Tag: Governor Darius Dickson Ishaku

  • A fitting honour for “The Grassroots Champion”

    A fitting honour for “The Grassroots Champion”

    The venue was the popular Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Centre, in the city centre of Abuja and the date was Friday, November 10, 2017. Governor Darius Dickson Ishaku stood tall as Comrade Ibrahim Khaleel, National Chairman of the National Union of Local Government Employees, NULGE, spoke of his attributes before a huge crowd of people made up of representatives of local government workers from all the 774 Local Government Council Areas in the country, members of the National Assembly from Taraba State, legislators from the Taraba State House of Assembly, chairmen and councillors from the 16 Local Government Areas of Taraba State and thousands of his supporters from in and outside Taraba State.

    Then came the highpoint of the event of that day.   Hon Gambo Tanko Kagara, National President of the Association of Local Governments of Nigeria, ALGON, emerged with the insignia of the prestigious ]award of Excellence and Best Performing Governor in Grassroots Development in Nigeria and handed over to Governor Ishaku to the admiration of the First Lady of Taraba State and Wife of the Governor, Barrister Anna Darius Ishaku and their son Gibuiya. The crowd exploded into a thunderous applause that almost sent the roof caving in. It was indeed a day that hard work, diligence and patriotism, all of them attributes that have defined the character of the administration of Governor Ishaku in the past two and a half years in Taraba State were acknowledged and rewarded from the least expected but highly respected workers’ umbrella constituency – the Nigeria Union of Local Government Employees, NULGE and the Association  of Local Government Chairmen in Nigeria, ALGON.

    The coming of the award was no surprise to people who have followed the giant strides in the development of the state by the administration. The surprise, really, was the source from which the award came – ALGON, and NULGE, both of them acting jointly and in one accord on this occasion. The two unions are the ultimate umbrellas organisations for all workers and administrators at the grassroots level. The grassroots of the country is for them a familiar terrain and they have good and up to date knowledge of developments at that level of administration in the country. NULGE, as a pressure group whose mission always is to fight for workers’ welfare, is hardly ever impressed by the efforts of political leaders to make life better for the populace. In the case of Governor Ishaku, it was different. They were impressed and they came out not only to say so publicly but to reward him publicly for it. The decision was a product of painstaking independent assessment of the 36 states governors in service delivery at the grassroots level through the promotion of projects and services with direct bearing on the welfare of people at the grassroots level. Governor Ishaku came out as the most outstanding performer.

    Comrade Khaleel told the audience that Governor Ishaku had excelled in his determination to take the local government system in Taraba State out of an unfortunate system that was characterised by monumental corruption, a system that was rotting and dying. “We have subjected Governor Ishaku to a process of long and painstaking investigation and I wish to say with all sense of honesty that he has passed our test. He has distinguished himself as the best friend of workers through regular payment of salaries and pensions and in promoting the welfare of workers generally.” Khaleel also said Governor Ishaku has done more than any other Governor in the country in promoting grassroots development and described him as a “Grassroots Champion”, the most committed promoter of quality education, a dedicated and an incorruptible friend of the people at the grassroots level.

    It was also from this perspective that Governor Ishaku saw the significance of the award. He said in his acceptance speech that it was significant that the award was coming from those who were, by their calling as trade unionists, not very easy to impress by the people in government. The award came from the source he least expected and he said so. “If a labour union is giving you an award, it means that award is indeed a worthy reward because it is coming from those who keep you on your toes every day through their agitations and demands for improved services.”

    The event was for Ishaku an opportunity to recount his long and victorious battle with ghost workers in the state. He told his audience that his administration adopted several strategies which outwitted the perpetrators of salary scams in the state. That victory is the reason that salaries are being paid regularly to workers at all level of governance in the state today. It is also the reason government is able to implement projects that have tremendously changed social and economic lives in the state.

    One remarkable way the administration has positively touched lives at the grassroots level is the 100 boreholes in 100 communities in the state. The successful implementation of that project has changed the water supply situation in the state dramatically, particularly in the rural communities. Those rural communities where people hitherto shared water from ponds with their domestic animals now have regular source of good water. They now have boreholes drilled for them by the government. Additional 150 similar boreholes in 150 more communities are now being drilled to further extend these facilities to more people. It is not unlikely that this rare gesture of the administration is one of the factors that have influenced the award in favour of Governor Ishaku.

