Tag: Kaduna

  • 10 killed in Kaduna post-Christmas celebration

    Gunmen on Saturday night killed 10 persons at a post-Christmas celebration in Kaduna State, it was learnt yesterday.

    A resident, Pastor Mike Maikarfi, told our reporter that the gunmen attacked the residents of Tattaura village in Sanga Local Government Area and ran away.

    The attackers also reportedly injured four persons.

    The injured were taken to a hospital in Akwanga, Nasarawa State, which is closer than Kafanchan in Kaduna State.

    Maikarfi said: “Tattaura community was attacked yesterday night (Saturday), leaving 10 people dead and four others severely injured. The attack took place at 10.12pm while Christmas celebration was going on in the community.

    “Tattaura is a community in Ancha District of Ninzo Chiefdom. The village is two kilometres East of Gwantu, the local government’s headquarters.  The attack took place in a shop where some men were relaxing.

    “Tattaura celebrated their Christmas yesterday night (Saturday) with dances by youths, children and adults.”

    The eyewitness said those killed are: Joel Ambo, Yakubu Ambi, Yamu Idzi, Anche Ishaku, Misalai Ngbo, Ishaya Anche, Monday Samson, Joel Anzah, Jonathan Anche and a young man, popularly called P–Square.

    At the time of filing this report last night, arrangements to hold a mass burial for the deceased was said to be on.

    Sympathisers and relations were seen trooping to the village over the attack.

    The Kaduna State Police Command and Kaduna State Government had not reacted to the attacks at the time of filing this report.

    Police spokesman, Aminu Lawan, a Superintendent (S), could not be reached for comment.

    Several calls to his mobile did not go through.

  • Anguish and death

    Anguish and death

    RIDO VILLAGE.  For those who have never visited this sleepy community in Chikun Local Government Area of Kaduna State, the village by reputation should be a paradise where the inhabitants live their lives in peace and pleasure. It is easy to visualise the wide roads, magnificent houses, good health infrastructure and like many other oil-bearing communities in the Niger Delta, a 24- hour electricity supply from the oil companies.

    It should be in a vintage position and those who dream of the village as an Eldorado could be forgiven.  In the whole of Northern Nigerian, it is the only ‘oil-bearing’ community; for 34 years, it has played host to the Kaduna Refining and Petro-Chemical Company Limited (KRPC), a subsidiary of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

    But in Rido, things are not always what they seem. It is not in Niger Delta, but all the trappings of oil pollution, gas flaring and the attendant health problems are common. It could be described as the oil community in the midst of the Sahara. The village is locked in a fierce battle with the oil company and some of its contractors over alleged indiscriminate dumping of waste products from the refinery.

    In early December, harmattan had descended on the village leaving the streets dry and dusty.  All over the community, a hail of dust had settled on the mud houses and every other living thing including domestic animals. As one moved through the very dusty and uneven Rido roads, a sad and depressing atmosphere was visible. The air was chocking and many of the people went around with long faces. Poverty was evident on almost every structure, animal and human in the village.

    The KRPC was designed to refine crude oil and also produce a wide variety of petroleum products some of which are used as Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG), Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), Automotive Gas Oil (AGO) or Diesel oil, Kerosene, Fuel Oil and Sulphur, according to the NNPC website.

    The KRPC also has one of the largest lubricating oil complexes in Africa and some of its products include: Base Oils, Asphalt (Bitumen) and Waxes. The KRPC was initially designed to produce 60,000 Barrels Per Stream Day (BPSD) but was upgraded in 1986 to 110 BPSD.

    The refinery itself was a product of the need to satisfy the northern market’s demand for petroleum products which the government thought would be more cost effective than transporting refined oil from Warri by road or rail. The refinery thus served the whole of the northern region with refined petroleum and petro-chemical products.

