Tag: Kabiru Garba Marafa

  • Air Force bombs bandits

    Eight fighter jets have been deployed in Zamfara State to chase out bandits who have seized the state by the throat, The Nation learnt on Wednesday.

    In fact, a primary school that served as a base for the bandits has been “shelled” by the Air Force, according to a source who pleaded not to be named because of the “security implication” of being identified.

    The news came as senators took turns to lament the security situation, with some calling for state police to stem the tide of violence.

    The source also hinted of the measures taken to restore peace in Zamfara and Kaduna states.

    The source said: “The roads linking Katsina to Zamfara State (Kauran Namoda-Zurmi-Jibiya road) has been retaken by troops and motorists have been plying the route again. The military and the police are after the bandits who have been fleeing into the bush.

    “A landing platform has been created in Birni-Gwari where military jets can land, refuel and takeoff. So, they don’t have to go to Abuja and Kaduna to refuel for operations. Eight fighter jets have also been deployed in Zamfara State.”

    President Muhammadu Buhari will today chair an “extra-ordinary” security meeting at the State House, Abuja, where he will be briefed by Service chiefs on the worrisome security situation in the land.

    Expected at the meeting are Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) General Abayomi Gabriel Olonisakin; Chief of Army Staff (COAS) Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai; Chief of Air Staff (CAS) Air Marshal Sadique Abubakar; Chief of Naval Staff (CNS) Rear Admiral Ibok Ekwe Ibas and Acting Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Mohammed Adamu.

    Also billed to attent the meeting are Defence Minister Brig.-Gen Mansur Dan-Ali; National Security Adviser (NSA) Maj.-Gen. Babagana Mongunu and Department of State Services (DSS) Director-General Yusuf Bichi.

    A Presidency source, who confirmed the meeting, said the security Chiefs will take turns to brief the President who just returned from a trip from Jordan and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

    Read Also: Air Force kills Boko Haram leaders, others

    Comments on insecurity dominated proceedings, with senators taking turns to paint harrowing pictures of near breakdown of law and order in their constituencies.

    No senator wanted to be left out of the debate of what they described as the general insecurity in the country.

    They suggested “immediate and uncommon” measures to prevent the country from slipping into a failed state.

    The outpouring of indignation followed a motion by Senator Kabiru Garba Marafa on the need to create an intervention fund in the 2019 appropriation to cater for the deteriorating humanitarian crisis resulting from the activities of armed bandits in Zamfara State.

    Marafa, in his lead debate, said he was aware of the recent protest staged in Abuja, other states and indeed by Nigerians in the Diaspora as a reaction to the deteriorating state of insecurity in Zamfara State.

    The Zamfara Central senator praised the protesters for their support and stressed “the need to sustain such sense of solidarity, as it has the potential of compelling those in authority to do the needful”.

    He lamented that the activities of armed bandits, cattle rustlers and kidnappers remained unabated.

    The senator noted that many people had died since 2011, besides the humanitarian crises which include but not limited to growing number of widows, rape victims and orphans.”

    According to him, “a conservative estimate of 11,000 male adult have been killed by bandits, leaving behind an average of 22,000 widows (at two wives/person) and an estimated 44,000 orphans (at an average of four children/deceased)”.

    Marafa said that in terms of casualty ratio and displacements, Zamfara State has more security issues than many states in the Northeast and Northcentral that were being given prominence by the mainstream media and the Federal Government in terms of recognition and assistance.

    Marafa added that owing to cultural and religious consideration, the burden of the widows, orphans, rape victims and displaced persons was being borne largely by close relatives, extended families and sometimes immediate neighbors who can no longer cope.

    The killings, he said, have brought untold hardship to several other families who have to accommodate displaced persons and families, overstretching accommodation, food, clothing and other sundry.

    He urged the National Assembly to provide for N10 billion in the 2019 Appropriation as Intervention Funds to cater for displaced persons and others affected by the activities of armed bandits in the Northwest state.

