Tag: Ibrahim Gaidam

  • Yobe empowers 6,000 youths

    The Yobe State Government through the SURE-P programme has empowered over 6,000 unemployed youths in the last two years, the Chairman of the State Youth Empowerment Committee, Kati Machina, has said.

    Machina said 6,572 youths with diploma in various fields have been employed by the government.

    He said each youth receive N15,000 monthly, adding that some of the beneficiaries are working as teachers while others are posted to the Hospital Management Board and the National Population Commission (NPC).

    His words: “This programme is one of the silent but most important ones being carried out by the Ibrahim Gaidam-led administration. You can’t imagine how these stipends have changed the beneficiaries’ lives.

    “Our choice of beneficiaries is not based on tribe or party affiliation. For your information, poverty does not respect any party or tribe. We try as much as possible to be fair to all applicants.”

  • PDP’s neglect of the North will be its nemesis in 2015, says Gaidam

    PDP’s neglect of the North will be its nemesis in 2015, says Gaidam

    Governor Ibrahim Gaidam of Yobe State yesterday dismissed the PDP as a failure whose neglect of the Northeast over the years will count against it in the 2015 elections.

    He said the PDP’s action is nothing short of wickedness and should be told so in clear terms by the electorate next year.

    Governor Gaidam spoke at the start of campaign ahead of next Saturday’s bye election in Nangere constituency into the State House of Assembly.

    The last representative of the constituency, Alhaji Abubakar Adamu Degubi, was killed two years ago at his Potiskum residence by unknown gunmen.

    “We cannot continue like this as a people. The PDP government is a failure in all sense. Nothing is working out in this country because of the failures of the PDP,” Gaidam said.

    “The high rate of insecurity in the country is becoming alarming. Our roads are no longer safe. You travel from Damaturu to Maiduguri and you will not see any patrol vehicle on the way. Boko Haram is  killing people on the high ways any way they like. This is too bad.

    “The problem bedevilling the country is because of the maladministration of the PDP. I urge you all to vote for the All Progressives Congress (APC). This is the only party that is the last hope of the common man in Nigeria.”

    Also speaking, the state party chairman, Alhaji Mai Mala Buni, praised the people of Nangere who have stood firmly as progressives and urged them to remain resolute in voting for the APC on   Saturday.

  • Gaidam: insecurity will end with  APC at the centre

    Gaidam: insecurity will end with APC at the centre

    •’God ‘ll expose terror sponsors’

    Yobe State Governor Ibrahim Gaidam has said insecurity will become history in the country when the All Progressives Congress (APC) takes over the central government next year.
    The governor said the nation was better off before 1999, when the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) took over the reins of leadership of the country.
    He said: “Nigeria would be in trouble if we allow the PDP to continue in power beyond 2015. We were better off before 1999. From all indices of development, things are getting worse since the PDP government took over the affairs of this country. The economy is very bad. Look at the security situation in the country: there’s no light, no roads. Nothing is moving.
    “With an APC government at the centre, it is my view that the insecurity in the country will be over and everything will be improved upon. Nigeria will be better again.”
    Gaidam, who spoke yesterday at the inauguration of newly elected state executives of the party, also said God would soon expose the sponsors of the Boko Haram sect.
    “The insurgency is coming to an end and God will get hold of the sponsors. God will not allow them to succeed again,” Gaidam said.
    The governor called for special prayers for the 234 secondary school girls kidnapped by Boko Haram members in Chibok, Borno State.
    He urged the new party executives to show their political strength in the next election by ensuring that their constituencies vote for the APC.
    Gaidam described the APC as the only party that can take Nigeria out of the woods.
    He added: “We decided to be part of this merger to join other progressives to save Nigeria from PDP’s misrule.”
    The party’s new chairman Mai Mala Buni promised that the executives would give 100 per cent loyalty to APC.
    He acknowledged the enormous responsibility placed on their shoulders.

  • Fire and fury as Boko Haram kills 43 pupils

    Fire and fury as Boko Haram kills 43 pupils

    Pupils were trying to climb out of the windows and they were slaughtered like sheep by the terrorists who slit their throats. Others who ran were gunned down

    IT was like a scene from an action-packed movie. A band of insurgents bearing rifles stormed a school. They set fire to the administrative block, moved on to the hostels where pupils were fast asleep and shut the gates. They set the hostels on fire and started shooting. Those who tried to escape were captured, their throats slit.

    But it was no movie. The scene was real at the Federal Government College, Buni Yadi, Yobe State where no fewer than 43 pupils were killed on Tuesday by Boko Haram insurgents.

    They died either from gunshot wounds, direct attacks through matchettes or as a result of complications from burns.

