was the helmsman of the division.

    The former GOC addressed reporters yesterday in Lagos at the command’s headquarters, after his handover to Gen. Dibi.

    He advised Gen. Dibi to keep watch round the clock and ensure that his alertness level remains high.

    Umahi said one of his greatest challenges as GOC of 81 Division was the reality of the existence of Boko Haram elements in Lagos and Ogun states.

    He said: “The most trying moment for me was the point we realised that we were already living with Boko Haram elements. Though we had always assumed they could be around, the realities did not dawn on us until we made the first arrest of 12 suspects.

    “At that point, we had to expand our dragnets and spread out networks to garner as many within as possible. This proved a tedious challenge for us. But, in the end, we were able to mop them up.

    “So, I can say that I am living Lagos safer than I met it.”

    On the number of terror suspects arrested during his leadership and the stage of investigation, Umahi said after the arrest of 12 suspects, 42 others were also nabbed.

    He explained that while some of the first 12 were set free, after screening by the State Security Service (SSS), others are on trial with exhibits, such as 14 explosives, AK-47 rifles and various types of ammunitions.

    “The 42 suspects, who were subsequently arrested have been profiled, screened and are awaiting trial,” Umahi said.

    According to him, the suspicion that some terrorists planned to bomb military formations in the Southwest was only a rumour but which the Army did not ignore.

    Umahi said: “The information did not come to us as well prepared military intelligence but as rumour. All the same, we do not leave any information lying down. We have responded to it and the signs are evident in all military formations.”

    It was learnt that security has been tightened in military zones across the state, with intelligence personnel searching vehicles, including those of senior and junior officers.

    It was also learnt that armoured personnel carriers (APCs) were being searched, with visitors made to call their hosts.

     

  • ‘Army committed to welfare’

    The Nigerian Army has promised to create a hospitable atmosphere for its officers, the General Officer Commanding (GOC) 2 Division, Maj.-Gen. Ahmed Jibrin, said yesterday.

    Jibrin spoke at the inauguration of projects at 2 Division Garrison, Adekunle Fajuyi Cantonment, Ojoo, Ibadan, Oyo State.

    The projects include a 315KVA transformer, an industrial capacity borehole, Bajaj motorcycles, a car park and an arms’ store.

    The GOC said the projects would create a more conducive environment for officers.

    He said the aim of the Army was to turn the force into an institution that could prove its essence any time.

    Jibrin noted that in pursuance of the objective, the garrison re-equipped the services and enhanced the welfare of its officers and men.

    The GOC hailed the commandant in-charge of the garrison, Maj.-Gen Laz Ilo, urging the officers to maintain the facilities.

    Ilo said he started the projects six months ago when he realised that his officers did not have electricity and water.

    He said: “We have been using generators and buying water. Life has not been easy for our officers. That’s why we embarked on this project. It will transform our garrison for an effective performance.”