Tag: INSECURITY

  • FG to partner southeast governors to end insecurity, develop region

    FG to partner southeast governors to end insecurity, develop region

    The Senior Special Assistant to President Bola Tinubu on community development, Chioma Nweze, on Thursday, November 2, said that the federal government would partner with south-east governors to end insecurity and develop the region.

    Nweze made the disclosure shortly after the official handover of agricultural equipment to IFAD beneficiaries in Onuebonyi, Ebonyi state.

    She maintained that agriculture is one of the policies of the federal government to end insecurity and boost food security in the Southeast.

    She said: “Mr. President is interested in what happens at the grassroots level. The President has recognized that communities are the strength of the nation. When the people in the communities are strong, that means the government is strong.

    “This IFAD program will end in a year plus. We are sure that, with what we are seeing and the positive impact/ benefits, the program will continue and we are going to expand it.

    Nweze during a courtesy visit to Governor Francis Nwifuru urged states to release more funds for agricultural programs at the grassroots.

    Read Also: Imo/Bayelsa/Kogi polls: Tinubu appeals for free, fair process

    She commended the Ebonyi state government for the release of N100 million naira to IFAD as the state’s counterpart fund.

    She added: “I encourage states to release more funds to IFAD because IFAD is about the people in the grassroots, the communities. The beneficiaries shouldn’t eat their seed money, there was a time they gave people rice to plant and they ate it. Once you plant, you will reap.

    “The more you plant, the more you reap. The next generation of billionaires are going to be agriculturists. The people that are going to make money in this country are people who take agriculture to the next level.

    “The president wants to remove all these baggers from the streets. He wants to remove them so that we can go into agriculture. If you want to go into fishery, poultry, etc, we are there to help, so that you can be self-sustainable.”

    The governor of Ebonyi state, Francis Ogbonna Nwifuru, called on the federal government to site more projects in the state.

    He said it has become worrisome that no federal government project is currently going on in the state, describing it as unacceptable.

    He made the call when he received in the audience, the Senior Special Assistant to the president of Community Development, (South East), Chioma Nweze.

    He noted: “It is unfortunate that currently, no federal government project is going on in Ebonyi State that is the number one thing we plead with you to tell Mr. President.

    “Even the Teaching Hospital we handed over to them is not functioning optimally, including the David Umahi University of Health Sciences.

    “As it stands now, Ebonyi state government is giving the university One Hundred Million Naira every month to sustain the institution.”

    The governor congratulated Nweze on her appointment and encouraged her to become a good Ambassador of the State by putting in her best in the job.

    The governor assured the Senior Special Assistant of the support of the government and the people of Ebonyi to enable her to succeed.

  • Boundary Commission to check insecurity along Nigeria-Niger border states communities

    Boundary Commission to check insecurity along Nigeria-Niger border states communities

    The National Boundary Commission of Nigeria has pledged to build a platform to tackle insecurity along the Nigeria-Niger border.

    Seven states bordering the two countries include Sokoto, Zamfara, Borno, Yobe, Katsina, Jigawa and Kebbi.

    The Director-General of the Commission, Adamu Adaji, stated this at a sensitisation workshop in Sokoto.

    Adaji said the platform would avail the states and communities along the border coast to rub minds and share ideas on the best ways to curtail the spate of insecurity occasioned by the proliferation of small and light arms, trafficking and other cross border crimes.

    He explained that the essence of the initiative was to build, strengthen and foster unity and purposeful integration between the two neighbouring countries’ border communities against any security threats.

    Adaji said the states shared frontier with Niger across 21 LGAs adding: “These states suffered security challenges resulting from the activities of Bolo Haram, bandits and other criminal gangs which displaced many citizens to become refugees in their states.”

    He recalled that the colonial masters created barriers separating the two neighbouring countries, an action Adaji said the commission hoped to reverse and transform into bridges of cooperation and integration between the two African nations.

    Read Also: Bandits kill one, abduct 25 in Southern Kaduna

    However, the Commission’s top echelon described as counterproductive , the forcible breaking of the border lands’ transnational identity through imposed state partitions.