    The death toll was expected to rise yesterday as soldiers were still gathering bodies, military spokesman Capt. Eli Lazarus said.

    The attack is the fourth on schools in Yobe. Governor Ibrahim Gaidam was furious.

    The figure of the dead from Boko Haram attacks this year is about 300 civilians – two months alone. There are no figures of the military dead.

    The sect’s members invaded Buni Yadi – 70 kilometres from Yobe State capital Damaturu – in many Hilux and other categories of vehicles, according to eye witnesses.

    They started operating around 2.00a.m and did not leave the school until early morning. There were no troops in sight when they operated.

    The insurgents set ablaze a locked hostel, shooting and slitting the throats of those who escaped through windows. Some were burned alive. Forty buildings were burnt down.

    A teacher, Adamu Garba, said he and other teachers who ran away through the bush estimate 40 students died in the assault that began around 2 a.m. It was difficult to communicate from the town, because extremists last year destroyed the cell phone tower there.

    Garba, who teaches at a secondary school attached to the college, said the attackers first set ablaze the college’s administrative block, then moved to the hostels, where they locked students in and started firebombing the buildings.

    At one hostel, he said, “students were trying to climb out of the windows and they were slaughtered like sheep by the terrorists who slit their throats”. Others who ran were gunned down.’’

    He said students who could not escape were burnt alive.

    Garba spoke to The Associated Press (AP) in Damaturu, where he and other teachers escaped to.

    President Goodluck Jonathan, in a media chat on Monday night, said Boko Haram attacks were “quite worrisome”, but that he was sure “we will get over it.”

    Thousands of Nigerians have lost family members, houses, businesses, their belongings and livelihoods in the four-year-old rebellion.

    Tearful Governor Ibrahim Gaidam suspended his week-long inspection tour of projects to visit the college, which is razed down.

    The governor said some of the burnt students had been conveyed to Damaturu by Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC) and State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) officials. He uttered no word as he moved from one ambulance to the other, looking at the burnt students.

    Parents of some of the dead yesterday evacuated the bodies for burial. Three of the injured pupils are on treatment at the Gen. Sani Abacha Specialist Hospital in Damaturu.

    Military sources claimed that the insurgents invaded the school overnight through what preliminary investigation described as an “unusual source”.

    Some of them were said to have used the bush path to sneak into the school to perpetrate the deadly act.

    Troops are said to be on the trail of the insurgents, with the Defence Headquarters ordering troops to either arrest or destroy them en masse.

    According to a top security source, most structures in the school were burnt by the insurgents. “A mop-up operation is still in progress as I am talking to you,” he said.

    Responding to a question, the source added: “The insurgents came to the school in an unusual manner, using bush path. They trekked to the school under the cover of darkness.

    “They invaded Buni Yadi from their bases and cells, which are between Yobe and Borno states. Certainly, they came in from Borno axis.

    “Unlike in the past, they did not shoot or use vehicles to attract attention of security men in the college.

    “We also discovered that they destroyed the telecommunications masts in the area about two days before the invasion. They brought down the masts to make it impossible for the school management to send distress signal to town.

    “As a matter of fact, they changed their tactics but they cannot have the last laugh.”

    Asked if there was no military formation or post around the area, the source added: “There were troops in Buni Yadi. They were patrolling other locations in the town as at the time of the incident.”

    “The Chief of Defence Staff, Air Chief Marshal Alex Badeh, has ordered troops to rout out the insurgents dead or alive. It is not everything we can disclose, but we are tracking them by air and land.”

    Defence Headquarters spokesman Maj.-Gen. Chris Olukolade said: “The insurgents are being trailed to locations between Yobe and Borno states. The whole operation is involving air and land counter-attacks.

    “It is either the insurgents are arrested or destroyed. We believe that we will get them.”

     

  • Angry governor: more troops or we’ll all be gone

    Angry governor: more troops or we’ll all be gone

    Seething with anger, Yobe State Governor Ibrahim Gaidam yesterday urged the Federal Government to deploy more troops in his state or the people of Yobe and Borno states “will be gradually wiped out” by Boko Haram insurgents.

    Speaking on the horrific attack on pupils, he said:

    “It is most unfortunate that in the past one year, we have experienced these kind of ugly acts from some insurgents for the fourth time, today.

    “The first one was at Government Day Secondary School, Damaturu; the second one was in Mamudo Government School and the third in College of Agriculture, Gujba. In Damaturu Secondary School, the insurgents massacred about nine pupils. In Mamudo, they killed about 24. In College of Agric, they killed about 40 students.

    “It is unfortunate. The action is highly barbaric, wicked, inhuman and immoral and it is devastating at the same time. It is unfortunate that up to five-six hours of killing and massacre, there were no security men around to contain the situation. At the same time, I’m aware that the military command in Yobe lacks adequate number of troops. Despite that, they must change their strategy of operation. If you pull out the military in the town and taking them out to operate in another place, there should be some few left on ground to contain any unforeseen circumstances. I believe they should change their strategy.