    There is also the administration’s skills acquisition programme that has taken thousands of women and youths off the poverty bracket. They were those who benefitted from training organised for them in various areas of vocation that have turned them not only into self-employed entrepreneurs but employers of labour. They were all given financial assistants and start-up equipment that helped them in setting up their own business outfits. Every electoral award in the state is a beneficiary from the scheme. The beneficiaries are rigorously monitored by government’s rescue watch officers to ensure that the beneficiaries do not derail from the objectives of the project. This scheme has greatly and positively touched lives at the grassroots.

    The Ishaku administration’s employment policy has changed lives way down into the rural communities too. The government had lifted the embargo on employment placed by previous administrations in the state. This has led to the employment of nearly 10,000 hitherto unemployed youths in two years, among them the 3000 teachers who were recently presented letters of appointment. The impact of these employments in the socio-economic lives of these employees and their dependants has been tremendous.

    The re-activation of six previously dead government-owned companies has also had tremendous impact on lives. It has opened more job opportunities and stimulated economic activities. The Highland Tea factory in Mambilla is one outstanding example of how the rural populace in the state have benefitted from the revival of the companies. The return of the company to business has also revived tea farming which is the main preoccupation of the people on the Mambilla Plateau. They now make good money from their tea farms by supplying the factory. Governor Ishaku has not only revived the tea company but has also helped tremendously in promoting the product in local and international markets. Today the product is in high demand, far more than the company can cope with. The overall impact of these efforts in positively transforming lives at the grassroots is certainly part of what swung the award in favour of Governor Ishaku.

    The award is an appreciation of the impact of projects and programmes under the government’s rescue mission which is being felt down to the grassroots level. The roads that the administration has built, hospital, clinics, schools and colleges that have been renovated or completely rebuilt, the provision of stable electricity through the supply of transformers, all have achieved one vital objective which is the stimulation of business activities that have also directly improved the economic lives of people in the benefitting grassroots communities.

    The Excellence Award on Grassroots Development is a fitting honour for Ishaku, a man who has fought the battle against payroll scammers and won, rescued education from the abyss of decay and reduced poverty in the state through his multi-faceted skills acquisition programmes that have touched lives positively down to the grassroots. True, “the Grassroots Champion” has joined several of Governor Ishaku’s other middle names.

    • Dan Abu is the Senior Special Assistant to the Governor of Taraba State on Media and Publicity

     

  • A fitting honour for “The Grassroots Champion”

    The venue was the popular Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Centre, in the city centre of Abuja and the date was Friday, November 10, 2017. Governor Darius Dickson Ishaku stood tall as Comrade Ibrahim Khaleel, National Chairman of the National Union of Local Government Employees, NULGE, spoke of his attributes before a huge crowd of people made up of representatives of local government workers from all the 774 Local Government Council Areas in the country, members of the National Assembly from Taraba State, legislators from the Taraba State House of Assembly, chairmen and councillors from the 16 Local Government Areas of Taraba State and thousands of his supporters from in and outside Taraba State.

    Then came the highpoint of the event of that day.   Hon Gambo Tanko Kagara, National President of the Association of Local Governments of Nigeria, ALGON, emerged with the insignia of the prestigious ]award of Excellence and Best Performing Governor in Grassroots Development in Nigeria and handed over to Governor Ishaku to the admiration of the First Lady of Taraba State and Wife of the Governor, Barrister Anna Darius Ishaku and their son Gibuiya. The crowd exploded into a thunderous applause that almost sent the roof caving in. It was indeed a day that hard work, diligence and patriotism, all of them attributes that have defined the character of the administration of Governor Ishaku in the past two and a half years in Taraba State were acknowledged and rewarded from the least expected but highly respected workers’ umbrella constituency – the Nigeria Union of Local Government Employees, NULGE and the Association  of Local Government Chairmen in Nigeria, ALGON.

    The coming of the award was no surprise to people who have followed the giant strides in the development of the state by the administration. The surprise, really, was the source from which the award came – ALGON, and NULGE, both of them acting jointly and in one accord on this occasion. The two unions are the ultimate umbrellas organisations for all workers and administrators at the grassroots level. The grassroots of the country is for them a familiar terrain and they have good and up to date knowledge of developments at that level of administration in the country. NULGE, as a pressure group whose mission always is to fight for workers’ welfare, is hardly ever impressed by the efforts of political leaders to make life better for the populace. In the case of Governor Ishaku, it was different. They were impressed and they came out not only to say so publicly but to reward him publicly for it. The decision was a product of painstaking independent assessment of the 36 states governors in service delivery at the grassroots level through the promotion of projects and services with direct bearing on the welfare of people at the grassroots level. Governor Ishaku came out as the most outstanding performer.