      “The inability to effectively engage border communities and convert the borders to bridges of cooperation most often create ungoverned spaces and vaccines for cross border crimes such as armed banditry, terrorism, drugs and human trafficking and smuggling of small and light arms. Getting these right requires composite regional and local authorities support and cooperation, ” the DG called.

    Earlier, Governor Ahmed Aliyu Sokoto represented by his deputy, Idris Muhammad Danchadi, pledged to support the piloting of the platform initiative to success, explaining that the state government was on track as it had concluded plans to establish community security guards to complement conventional security agencies in fighting insecurity across the 23 LGAs.

  • Insecurity: NASS may ask president to reintroduce cashless Policy, says Speaker Abbas

    Insecurity: NASS may ask president to reintroduce cashless Policy, says Speaker Abbas

    Speaker of the House of Representatives, Hon. Abbas Tajudeen has revealed that there was pressure on the leadership of the House to ask the president to return the nation back to the era of cashless policy.

    The Speaker said the argument has been that the cashless policy which was introduced late last 2022 and early 2023 helped reduced incidences of banditry, kidnapping and other forms of insecurity in th country.

    Speaking when the New Commandant of the National War College led the management to pay him a visit, the Speaker asked the college to conduct a research on the relationship between cashless economy and insecurity

    The Speaker said the reintroduction of the cashless policy may be one of the non-kinetic approach to curbing the rising cases of I security in the country, saying ‘maybe what was started and later abandoned maybe the solution we are looking for.

    He said: “You are aware where Nigeria is today in terms of security. We are at the lowest and we rely on institutions like yours to come up with policies that will minimise, if not eliminate all the security challenges that this country is facing.

    “Our people are suffering, the country is in tartars. Everywhere you go, it is the same trade mark, the same hand writing. Insecurity, terrorism and banditry. I believe that one of the reasons your institution was established was to proffer solution in terms of policy.

    “I want to challenge you to put on your thinking cap, think outside the box and come up with suggestions for the executive and the parliament on what we need to do to bring to an end this incessant insecurity that is affecting this country.

    “I believe you are up to the task and will deliver at the end of the day. I want to give you one assignment. Being a research based institution, please help us study the relationship between cashless society and insecurity.

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    “A lot of people have been coming to say let us go and talk to the President and ask him to revisit this issue of cashless policy introduced towards the end of last year because it was found that the introduction of the policy significantly reduced terrorism, kidnapping and all forms of banditry.

    “That in a way started giving us some sort of reflection, that it may be one of the none kinetic policy that you can come up with and advise on so that what was startee and aborted may be one one of the things that may bring an end to this situation.

    “We want you to put it as part of your study. What could be the impact of a cashless society vis-a-vis insecurity. Can one complement the other?

    “I am sure that Mr. President and the parliament will be interested whether it is a policy that we need to reintroduce and probably give it a better human face if it will help improve the security of the country at the end of the day”.

    The Speaker however assured the National Defence College that the current Assembly will pass the law that will give legal backing to the change of name of the institution from National War College to National Defence College.

    He said: “We are aware of all the challenges you are facing in terms of funding, legislation concerning the name of your school. We have already set the ball rolling to ensure that what happened in the 9th Assembly does not repeat itself.

    “The bill was there and we were unable to conclude the entire legislation process before we winded up. This time around, we are starting early and I want to assure you that under the 10th Assembly, the full name of your institution will be given legal backing.”

    He asked the college to organise refresher course for the security personnel of the National Assembly, saying “I want you to look at one of our units, the Seargent at Arms and see how you can add value to it.

    “It remain our security outfit in the National Assembly. But from what I see in their conduct and activities, they need more training to do their job well. I think your institution can play a major role there.”

    Speaking earlier, the Commandant of the College, Rear Admiral Olumuyiwa Olotu said the college appealed to the National Assembly to pass the bill changing the name of the institution to National Defence College.

    Admiral Olotu said the act establishing the college still refer to it as National War College even though the name has been changed for over ten years.

    He dososed that the the institutoon has graduated 2757 officers since it’s inception including 296 foreign officers.

  • Commissioner seeks media support in tackling insecurity

    Commissioner seeks media support in tackling insecurity

    The Ekiti State Commissioner for Youth Development, Mr. Gold Adesola Adedayo, has called for collaboration from media in the ongoing fight against insurgency, banditry among other criminal activities plaguing the country.