    The refinery, built by Japanese company, Chiyoda Chemical Engineering and Construction Company, occupies 2.89 square kilometers. It is a well laid out plant with different sections clearly laid out. A high, long wall separates the oil-rich Rido from the poor Rido and stretches several kilometers. The road that passes through the refinery is long and smooth and  the plant is adjoined by beautiful gardens and posh lawns. There are flowers by its walls and gates and several signposts urge visitors to “help keep our lawns beautiful.”

    The KRPC has made tremendous progress in 34 years; business has expanded and profits soared. Like other refineries in Nigeria, the KRPC has constantly flared its gas. According to the locals, the fury of the flames could be felt in all of Rido irrespective of the time of the day. But the prosperity witnessed by the refinery is one sided; the green lawns and beautiful gates, well tarred roads and well oiled executives all ended by the gates of the refinery. The rest is hell and this is where the 40,000 inhabitants of Rido village live.

    A community and the oil company

    On Sunday, December 14, 2014 around 3pm, a huge protest was underway in Rido community. It involved men, women, children, invalid, the cripple and the aged. About 1000 members of the village gathered in the village square. It is a small space in-between four rectangle shaped houses. There is no finesse about this square as it consists of only dust and sand.  The protesters displayed several banners calling for justice for the long suffering people of the community. Others spoke about environmental justice for the villagers, while a banner reads: “What is good in the South is good in the North, Environmental Justice for the Dead Children and Poisoned People of Rido.”

    Mariam Shuaibu was very prominent in the protest. She is a short, middle age woman with broken teeth and tough look.  Shuaibu is no ordinary woman; she is the women leader of Rido community and one of its most outspoken activists. The women and men alike look to her and her never ending energy and commitment to the cause of Rido.

    Shuaibu could reel off all the things that were wrong with Rido on the tip of her fingers. “We have disability in this village; many of our children are disabled and some of them have speech defect. We have lost some children in this community and it has affected our husband’s sexual performance as they cannot satisfy us sexually because of the gas flare that we are exposed to.” For this litany of woes, there is only one direction the blame would go: The KRPC.

    About 1000 members of the community agreed with Shuaibu. According to them, the village has endured 34 years of consistent gas flaring, which has left the community paralysed, a number of its indigenes dead and several more disabled.

    There are more accusations against the company; the residents say since the refinery was established, only eight indigenes have been employed. In August 2014, Shuaibu wrote to the KRPC asking that the youth be employed. “Since the company was commissioned in 1980, only eight people from the area had been mandated to be working as staff and we now have excessive unemployed youths roaming about the street looking for daily food upon all the smoke we are inhaling from the plant of the company which harm us always,” she wrote.

    Shuaibu did not get the dignity of a response. “Anybody you see in the refinery from this community working there is a cleaner, earning between N5,000 and N10,000 per month,” a resident said.

    But more worrisome is the state of the community, there is no tarred road and the presence of the government is lacking. The residents say when it rains, about 70 percent of the roads become impassable. The KRPC dug one borehole which at the time of the visit has been abandoned; some residents alleged that the water from the borehole was contaminated. The hospital in the village was built with Debt Relief Gains of the Federal Government, while the KRPC built one school block for the community.

    The villagers are simple farmers and their market attested to it. Farmers brought simple vegetables and pepper to the market for sale in the evenings, while itinerant food sellers occupy almost every available space on the dirt floors. The biggest commodity in Rido is not the oil but food.

    Toxic waste: two years of open sore

    There are many questions begging for answers about toxic waste from the KRPC dumped on the community allegedly by a contractor around June 2012. Is it true that the waste dumped inside Rido community was toxic? Could the waste have been responsible for the death of about 1000 birds in Biams Takai Farms and could it have been the cause of the strange illness which afflicted children and adult about the same time?

    More importantly, could the waste have been the cause of the violent death of at least five children in the village, who died some weeks after the dumping of the waste, following severe illness, which involves abdominal pain, vomiting and body weakness?