    Marafa prayed the Senate to urge the Federal Government to set up an Ad-hoc Committee to be known as Presidential Initiatives on Zamfara State (PIZAMS), with a 10-year lifespan to manage the said funds and subsequent allocation/donations.

    He noted that over 70 per cent of the people were no longer sleeping in their homes for fear of being kidnapped.

    The senator relived how his sister was murdered by bandits in her matrimonial home.

    Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu said the Senate should join Nigerians and the media to show concern about Zamfara State.

    To Ekweremadu, the time has come for a state of emergency in the state, not to remove the  governor but to initiate extreme measures to stabilize the state.

    The Enugu West senator also said that the country should no longer shy away from introducing state police.

    According to him, state police will go a long way to nip in the bud most of the security challenges in states.

    Senate Leader Ahmad Lawan, who also supported the motion, insisted that the Senate should be practical in its approach to security issues because Nigerians were losing their lives.

    He recalled that the Federal Government recently banned mining in Zamfara State to prevent criminals from using mining to perpetrate crime.

    Lawan, who said that no amount is too much to save the lives of Nigerians, noted: “This is one motion that we can spend weeks to consider because it deals with why government exists.

    He suggested that relevant committees should engage security agencies to put the Senate in better position to appreciate what is going on.

    Senator Emmanuel Bwacha (Taraba South), who had earlier raised the issue of insecurity in his constituency, cautioned against living a pretentious life.

    He lamented that “never in the history of this country have we faced this level of insecurity”.

    Bwacha insisted that something uncommon must be done to save the situation.

    He said: “Before the elections, some people were grandstanding. Now that the elections are over, can we now do the right thing? There is no doubt, everything seems not to be working; we must do something urgently.”

    Senator Emmanuel Paulker said that the number of people killed in Zamfara State was more than the number of people killed by Boko Haram in Borno State.

    Senator Shehu Sani said that the killings in Zamfara State had gone beyond the state to other neighbouring states.

    Insisting that the Senate must agree that the country is at war, the Kaduna Central senator said that the reports from Zamfara were worse than the reports from Somalia and Afghanistan.

    Sani recalled how he escaped being kidnapped on his way to Kaduna State, warning that what is going on in the country are symptoms of a failed state.

    Senate Chief Whip Olusola Adeyeye identified the 1999 Constitution as the country’s problems.

    The 1999 Constitution, he said, cannot give the country peace, progress and unity.

    All the prayers in the motion were unanimously adopted.

    Senate President Bukola Saraki said: “From the contributions we have had, I think it is key that we begin to look at the problem and look for long-term solutions. I think that what we did yesterday (Tuesday) in trying to strengthen the funding of the police and what we have before us, the Police Reform Bill, which would be laid today. The sooner that we can pass that will also help us in addressing the insecurity challenges.

    “But more importantly is that we must go back to what a lot of us had been advocating here, that there is need for us to have state or community police. It is the way forward. Otherwise, we will continue to run into these problems. In the area of oversight, there is a lot also that we need to do to ensure that we hold the security agencies accountable. And we need to move very fast in this area.”

  • Senator loses sister to bandits in Zamfara

    Elder sister of Senator, Kabiru Garba Marafa, Hajia Ade Marafa has been reported killed by suspected bandits in Gusau local government area of Zamfara state.

    The bandits were also said to have abducted Ade’s husband, Alhaji Ibrahim and his brother.

    The armed bandits were said to have stormed their residence in Ruwan Bore area of Gusau local government area at the early hours of Tuesday.

    Read Also: Buhari shifts Zamfara campaign rally

    The marauders, said to be bearing dangerous weapons including guns, were reported to have operated at the residence and in the whole village for hours from between 3.am to early hours of Tuesday.

    It is said that Alhaji Ibrahim has not been released as at the time this statement was issued.

    Marafa’s Personal Assistant, Abubakar Abdullahi Tsafe, in a statement said the senator’s sister has been buried in accordance with Islamic injunction.