    Comrade Khaleel told the audience that Governor Ishaku had excelled in his determination to take the local government system in Taraba State out of an unfortunate system that was characterised by monumental corruption, a system that was rotting and dying. “We have subjected Governor Ishaku to a process of long and painstaking investigation and I wish to say with all sense of honesty that he has passed our test. He has distinguished himself as the best friend of workers through regular payment of salaries and pensions and in promoting the welfare of workers generally.” Khaleel also said Governor Ishaku has done more than any other Governor in the country in promoting grassroots development and described him as a “Grassroots Champion”, the most committed promoter of quality education, a dedicated and an incorruptible friend of the people at the grassroots level.

    It was also from this perspective that Governor Ishaku saw the significance of the award. He said in his acceptance speech that it was significant that the award was coming from those who were, by their calling as trade unionists, not very easy to impress by the people in government. The award came from the source he least expected and he said so. “If a labour union is giving you an award, it means that award is indeed a worthy reward because it is coming from those who keep you on your toes every day through their agitations and demands for improved services.”

    The event was for Ishaku an opportunity to recount his long and victorious battle with ghost workers in the state. He told his audience that his administration adopted several strategies which outwitted the perpetrators of salary scams in the state. That victory is the reason that salaries are being paid regularly to workers at all level of governance in the state today. It is also the reason government is able to implement projects that have tremendously changed social and economic lives in the state.

    One remarkable way the administration has positively touched lives at the grassroots level is the 100 boreholes in 100 communities in the state. The successful implementation of that project has changed the water supply situation in the state dramatically, particularly in the rural communities. Those rural communities where people hitherto shared water from ponds with their domestic animals now have regular source of good water. They now have boreholes drilled for them by the government. Additional 150 similar boreholes in 150 more communities are now being drilled to further extend these facilities to more people. It is not unlikely that this rare gesture of the administration is one of the factors that have influenced the award in favour of Governor Ishaku.

    There is also the administration’s skills acquisition programme that has taken thousands of women and youths off the poverty bracket. They were those who benefitted from training organised for them in various areas of vocation that have turned them not only into self-employed entrepreneurs but employers of labour. They were all given financial assistants and start-up equipment that helped them in setting up their own business outfits. Every electoral award in the state is a beneficiary from the scheme. The beneficiaries are rigorously monitored by government’s rescue watch officers to ensure that the beneficiaries do not derail from the objectives of the project. This scheme has greatly and positively touched lives at the grassroots.

    The Ishaku administration’s employment policy has changed lives way down into the rural communities too. The government had lifted the embargo on employment placed by previous administrations in the state. This has led to the employment of nearly 10,000 hitherto unemployed youths in two years, among them the 3000 teachers who were recently presented letters of appointment. The impact of these employments in the socio-economic lives of these employees and their dependants has been tremendous.

    The re-activation of six previously dead government-owned companies has also had tremendous impact on lives. It has opened more job opportunities and stimulated economic activities. The Highland Tea factory in Mambilla is one outstanding example of how the rural populace in the state have benefitted from the revival of the companies. The return of the company to business has also revived tea farming which is the main preoccupation of the people on the Mambilla Plateau. They now make good money from their tea farms by supplying the factory. Governor Ishaku has not only revived the tea company but has also helped tremendously in promoting the product in local and international markets. Today the product is in high demand, far more than the company can cope with. The overall impact of these efforts in positively transforming lives at the grassroots is certainly part of what swung the award in favour of Governor Ishaku.

    The award is an appreciation of the impact of projects and programmes under the government’s rescue mission which is being felt down to the grassroots level. The roads that the administration has built, hospital, clinics, schools and colleges that have been renovated or completely rebuilt, the provision of stable electricity through the supply of transformers, all have achieved one vital objective which is the stimulation of business activities that have also directly improved the economic lives of people in the benefitting grassroots communities.