    The answer to this puzzle is dependent on the persons one is asking as the village is polarised between the supporters of the KRPC and the villagers. Most of the villagers are on one side, while the village head, Sirkin Rido, Hamisu Haruna, and some of his chiefs are reportedly on the side of the oil company.

    The Nation’s investigations began where the whole problem started on Dokaje Street, where the waste was dumped. Nothing remained of the waste now but dry and irritating grass. But about 500 meters away are the remains of Biams Farms, which reportedly recorded massive financial losses. Some of the structures had collapsed, while the chicken pen had less than 10 birds remaining.

    But the farm had not always been like this, according to a farm worker, who declined to give his name. There were cows and over 3,000 birds, eggs were plentiful and profit soared until the fateful day when contractors from KRPC dumped alleged a fatal waste on the farm.

    According to a letter of complaint written by the farm to KRPC on July 4, 2012 and signed by one Mrs. Maimuna Isa, which was obtained by The Nation, the waste was allegedly dumped between June 10 and 14, 2012, the farm began recording high mortality of its birds from June 10 and peaked on June 14 when more than 500 birds died within three hours. The farm believes the death is a direct result of the waste from the KRPC.

    The letter read:  “We wish to state categorically that being bird handlers for over 10 years, this phenomenon (bird mortality) is not unconnected with the dumped harmful waste. The proximity of the farm to the dump site and action of the wind helped to disperse the harmful powdery substance into the farm and environs.”

    The Nation traced the Farm Manager, Folorunso Ganiyu, who was a witness to the incident and who said he performed a post-mortem on the dead birds to ascertain the cause of death. “When the mortality began, we were losing between five and 10 birds a day. I started using some drugs and did a post-mortem on the dead birds. I opened the viscera and knew they inhaled some obnoxious gas because if it is a mere respiratory problem, it shouldn’t cause death.  We also called our doctor who did a post-mortem and discovered blood in the lungs of the birds. The wind brought some substances from the waste and they settled on our feed, contaminating them and poisoning our birds. The smell is like tear gas.”

    Ganiyu said the farm recorded massive losses and is back to square one. “We lost over 1,000 birds; those that survived became weak and egg production dropped and they too began to die. The post-mortem showed they had liver problem; we had to dispose of the birds to protect the other farms. We spent millions to raise those birds and we didn’t make any thing on them, now we are back to square one,” he lamented.

    But it is not only Biams Farms that recorded losses allegedly associated with the waste dump, many people in the village did too. To 59-year-old Abdulahi Adamu, who is crippled in both legs, the deaths witnessed in the village is a direct consequence of the toxic waste.  “Anyone in this village knows we are in a critical condition because of the toxic waste that was dumped on this village. If you go to the Niger Delta, you will see good roads and schools and hospitals, but here, it is not the same and the waste has killed some of our people,” he said.

    Alhaji Saidu Liman told The Nation that he lost three children to the toxic waste; the old man looked wasted and tired. He also said he lost 10 cows, seven goats and some of his surviving children had various health problems.

    The residents are not happy with some leaders who are alleged to have been compromised and allegedly being used to thwart every effort made to get redress from both KRPC and Chembache investments. One of the aggrieved residents is the woman leader, who is extremely bitter about the alleged ignoble role, allegedly played by a particular leader.

    Another spokesperson, Abdulrazeez Lawal Gwarjo, also insisted that the waste was responsible for the deaths and destruction unleashed upon the village. He took The Nation to some of the victims who lost animals or children; there are many also who were sick.

    Hassana Godwin said she fell sick as a result of the waste dump, but more serious is that her brother lost his son in the consequence of the incident. She was bitter against the said leader, accusing him of denying the fact of the boy’s death.

    “My brother lost his son called Monday during the waste dump; we went to him (leader) but he denied that the boy was dead. All of us got sick, we are suffering here,” she said. Gloria Joseph who originally came from Akwa Ibiom but has lived in the village for 20 years said: “Please, help us; we are suffering. I almost lost my son during that time. The children just got weak, the vomit was horrible and they lost lots of body fluid. All of us were in the hospital; please help us,” she said.