    The Commissioner said that  the time had come for the media professionals to join the Nigerian Army in its renewed bid towards stemming the tide of insecurity in the country through their reportage.

    Adedayo gave the appeal in Ado Ekiti, on while delivering a speech at a seminar organised by the Nigerian Army in collaboration with Ukan Kurugh Foundation.

    Read Also: How to tackle insecurity, economic problems, by Bamidele

    He noted that the media had a major role to play in nation-building and towards a peaceful and livable society, saying their reportage could strengthen or undermine the security agency.

    The Commissioner said that the media, particularly social media users, should be a strong partner to the Nigerian Army to reinforce the multifaceted wars being raised by the federal government to safeguard the integrity of the nation and rescue it from bloodsuckers.

  • How to tackle insecurity, economic problems, by Bamidele

    How to tackle insecurity, economic problems, by Bamidele

    Senate Leader Opeyemi Bamidele has called for concerted efforts of critical stakeholders in resolving the economic challenges and tackling insecurity.

    At the just concluded retreat for all senators in Ikot Ekpene, Akwa Ibom, he proposed a strategic collaboration between the Federal Executive Council (FEC) and National Assembly as one of the strategies to decisively address hydra-headed challenges that beset Nigeria.

    The 2023 retreat for senators came to a conclusion last weekend with renewed hope for the future of Nigeria. This was evident in the pattern of frank discourses that took place at the two-day retreat under the theme, “Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms in Nigeria.” The retreat explicitly delved into diverse issues that placed Nigerians under undue socio-economic burdens in the last two decades.

    Obviously, it was not another talk shop. Rather, it was a gathering of patriots, who were curiously in search of antidotes to hydra-headed challenges that viciously beset Nigeria. Its mission was unambiguous from the inception. For the President of the Senate, Senator Godswill Akpabio, it is a forum for building capacity, which every legislator requires to function effectively.

    Facilitated by the National Institute of Legislative and Democratic Studies, Akpabio set the stage for this purely legislative retreat, where resource persons freely shared divergent views about many challenges confronting the federation and proposed convergent strategies, which they believed, would restore stability in the country’s macro-economic environment and promote peaceful coexistence if each arm of governments pursues its goals with political will.

    Capacity building is just one of the rationales for the parliamentary retreat, according to Akpabio. Besides, the senate president observed that the retreat was designed to develop pro-people legislations that could promote enduring peace; guarantee sustainable development and deepen peaceful co-existence, among all Nigerians, irrespective of their ethnic nationalities and religious leaning. .

    For these reasons, the retreat was never a mere convention for senators across the federation. In good numbers, also, members of the Federal Executive Council attended the retreat that placed the interest of Nigeria above their political allegiance. Among others, Chief of Staff to the President, Mr. Femi Gbajabiamila; Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Mr. Olawale Edun; Minister of Budget and Economic Planning, Alhaji Atiku Bagudu and Deputy Governor of Akwa Ibom State equally graced the two-day retreat.

    Read Also: Insecurity: Flights resume operation at Kaduna Airport

    From its inception to conclusion, the country’s socio-economic realities poignantly came to the fore in the presentation of nearly all guest speakers and resource persons. However, beyond the rhetoric of grim realities that currently eclipse Nigeria, there was a consensus on the significance of developing creative legislative frameworks in response to the country’s socio-economic realities.

     But is the retreat sufficient to activate the consensus, especially at a time of global crises that directly impinge on domestic economies and politics?

    Bamidele set the agenda on how to transform the consensus to reality in nearly all sectors of Nigeria’s economy.

    He said legislative intervention is critical to every initiative directed at making Nigeria an investment destination or ensuring stability in all parts and sectors of the federation. But Bamidele specifically recommended a forum where the executive and legislature would always meet to perfect institutional approaches to addressing  vicious challenges that threaten Nigeria.