    It would be recalled that Marafa who represents Zamfara central senatorial district, had on several occasions, expressed reservations over the lackadaisical attitude of the state government in tackling the menace of banditry, bedeviling the state.

  • Marafa attacks Yari over Oshiomhole ‘must go protest’

    Chairman of the Senate Committee on Petroleum (Downstream), Senator Kabiru Garba Marafa on Thursday faulted the protest in Gusau, Zamfara State capital, calling for the sack of the national chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC), Comrade Adams Oshiomhole.

    Marafa who is front lie governorship contender in Zamfara State said that a number of sponsored protesters stormed Gusau, the state capital on Thursday calling for the immediate removal of Oshiomhole over his respect for the rule of law in the conduct of party primaries.

    The Zamfara Central senator in a statement he issued in Abuja, noted the protesters were “mobilised by the State Governor, Abdulaziz Yari following his inability to bend rules to impose candidates who are his cronies on the party in the state.”

    The ranking Senator who is also as” leading governorship aspirant of the APC in Zamfara State,” said that Yari should be the one to be sacked and not Oshiomhole.”

    He described the APC national chairman as “a law abiding leader.”

    Marafa said, “Yari and his co- travelers are wrong and Comrade Oshiomhole is right as far as the issues in the party are concerned.”

    The senator who recalled the genesis of the party crisis in Zamfara, insisted that “primaries were not conducted in Zamfara State and there was no consensus either!”

    He said, “There was a court order that says all parties should not take any step that will render useless the litigation  before it. The party under the able leadership of Comrade Adams Oshiomhole respected the order and said all parties in the crisis should hands off.  The party and it leadership should be commended for respecting the law, a foundation upon which APC was built.

    Read Also: No cause for alarm, says Oshiomhole

    “Two, when the committee of the NWC came to conduct the primary in Zamfara,  violent orchestrated by Yari’s people erupted. The committee was forced to cancel  the election. This is also a valid thing. The position taken by the Governor that primaries should be conducted by the executives in his camp was irresponsible, contemptuous and height of lawlessness.

    “The crux of the matter is that there was no election and there was no consensus in Zamfara. So, we are commending Comrade Oshiomhole and INEC for respecting the court order.”

    Marafa said the millions of Naira spent by Yari to allegedly organize the protest should have been channelled towards securing the release of 17 persons including two young girls kidnapped in Dauran, Jangebe, Magami and other locations in the state.

    ” The money spent on the protest should have been used to assist the security agencies in the state to rescue the abducted  persons. The Governor has stopped  assisting security agencies  with fund in the state in the last five months,” he said.

    Marafa assured that majority of APC family members in Zamfara are solidly behind Oshiomhole and the leadership of the party.

  • 2019: Marafa declares for Zamfara governorship race

    The senator representing Zamfara Central Senatorial District, Kabiru Garba Marafa has joined the governorship race for the Zamfara Government House.

    Marafa who is also chairman, Senate Committee on Petroleum (Downstream), is said to have declared his intention to vie for the governorship race when the newly elected executive of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the state paid him a sallah visit at his Yandoton-daji residence in Tsafe local government area of the state.

    The ranking lawmaker in a statement said he would officially declare his intention to contest for the governorship race in an occasion to be held in Gusau, the Zamfara State capital where all the stakeholders in the state would attend.

    Read Also: Tambuwal seeks lasting peace in Zamfara

    He told the party executives that following the numerous calls across the 14 local government areas of the state, he has decided to join the governorship race. 

    If elected, Marafa (58) said he would fight corruption, injustice and provide the much needed leadership to stimulate the growth and development of the state.

    While commending the state Governor Abdul Aziz Yari for admitting his failure to provide the needed leadership to tackle the security challenges facing the state, he said he would use all the resources at his disposal to combat the banditry in the state, if elected.

    “If we provide security, our people will return to their homes and farmlands to do what they know best, farming. If given the needed support, we in Zamfara can feed the country with the enormous resources Allah has blessed us with,” he said.

    He also pledged to look at the state legal system to make it conform with the true teachings of Islam for the benefit of all.