    The dumping of the waste in Rido has assumed a gigantic proportion in the lives of the villagers. The incident has also been given the name, Bola, which is used to describe the dumping of the waste. “The waste caused many problems in this community; many people suffered because there was firewood inside. The women picked these and used in cooking; the smoke they inhaled caused them to vomit and their stomach ached,” Harrisu Habibu, the youth leader of Rido, said.

    Habibu also said the community went to complain to the KRPC but got no response; he said even two years after the disaster, the oil company is yet to compensate the community. There is so much bitterness against the embattled leader; it was gathered that he rarely sleeps in the community and not easily accessible. The following day after The Nation first interviewed the residents, it was gathered that the leader held a meeting with some people. According to sources close to the meeting, the leader complained about The Nation’s visit and decried the actions of some youths in the village who spoke to us.

    When our reporter requested for an interview, the leader said he was in a meeting and could not respond. His voice sounded cold and harsh. Many text messages sent to him went unanswered as well. When it was gathered that he was in Rido, The Nation returned to the village to wait for him in his residence. After a long wait, The Nation was calmly informed that he had gone to work and the time of his return unsure.

    Several phone calls later, the leader finally declined an interview, directing The Nation to go through the proper channel which he did not specify.  But from media interviews he granted after the incident, he denied any knowledge of death in his village and aligned himself with the KRPC that the waste was non-toxic.

    Deadly toys

    The toxic waste, which allegedly caused death and destruction, may have had a limited effect if the villagers had understood the toxic nature of the waste. It was gathered that when the waste was dumped, children went to forage on it looking for toys to play with. Many of those who did fell sick. The women were not left behind as they also went in search of firewood, which they used in preparing the evening meal. The smoke generated from this caused much upset in the village.

    The animals were not left behind; dogs went in search of food on the dumpsite and, according to the villagers, many of them died from eating from the dumpsite.  Reports of the strange happening soon reached Kaduna and several agencies of government were deployed to investigate the matter.

    On June 19, 2012, the KRPC invited the Kaduna State Environmental Protection Authority (KEPA) to sample the alleged waste. Even though KEPA officials declined to speak to The Nation, the report of the investigation dated July 10, 2012, was, however, obtained from sources. From the sample collected by KEPA, most of the chemicals were found to be “within acceptable limit.” Therefore, in the final analysis of KEPA, “The confirmatory test shows that results obtained are within acceptable limits, therefore, the refuse dumped is not harmful to the environment and public health.” The report was signed by one Lawal M. Usman, Director Laboratory Services.

    But there are curious observations in the report. Some sections of the chemicals were marked “not determined,” which could be due to lack or faulty equipment to perform the test. For example, tests on Phenols, Hydrocarbon (IR method), Arsenic (mg/I), Cyanide (mg/I), Total Chromium, Selenium, mercury, oil and grease content and Taste were all not determined.

    The National Environmental Standard and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA) officials went to Rido on June 29 after the waste had been evacuated by KRPC amidst tight security and took soil samples of the site. The result also came back that the samples were not toxic.

    The Federal Ministry of Environment also released a report on the waste, dated February 13, 2013 and signed by Mrs. O. O. Babade, Director Pollution Control and Environmental Health. The report concluded: “A careful harmonisation of our findings with the report of KEPA and NESREA makes it difficult to link the alleged loss of poultry and human lives as reported, confirmed the waste not toxic to the alleged waste dumped at the affected sites.”

    The Kaduna State House of Assembly also mandated its Committee on Environment on July 10, 2012 to investigate the matter. In a report submitted to the House by Hon.  Haruna Inuwa, the committee said it held meetings with members of Rido community, Ministry of Environment, KRPC and Chikun local government and concluded that: The contractor, Chembache Investment, was mandated to dump the refuse at KEPA approved site at Kakau along Kaduna-Abuja Highway; that the contractor breached the terms of agreement with KPRC and KEPA law number 7 of 2012, Section 27 (2).