     He further delineated the need for such regular sessions, an initiative comparable to quarterly executive-legislative parleys that successive governments in Lagos State have embraced since 1999 to tackle governance challenges through strategic collaboration and collective responses among arms of government. And the outcome, as far as Lagos is concerned, has been enviable. Can such an initiative work at the federal level? Bamidele did not specifically refer to the case of Lagos. But he suggested that such sessions should be held quarterly or biannually. Also, they should be tailored practically at discussing and perfecting coherent and logical responses to a myriad of socio-economic challenges that complicate the conditions of living and undermine the unity of Nigeria.

    On this account, Bamidele explained the imperative of holding regular executive-legislative sessions, which other speakers agreed, would open a new vista of strategic collaboration in the overall interest of Nigeria and her teeming populations. First, according to him, such sessions will give the National Assembly and Federal Executive Council to work out modalities of mainstreaming Tinubu’s eight-point agenda into the programmes of the National Assembly.

    Second, he believed, such sessions will speed up the process of developing and initiating innovative legislative frameworks that can aid delivery of enviable public services within a short period. Bamidele’s argument is pure and simple. He simply argued that actualising Tinubu’s eight-point agenda “entails the collective responsibilities between the two arms of government rather than unilateral roles of the executive.” 

    As the senate leader succinctly pointed out, this calls for strategic collaboration between ministers and chairmen of all standing committees in the Senate and House Committees. It also calls for legislators to have strategic sessions with the permanent secretaries and chief executives of key federal parastatals with a view to devising approaches to the implementation of the eight-point agenda in the national interest.

    He clearly mapped diverse challenges that currently beset Nigeria. From the food crisis to intractable insecurity, chronic inflation, Naira devaluation and political instability, Bamidele explained how the eight-point agenda painstakingly sought to address all these challenges. He also explained how legislative interventions “are critical to seamless actualisation of the eight-point agenda.”

    Bamidele suggested key areas where the executive and legislature should leverage strategic collaboration “to break the vicious cycle of economic doldrums and political contradictions that have been the woes of Nigeria.” The areas include the need to review the Land Use Act, 1979; strengthen the National Directorate of Employment; embrace true fiscal federalism; diversify the country’s economy and standardise social investments.

    Like other senators at the retreat, the senate president utterly agreed with Bamidele on the need to set a common forum for lawmakers and members of the Federal Executive Council, where they would discuss issues of strategic national interest and work out innovative legislative frameworks to those issues that threaten the country’s collective interests. It is time, according to him, to culture a strategic collaboration.

    Beyond creating an executive-legislative forum, Akpabio specifically explained the place of the Senate, indeed the entire National Assembly, in establishing “an environment that can guarantee investments and promote harmony among citizenry.” For him, this can only be achieved through enacting innovative legislation and carrying out oversight functions purely in the national interest.

    Akpabio was not the only functionary that shared this sentiment. Also, Speaker, House of Representatives, Hon. Abbas Tajudeen and  Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Barau Jibrin shared the same conviction. Collectively, they emphasised the need not just to betray the expectation of the people that voted them into offices, but also the hope of all Nigerians irrespective of their political leanings.

    Nearly all key speakers agreed to this collective aspiration, which they all argued, should be vigorously pursued in order to evolve a new nation. But Akpabio argued that such an aspiration would not be a mere mirage if the National Assembly fails to work with key functionaries in the Federal Executive Council with a view to mainstreaming Tinubu’s eight-point agenda into the legislative programmes.

    With the depth of engagement at the retreat, Edun concluded that a great future “is awaiting Nigeria, though her present challenges may be daunting.” Now that a new vista for strategic collaboration has been opened, Edun observed that both arms of government “are under obligation to work out collective responses to hydra-headed challenges that confront us as a people of common destiny.”

     Edun thus acknowledged the centrality of legislative interventions to the implementation of the eight-point agenda. For him, the agenda is well defined and will be wholeheartedly pursued in the overall interest of the people. However, the minister emphasised the role of the National Assembly in implementing the eight-point agenda, which was at the core of Bamidele’s proposal for strategic collaboration between the executive and legislature.  From food security to poverty eradication; growth, job creation; access to capital; inclusion; rule of law; and fighting corruption, Edun agreed that the time has come for both arms of government to synergise on how to methodically and systematically pursue the eight-point agenda in order to bring about desirable outcomes across all sectors. But does this quest for strategic collaborations suggest the erosion of legislative independence? Stakeholders at the retreat largely disagreed on its possibility of eroding the independence of the National Assembly. Collaboration between both arms, they all admitted, may not in any way turn the legislature to a willing tool in the hands of the executive. Rather, it offers a platform for mainstreaming campaign promises into legislative programmes in the interest of all Nigerians, whether the poor or the rich, the middle class or the vulnerable.