    The Excellence Award on Grassroots Development is a fitting honour for Ishaku, a man who has fought the battle against payroll scammers and won, rescued education from the abyss of decay and reduced poverty in the state through his multi-faceted skills acquisition programmes that have touched lives positively down to the grassroots. True, “the Grassroots Champion” has joined several of Governor Ishaku’s other middle names.

     

    • Dan Abu is the Senior Special Assistant to the Governor of Taraba State on Media and Publicity
  • Taraba to fix abandoned road

    Hope has come to the people of Kurmi Local Government Area of Taraba State. Governor Darius Dickson Ishaku has promised to fix the deplorable road from Mararaba to Baissa in Kurmi before the expiration of his tenure.

    Kurmi, sharing boundary with Cameroon Republic, is very rich in the production of cocoa, palm oil, timber and other food and commercial crops, but the disrepair of the road, abandoned, in the area has grossly hindered productivity and development of the area.

    The poor condition of the road, culminating in deathtraps, causes food wastage and productivity depletion as there are no storage facilities. One farmer told The Nation that the situation is killing their morale and grossly hampering crop cultivation targeted at diversifying the economy from oil to agriculture, especially crop cultivation.

    Ishaku promised to repair the road when the Chief of Kurmi, Samaila Maiwuya, and the Chairman of Kurmi Local Government Area, Stephen Ibrahim Agya, and other Kurmi stakeholders paid him a visit in Government House, Jalingo.

    The visitors had come to thank the governor for appointing their sons and daughters of Kurmi, under the Rescue Teachers Scheme (RTS), in his administration.

    Welcoming the guests, Ishaku said he will reconstruct the road from Mararaba to Baissa in their local council which had been abandoned for decades. He added he was also working to establish a cocoa grading centre in the state so that other states will no longer take the credit of what is being produced in Taraba.

    “This will also end the tedious journey that cocoa farmers from Taraba often embark on to have their cocoa graded in Ibadan, Oyo State,” he said.

    The governor disclosed that the first road he wanted to construct in the state when he took the saddle of office was the Mararaba/Baissa road.

    “But the road was laced with lots of encumbrances, especially on the part of the contractor,” he said. “It took me time to be able to terminate the contract and subsequently embark on a fresh feasibility study as well as a new design, beginning from Mararaba to Baissa and to Abong,” he revealed.

    Ishaku noted that the design of the road has been completed and a competent contractor contacted. The cost of the contract submitted by the contractor is now the major hitch, said the governor.

    He explained: “Due to the harsh economic reality on ground, other options are being explored considering the commercial posture of Kurmi to the State and the entire country. I intend to construct a standard carriage road that will stand the test of time so that the commercial potentialities of the area would be fully exploited for the benefit of Taraba. Nevertheless, the road to Kurmi will be constructed before the end of my tenure.”

    Former Information Commissioner and senior aide to Ishaku on Public Affairs, Emmanuel Bello, said, when constructed, the Mararaba/Baissa road would link lost communities in Kurmi with the rest of civilisation and usher in prosperity to farmers. “Kurmi, with all its potentials would jerk to life radically; a people abandoned would see light. The road to economic growth and development of Kurmi and Taraba State is that road.”

  • Suntai’s funeral: Taraba declares Friday Public holiday

    Suntai’s funeral: Taraba declares Friday Public holiday

    Governor Darius Dickson Ishaku Thursday declared Friday a public holiday in honour of the late governor.

    “The public holiday is to enable civil servants and members of the general public to prepare for the burial of late Governor Danbaba Danfulani Suntai.

    “Governor Ishaku is calling on the people of Taraba State to continually pray for the repose soul of the departed governor to rest in peace.

    “The governor has also requested for fervent prayers for members of the committee handling the burial arrangement to perform their responsibilities well, to accord the late governor a befitting burial,” Ishaku said in a statement signed by his Chief Press Secretary Hassan Mijinyawa.

    Preparation for the burial officially began on Wednesday with three valedictory sessions by lawmakers at State House of Assembly, executive cabinet members in Government House and Suntai’s tennis teammates at the Jolly Nyame Stadium.

    Tears ran freely from the eyes of many who attended the valedictory sessions.

    Governor Ishaku announced that his predecessor’s funeral service will hold Friday morning at the Jolly Nyame Stadium in Jalingo.

    Final interment will be in the deceased’s residence in Suntai, Bali local government area same day evening.