    The House also said Biams Farms did not present any evidence to support its claims and  the death of Monday Madaki Liberty  was not supported by medical evidence. The Sirkin Rido also did not have any knowledge of any death in his domain. The House also wants KRPC to ensure the supervision and monitoring of its contractors and KEPA to ensure strict compliance with environmental laws.

    The Nation contacted Ganiyu, who is also a veterinary doctor, with this new evidence. He said the result from KEPA cannot be relied upon because the parameters are faulty. “The parameters they used do not correlate at all, so the result cannot be relied upon. An environmentalist has carried out a research and says it is toxic, how can NESREA depend on a report that KEPA sent? Does KEPA have the necessary facilities to conduct such a test? We have forensic tests from NADFAC and National Forensic Laboratory, which returned a toxic verdict, so which laboratory should we believe?

    “If they said the waste was not toxic, then there is no need to have a special place for dumping it. If it is that harmless, they should have been comfortable dumping it anywhere. They have done something wrong and they cannot apologise, instead, they are treating it with negligence.”

    Ganiyu also faulted the House of Assembly report, which he described as lopsided and unfair. “There are two things to note in the way the committee conducted its investigations. When you do an open hearing, you should have all the sides to the dispute in attendance. But KRPC was not represented; they sent in a report to the committee and it took it,” he said.

    He also picked holes in the committee report, which, he said, does not have details of the proceedings. “There should have been a step-by-step report of what was said at the hearing. This was not there, the House just passed its judgment, how did they arrive at their deductions?

     

    A minority report

    The report of these organs of government appeared to have effectively put paid to any hope of compensation for the people of Rido; it was also a life line that Chembache Investment had been looking for.  When confronted with the reports of the agencies, many of the residents dismissed them. “When the NNPC and others came, they did not visit the village, they only went to the palace of the Sirkin and didn’t come to see us here,” Shuaibu said. Many of them expressed anger over the conduct of KRPC officials, who first visited the site. “They didn’t even want to see the sick people, they just said the waste was not from them and they told us to go to court,” a source said.

    About three weeks after, KRPC came to evacuate the waste under heavy security with the workers wearing protective gloves, according to information gathered by The Nation. A resident observed that if the waste was non-toxic, the workers should have exposed themselves to it.

    But a Civil Rights Organisation, Kaduna Integrity Group, came to the rescue of the villagers and engaged the services of an independent laboratory to conduct a test on the waste. According to a report, dated July 27, 2012 by the laboratory, Analchem-YGT Hydro Technologies Ltd, which was exclusively obtained by The Nation, the material evidences seen at the site were described as bags of caked “Caustic Soda Pearls”. The shipment information on the consignment indicated it belonged to KRPC with Order No: 179 from D.I. s.r.i Via Maurizzo Gonzaga, 201230 Milano, Italy.

    “The wastes were, therefore, suspected to be expired caustic soda that may have arisen as a consequence of over-stocking and or poor storage or exposure to moisture due to its hygroscopic nature at the KRPC warehouse,” the report read.

    The report further said: “Caustic soda is a white odourless solid substance that is hygroscopic, that readily absorbs moisture from the air. This chemical is listed on the Right to know Hazardous Substances list and on the Special Health Substances List as a serious hazard because it is cited by the US Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), Department of Transportation, National Fire Protection Agency and the Environmental Protection Agency.”

    The report noted that available materials indicate Caustic Soda is strongly corrosive (hazard class 8) and a powerful irritant which can cause severe burns and permanent damage to any tissue it contacts. The report said the death of birds from Biams Farms may be due to the inhalation of aerosols arising from exothermic reaction associated with raindrops on the chemical waste. The report also explains that dogs may have died due to the inhalation of aerosols and irritation due to skin contact.