  • Insecurity: Forgiveness cardinal to sincere reconciliation, says Plateau CP

    Insecurity: Forgiveness cardinal to sincere reconciliation, says Plateau CP

    The Plateau State Commissioner of Police, CP Okoro Julius Alawari, has charged stakeholders in the state to imbibe the culture of true and sincere forgiveness, which he said, is cardinal to genuine reconciliation.

    CP Alawari said it was time to chart a new course of finding a lasting solution to the problems confronting Plateau and do away with blaming one another.

    The Police commissioner gave the words of admonition when he hosted an emergency stakeholders meeting on a wave of security concerns held at the Police Officers’ Mess Jos.

    In his address to the stakeholders, the CP said there must be a continuation of a series of meetings that is going on between the Fulani and other members of the community to de-escalate any tendency tantamount to peaceful coexistence.

    “When you go back to your communities, the elders should constantly hold meetings with their youths, because these are people that are going out rustling cows; they are the people that are going out to organise reprisal attacks.

    “The youths are blaming the elders while the elders are blaming the youths. You must begin with reconciliation between the elders and the youths; then gather them and talk to them as elders and fathers, so that we can find a lasting peace.

    Read Also: Insecurity and the plight of kidnap victims (2)

    “If we talk to our youths with sincerity of purpose, the issues of cattle rustling, underage grazing, night grazing and reprisal attacks would stop.”

    The CP advocated the need for constant synergy and communication between the security agencies and the traditional rulers for prompt action in times of eventuality.

    Brig-Gen. G. G. Shipi, special adviser to the governor of Plateau on Security explained that the government is very passionate about peace returning to the state.

    He said the government under the Barr. Caleb Mutfwang led-administration has set machinery in motion, and is ready to implement solutions that would bring about lasting peace and harmonious coexistence in the state.

    Plateau CAN chairman, Rev. Father Polycarp Lubo noted that the meeting was timely, as he commended security personnel and Plateau government for taken proactive measures in addressing insecurity in Mangu and other parts of the state

     “We must learn how to forgive one another; if not, the reprisal attack would continue,” he said.

  • Insecurity and the plight of kidnap victims (2)

    Insecurity and the plight of kidnap victims (2)

    Perceived callousness in society comes, chiefly, from the responses of the government to public issues as they affect individuals and the collective. As a country and society, we are perhaps the most cold-hearted people on the surface of the earth. Here, a man who fed his children last night and … could still afford something substantial as zakat, that’s our definition of generosity. An armed robber who is lucky to escape unhurt is the one society worships. In our fated clime, if you don’t have money, you are in trouble. In the eye of the nouveau riche, why must you not even have money? Times and things have now gone so bad that those who lived under Ibrahim Babangida would think that Sani Abacha was complete evil, whereas those who lived under Muhammadu Buhari would also think as if this sad and sympathetic country had a better yesterday. Taking the most optimistic view, Abacha’s approach would have been one of ‘live-and-let-live’.

    In 1980, Ogunpa flooding happened to Ibadan. No doubt about it: it was a terrible tragedy, with millions of naira worth of goods either destroyed and/or carted away. Lives in their preciousness were also lost. Not unexpectedly, the government’s response was swift, but only in terms of jingles and advertorials, not that foodstuffs and/or clothing were given to the people. In specific terms, there were no physical interventions as in what could truly touch the people. Instead, eloquent words – that the government would see to the sufferings of the people – were in excess of expectations. The late Bola Ige, who was the governor of the old Oyo State at the time, was on hand to mitigate the perceived energy of the enemy, notably Adisa Akinloye and Richard Akinjide, who were not only indigenes of the ancient city but also rubbing and defending the ego of Shehu Shagari, the then president of Nigeria. To the victims, nothing came; unfortunately, so!