    “I want to use this opportunity to call on the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria or the chief of army staff and chief of defence staff or whoever is concerned to send, as a matter of urgency, more troops to Yobe to contain these insurgents.

    “I was made to understand clearly that they don’t have enough number of troops to cover each and every school in Yobe, but at the same time, they need a change in strategy to tackle this problem.

    “It is unfortunate that our grand-children are dying for lack of care, perhaps from the Federal Government. These things are happening only in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states in the North eastern part. Whatever it is, we have seen quite a number of troops in Maiduguri, and we need to get more here. We will all die but the circumstance of the death is what matters. How can you just take arms and come and meet defenceless students, kill them, burn them and go away and then move to another school and do the same.

    “I think the Federal Government should be more serious to ensure that these inadequacies are arrested; otherwise, I think they will gradually wipe out all the people in Yobe and Borno states. I so observe,” Gaidam said

    The governor went on: “We are constrained that the security men are not under the jurisdiction of the state government. The arrangement of police, sss and soldiers is vested in the Federal Government and we are still calling on them to live up to their responsibilities.

    “I also want to condole with the families of those who lost their lives and pray for Allah to forgive them their sins,” he said.

    The governor gave a cash donation of N100 million to the members of staff of the college.

    One of the teachers told our reporter that the attackers came in Hilux vans with some dressed in military uniforms and bulletproof vests.

    They came in and started shooting. Some of them were fully kitted in military uniform with bullet proof vests. Only boys were killed and the girls were left unhurt. None of the girls was abducted by the insurgents – to my knowledge,” he said.

    A senior teacher who took the governor round the school also lost his son in the attack.

    The National Association of Nigerian Students (NANS) under the aegis of Nigerian Students NANS Zone ‘C’, comprising of Adamawa, Benue, Borno, Kogi, Kwara, Nasarawa, Plateau, Taraba,Yobe states and FCT Abuja, condemned the attack.

    A statement signed by Comrade Dauda Muhammad Gombe, Comrade Baba Adamu Muhammad, said: “The attack on innocent students is very serious and an issue of concern to all.”

     

  • Gaidam gives deadline to contractor

    Gaidam gives deadline to contractor

    Yobe State Governor Ibrahim Gaidam yesterday directed the contractor handling the Damaturu Regional Water project to deliver it by December.

    Gaidam, who inspected the project on Gujba Road, said he had seen no progress in three weeks.

    His words: “This is the third time I am visiting this project but you have always complained.

    “The other time it was insecurity; the last time it was the crane. Now that the crane is here and the insecurity has gone, I am sure you have no excuse again.

    “By the time I visit in June, I want to see an appreciable degree of work so that before end of this year you will complete and handover the project to us,” the governor said.

    The Damaturu regional water project was awarded in 2009 by the Federal Government at an initial cost of N1.9 billion.

    The project was stagnant and the state decided to take it over, reawarding it at N1.145 billion to UNIPUMP Nigeria in 2012.

     

  • Yobe thwarts PDP’s 2015 calculations

    Yobe thwarts PDP’s 2015 calculations

    IT took a lot of courage and political savvy to conduct the local government election in Yobe State’s 17 LGAs in the closing days of last year. That Governor Ibrahim Gaidam was able to pull it off comes not only as a surprise to Nigerians, opposition party and ruling party alike, it effectively put paid to any plan by both the PDP and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to disenfranchise the Northeast, a significant bulwark of the opposition.

    The PDP and the Jonathan presidency will now have to rework their calculations if they hope to retain the office they have won thrice, mostly dubitably. In 2015, the chances of holding elections in Yobe are much higher than it was when the state had not yet conducted its LGA poll.

  • Gaidam presents budget of reconstruction and consolidation

    Gaidam presents budget of reconstruction and consolidation

    •Govt to spend N102.99b

    •’Jonathan afraid of opposition’

    Yobe State Governor Ibrahim Gaidam yesterday presented anAppropriation Bill of N102.99 billion to the House of Assembly.

    The figure represents an increase of 15.78 per cent over last year’s N86.7 billion.

    Capital Expenditure will take N67.43 billion or 66 per cent and Recurrent Expenditure N35.46 billion.

    Tagged: “Budget of Reconstruction and Consolidating the Socio-Economic Transformation”, the budget would be financed “with a treasury opening balance of N6.1 billion, Statutory Allocation of N52.9 billion, Excess Crude Oil of N9.9 billion, Value Added Tax of N10.01 billion, Ecological Fund of a billion naira, Internally Generated Revenue (IGR) of N3.63 billion and external and internal loans of over N12.7 billion.