    Ishaku and some key officials of the State government, core political allies and some relatives will Friday morning receive the body at the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja

    The body will be flown to the State capital Jalingo and conveyed to his residence.

    There would be a “special Juma’at prayers at the Muslim Council Secretariat, while wake keep will hold at the LCCN Mayo-Gwoi.”

    The “service of songs” took place Thursday at the CAN Secretariat Jalingo.

    Governor Ishaku described the late ex-governor as “a visionary and pragmatic leader who created the framework” for him to build on.

     

  • Ishaku: GOC Ahanotu on mission to satisfy interests in Taraba crisis 

    Ishaku: GOC Ahanotu on mission to satisfy interests in Taraba crisis 

    Governor Darius Dickson Ishaku Wednesday faulted comments made by the General Officer Commanding (GOC) of 3 Division of the Nigeria Army, Brig-General Benjamin Ahanotu on the recent crisis on Mambilla Plateau, Sardauna local government area of Taraba State.

    Ahanotu, on visiting the scenes of the killings and destruction in the area on a motorbike, had described the incident as “genocide, worse than Boko Haram massacre.”

    In Gembu, Ahanotu told the Chief of Mambilla Shehu Baju: “I was shock 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.”

    “The Fulanis 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 exco chamber, Jalingo, the GOC said he has never seen such a gruesome devastation since he started his military career.

    Governor Ishaku, in a statement signed by his Senior Special Assistant (SSA) on Media and Publicity Bala Dan Abu, said: “It was clear that Ahanotu was on a mission to satisfy some vested interests in the crisis.

    “He (Ahanotu) has spoken in places in a manner unexpected and unbecoming of an officer of his rank and training.

    “The Taraba State Government rejects in its entirety the deliberate and callous attempt by unpatriotic elements to tag the Mambilla crisis as genocide.

    “The recorded casualty figure of 18 human lives as announced by the police and other security agencies that brought the fighting to an end obviously do not support that evil name-tag.”

    Two groups, Taraba Pro-Democracy Organisation (TPDO) and the Good Governance Group (GGG) yesterday alleged the federal government was planning to declare a state of emergency in Taraba state.

    A military source also hinted The Nation of a possible state of emergency in Taraba should investigations show that the killings on the Mambilla Plateau were genocide.

    Our source added that a plan (of state of emergency) was in advanced stage, but the federal government was only awaiting findings to ascertain whether the Taraba State Government had a hand in the killings.

    Minister for Women and Social Development Senator Aisha Alhassan had alleged that “the Governor, Darius Ishaku and the Speaker Peter Abel Diah of asked the people to go and fight.”

    Senator representing Central Taraba, Yusuf Yusuf, who made a call for an emergency rule in Taraba State, said over 200 Fulanis with their over 20,000 cows were massacred.

    Reacting to a front page comment in Daily Trust publication of Monday, July 3, entitled: “Genocide in Mambilla,” the governor said “the killings were no genocide but a clash between herdsmen and farmers.”

    He described the newspaper’s editorial judgment as “biased and discriminatory,” and equally faulted it for “heavily relying on the reckless, highly partisan and distorted account of the Mambilla crisis by Brig-General Ahanotu.”

    “In that editorial comment the newspaper laboured painfully to give the ugly tag of genocide and ethnic cleansing to the unfortunate crisis that occurred recently between herdsmen and farmers in Mambilla.

    “The paper’s editors failed to perform their professional duty of subjecting information on the crisis to independent investigation through their own reporters and other field men.

    “Rather, they chose to believe the outrageously partisan and fraudulent figures of death of people and cows as given by Fulani leaders who were party to the crisis,” Ishaku said.

    He added: “The newspaper’s curious silence and failure to label the massacre of indigenes of Southern Kaduna by Fulani as a case of genocide and ethnic cleansing has apparently exposed the partisan direction of Daily Trust’s editorial standpoint on issues in which the interests of its pay masters are involved.

    “The Mambilla crisis was an unfortunate clash of people who have lived together for decades as neighbours.

    “The crisis was unfortunate and it has been condemned as wrong by respectable voices from around the country.

    “The Taraba State Government has deployed men and materials to the affected areas to give succor and help quicken the healing process. What the government expects is support for this effort and not the evil act of promoting sentiments that can only worsen the peace process being pursued by government.

    “Enough is enough of this mischievous effort to give a dog a bad name in order to hang it