    Read Also: FG raises N652bn from Sukuk bond

    Somewhere along the line, something important happened, but not in the public glare. The Federal Government intervened with N30 million, and the money was shared. Friends and colleagues watched as government officials of specific calibre started building monstrous houses and buying exotic cars; and they were careless with their mouths. Though the victims documented what Ogunpa took away from them, it was just an exercise in futility. When money came, which took several months due to the shape and size of Nigeria’s bureaucratic slip-ups, the people had moved on, obviously without any assistance from anybody. But their children in the civil service saw what happened and news went round. As at that time, Ige was no longer in government. People saw all those anomalies but there was no way they could push their aggression beyond bottling up the resentment they had for the government and government policies; and it was freely discussed among the people. Again, that’s where it ended. After all, there’s no sympathy for government money, more so as it belongs to no one. Sad therefore that the handlers of Nigeria’s affairs have consistently shown sufficient callousness to the extent that nobody pities them again. Sadder that that policy has been responsible for the depravity in the system, which makes nobody care. The saddest part of it is that it subsists till date, because nobody has attempted to address it.

    Look at the parents of the Chibok girls, Leah Sharibu and many others who are still languishing in the terrorists’ enclave. Talking seriously, that’s sufficient enough to take their faith away from them because, if one has a God who cannot actually save one while one is here, it is useless believing in the afterlife. If one calls on God while one is on earth, and, indeed, He hears but cannot save one, then it is as if one doesn’t have a Saviour in the first place! With this sad expression staring us in the face, isn’t it time our religious leaders called on God again – if, truly, they know how to call on Him – to come down and rescue those who trust in Him? Isn’t it time we beheld His real power, because, for those who truly believe in Him, at no time is His power limited?

    The pathetic truth is that those who are leading us on the religious path in Nigeria are unperturbed even as dear fatherland has turned into a fount of uncertainties, a cocktail of misfortunes, a terrible economy and a nation divided. Pastor Adejare Adeboye is fine; Pastor Folorunso Kumuyi is fantastic while Bishop David Oyedepo keeps acquiring jets as if he’s buying motorcycles. Remember former President Buhari also rode to Aso Rock on the promise of recovering the Chibok girls. PMB has done his 8 years and gone back to Daura, leaving behind policy summersault, unmet promises, unsettled obligations and, most importantly, the girls at the mercy of Boko Haram and ISWAP terrorists. As things stand, nobody remembers poor Leah who is wasting away in the forest for knowing the God she served or her parents who continue to walk the path of their fate. Still, our spiritual fathers continue to use this same God to make money; and it is as if being a Nigerian is a crime. And we ask: isn’t ours a terrible tragedy?

    For heaven’s sake, how did we get to this pass?

    • Concluded.

  • ‘Muster political will to end insecurity’

    ‘Muster political will to end insecurity’

    The Reformed Presbyterian Church of Nigeria (RPCN) has urged the Federal Government to muster political will and courage to end insecurity.

    This was contained in a 10-point communiqué issued by the church at the end of its 4th General Assembly on October 8, at the All Saints RPCN Parish, Uburu, Ohaozara Local Government of Ebonyi State.

    It was signed by the Moderator-General, Rt. Rev. Chima Uduma and Secretary-General, The Rev. Cornelius Eke.

    The church said: “The Federal Government should muster the political will and courage to end once and for all, the lingering state of insecurity in the nation, which has continued to manifest in a spate of kidnapping, armed banditry, cultism, armed robbery, marauding of  gunmen and menace of ethnic separatists.”

    The church through the communiqué appealed to the Federal Government to hasten action on the release of the Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) vehicles promised by the President Bola Ahmed Tinubu administration for intra-and inter-state transport, to ease transport difficulties of the masses occasioned by the fuel subsidy removal.

    On the 2023 election tribunals and appeal tribunals, the communiqué expressed the need for the judges at all levels to be unbiased and deliver just judgments “in order to forestall miscarriage of justice, bearing in mind that God is a just God that judges all men according to how they judge others.”

    Read Also: FG looking into gas exploration, solid minerals

    The church congratulated the Federal and Ebonyi state governments on their 63rd and 27th anniversaries.