    Gaidam said: “To achieve the six-point objectives of this Appropriation Bill, Capital Expenditure has been increased by over seven per cent to accelerate the execution and completion of projects that .

    “The Ministry of Works took the lion share of N16.58 billion for its recurrent and capital expenditures, Education got over N12 billion, with that higher education getting N7.2 billion.”

    The Health sector was earmarked N11.63 billion, while Transport and Energy would spend N7.4billion.

    The Speaker, Adamu Dala Dogo, praised the governor for his presence.

    Dogo said the fear of the opposition prevented President Goodluck Jonathan from presenting the Appropriation Bill.

    He called on the President to hand over to an APC elected president on May 29, next year at the Eagle Square or send his Vice President.

    “Nigerians will not accept any hand over from Mrs. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala in the same way she was sent to present the budget.”

    The House adopted the budget.

  • Gaidam swears in commissioners

    Gaidam swears in commissioners

    Former Senator Adamu Talba and five others, including ex-Speaker of Yobe State House of Assembly, Tijani Zanna Zakariya, yesterday took their oath of office as new members of the State Executive council.

    Talba was elected to the Senate in 2007 on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). He re-contested in 2011 but lost to Alkali Jajare.

    Governor Ibrahim Gaidam urged them to imbibe transparency and accountability.

    He explained that the appointment of the new commissioners was based on wide consultation, track record, honesty and integrity, while calling on them to uphold the confidence and responsibility vested on them.

  • Yobe warming up for council poll

    Yobe warming up for council poll

    After he succeeded his predecessor, the late Senator Mamman Ali, in January 2008, Yobe State Governor Ibrahim Gaidam unfolded his vision for the state during the presentation of the Appropriation Bill to the House of Assembly.

    He promised not to subvert the democratic structure at the local government level. The governor immediately directed the Yobe State Independent Electoral Commission to set up the machinery for the poll.

    The governor’s pronouncement a loud ovation. The legislators applauded the decision.

    Barely two months, the electoral body swung into action. It held consultations with the stakeholders, including political parties, security operatives, civil society organisations, and the media.

    The election was held on August 8, 2009.

    According to the Yobe State Local Government Amendment law, the tenure of office for elected council chairmen is two years. However, for six years now, caretaker committees have been administering the councils.

    The Mohammed Abdu-led commission could not organise the election, following the Boko Haram insurgence.

    Gaidam has shown commitment to the development of grassroots democracy. he has said that the election will hold, when the security situation improves. Many believe that he is still faithful to this agenda.

    The umpire, Abdu, told reporters in Damaturu, the state capital, that the stage is now set for the poll. He said it will hold on December 28.

    Abdu also disclosed that both the sensitive and the non-sensitive materials for the poll are ready.

    The electoral chief said that 10 political parties are participating in the exercise, adding that the chairmanship and councillorship candidates have been screened by the agency.

    But the Peoples Democratic party (PDP) has announced that it will boycott the election. The party said that the atmosphere is not conducive, since the state of emergency has not been lifted.

    But the chairman of the commission disagreed with the party, recalling that it had consented to the choice of December 28 as the poll day.

    The PDP Chairman, Lawan Gana Karasuwa, said: “We cannot run an election in a state where there is a state of emergency. Initially, we welcomed the decision to participate in the election, hoping that the state of emergency would expire as at the time the election would be conducted. But, with the recent extension of the emergency rule, we cannot go into that election as law abiding citizens. I think they are just wasting their time”.

    Abdu said the emergency rule declared in the state does not affect democratic structures. He said that, based on this, the election will hold.

    “If they (PDP) decide to back out of it, it is entirely their problem as the commission will not force any political party to participate in the election. We have all our democratic structures intact in the state of emergency. So, we are going ahead with our elections”, he maintained.

    The Coalition of Political Parties in Yobe State has thrown its weight behind he exercise. Its Chairman, Umar Kukuri, expressed confidence in the ability and neutrality of the commission.

    “While supporting all the programmes towards the success of this election, we also call on candidates and political parties to conduct themselves peacefully throughout the electioneering process. Similarly, we urge supporters of all political parties to turn out en masse and elect candidates of their choice”, Kukuri said.

    This is the second time the PDP is boycotting the local government election. In 2009, the party accused the ruling All Nigerian Peoples Party (ANPP) of not providing a level playing ground for the election. The ruling party ANPP won all the chairmanship seats.

    As Yobe prepares for the poll, the argument for local government autonomy is also raging.

    Many have argued that the lack of autonomy has crippled the development of the local government system. Others have pointed out that corruption is rampant at the local government level. The joint state/council account has become their albatross.