    It hailed Governor Francis Nwifuru for approving and releasing funds for the payment of gratuity arrears.

    The church also praised the governor for recruiting doctors, paramedical officers and civil servants to ease unemployment and improve people’s well-being.

    “The recruitment should follow due process in order not to truncate the good intentions of the government,” it said.

    The next General Assembly holds in August 2025, to be hosted by the Ohaozara Synod of the church.

  • LP candidate cries out over insecurity in Okigwe

    LP candidate cries out over insecurity in Okigwe

    Imo State Labour Party governorship candidate Senator Athan Achonu has cried out to President  Bola Ahmed  Tinubu over the state of  insecurity  in Okigwe Local Government Area.

    He also pleaded with the President to call Governor Hope Uzodimma to order over the ceaseless spate of violence in the state.

    Achonu said the development which has claimed many lives and properties could have been averted if the state government  had been serious and sincere in its promise to provide security for the people.

    Achonu stated this yesterday while reacting to the increasing security challenges in the state. He advised all residents  to hold the state government responsible for their predicament.

    He also pleaded with President Tinubu to quickly set up a panel of inquiry to unravel the recent killings and bombing of many villages in the Imo North senatorial district where many people including soldiers were killed.

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    He lamented that Izombe and Oguta had become no-go areas as a result of insecurity stating that the unhealthy trend if left unchecked might provoke apathy in the forthcoming guber poll.

    “The governor is threatening the people with bombings in the 21st Century with a warning that if they do not move, he would bomb them and the press should go and investigate this to save this country which is now in a mess”.

    “It is with so much grief and sadness that I address the nation today, on the ongoing multiple bombardments happening in the Okigwe zone, which has led to the destruction of lives, properties and livelihood.

    “As I address you now, so many families are left homeless, scores dead and many missing and yet to be accounted for. It grieves my heart, that these dastardly acts are being directed at defenceless citizens.

    “I want to call on Mr. President once again, to set up a high-powered investigative panel to unravel the perpetrators behind the wanton killings and destruction of properties currently going on in Imo State, and more so, to use this office to call the Imo

    The Media Adviser to Governor  Uzodimma,  Chief Oguwike Nwachuku chided Achonu, who he said was the only person not interested in peace returning to Okigwe.

    He said: “Achonu is synonymous with alarm raising. The situation with him now is so bad that he raises the alarm when women give birth naturally. He seems to be the only person not interested in peace returning to Okigwe so that the good, peaceful and hardworking people of the zone can live their lives normally again and free from the grip of bandits.

  • Develop workable solutions to solve insecurity, Defence minister tells military

    Develop workable solutions to solve insecurity, Defence minister tells military

    The Minister of Defence, Mohammed Badaru, has urged participants at the Army War College Course to develop the right set of skills and knowledgeable solutions that could help in solving the present security challenges.

    He said  the War Course was a critical learning curve in the military career adding that the knowledge acquired on the course would determine how well the officers will contribute to the ongoing and future operations.

    Badaru made the call during the graduation ceremony of Army War College course 7/2023 in Abuja, on Saturday, October 7.

    The minister said the strategic leadership requires an understanding of the intricacies of the environment.

    “It also requires the ability to craft and communicate a vision as well as a selfless commitment to your mission and the people you lead,”  said.

    Read Also: Insecurity: Crackdown as army begins exercises in Southwest, Southeast, others

    According to him, the course requires that one demonstrates both competence and character in every action one takes and on the development as well as mentorship of the next generation of young leaders.

    He hailed the commitment, loyalty, doggedness and long-standing service of the troops deployed across the country, adding that their unparalleled determination has brought peace and security across the country.

    Badaru thanked the President Bola Tinubu for his unflinching support to the Armed Forces of Nigeria pledging that the Federal Government is committed to support them to develop the right set of skills and knowledge to tackle security threats.

    In his welcome address,  the Commandant of the Army War College Nigeria, Maj. Gen IB Maina, said the mission of the college is to produce well-trained, educated and inspired operational-level leaders for the Nigerian Army.

    He said 73 participants drawn from the Armed Forces and other security agencies went through rigorous training with ability to provide answers to problems at operational levels.