    The report, which was signed by the President and Lead Consultant, Yakubu Tilde, also posed some questions regarding effective monitoring and supervision of contractors by KRPC’s Safety Department. Left with no option, some members of the community dragged the KRPC, NNPC and Chembache Investments ltd to court. Among the plaintiffs were Shuaibu, Saidu Lima and Biams Farms. Among several declarations and reliefs sought by the plaintiff was general damages of N25 billion.

     

    A briefcase company

    In all the reports on the waste dump, all the blame has been laid at the feet of the contractor, Chembache investment Ltd. On June 22, 2012, the KRPC issued a query to the contractor which was answered by Chembache on July 5th. Part of the response reads: “We view the incident that occurred as an obvious omission on our part. It was not a deliberate act to create an unpleasant situation that would portray KRPC in bad light knowing full well that KRPC is a responsible corporate organisation.

    “As you are aware, we have executed several jobs in your company in line with the terms and conditions of terms stipulated in the contract agreements and brief often before the commencement of any job. All these we have satisfactorily adhered to.

    “What transpired in the course of executing the clean up site is highly regretted. We owe KRPC our sincere apologies for having dumped waste on an undesignated place. It was never our intention to create such an awkward and uncomfortable situation. We understand and acknowledge the mistake and resolving the matter,” the Managing Director, Chidi Onwuegbuche wrote.

    But the ‘victims’ have raised series of questions regarding the qualification of the contractor Chembache Investment. When The Nation tried to get in touch with Chembache Investment, the company has only one listed address in Kaduna, which is Kaduna State Urban Planning Development Agency ( Kasupda) building, 73, Kachia Road, Kaduna South. The Nation was directed to ask for one Adaora.

    When The Nation arrived at the address, there are more than 10 tenants in the building selling different goods, including a supermarket, a phone shop and a pharmacy. Several road side sellers lined the front of the building including a suya merchant. After many hours of fruitless search, The Nation was able to find Adaora and she did not look like an industrial waste disposal official. Chembache Investments, a leading contractor for the KRPC, a subsidiary of the NNPC, operates in Kaduna from a small shop in Kasupda building facing Kachia Road, where plastic chair, tables and buckets are sold.

    Adaora, who claims to be a niece of Chidi Onwuegbuche, conceded that the shop belongs to Chembache Investments but that the Director had gone to Imo State for the New Year holiday.  She said that was the official address of Chembache Investment Ltd and in the absence of the Director, she acts for the company. She refused to divulge any other information but on pressure, she agreed to call Onwuegbuche, who spoke to The Nation on telephone.

    Onwuegbuche said: “Yes, it happened in 2012 and the waste was actually from the refinery; we were not instructed to dump it there. It was the villagers who wanted to get the woods that asked us to do so. It is not the whole waste and we don’t dump wastes in communities because we have where we dump them. The case is in court, we won the first round and they are suing us for N25billion now.”

    The Nation went to KRPC office but without prior appointments was not allowed entry.  The reporter made several phone calls to the mobile number of Idris Abdullahi, the Public Affairs Manager of KRPC, which went unanswered. Several text messages to his number were not answered as well until the time of going to press.

    Because NESREA had conducted some tests on the wastes, The Nation met with the state coordinator, Sharif Ibrahim, who denied knowledge of the incident. Ibrahim said the agency was established in Kaduna in October 2013; therefore, he had no documents on the incident. He said his agency had asked for a meeting with KRPC but it has not gone through.

    He acknowledged that the agency had worked in Inlowo village in Kachia local government in February 2014 over a complaint of oil polluted wells, which proved to be true. He said to verify the claims of the people of Rido, a test on the borehole should be conducted to verify the purity of the Rido water. He promised to carry out the test in February 2015.

    There are questions if Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) was carried out by KRPC. Even though the company was established before the enactment of the law, the law demanded that an environmental audit should be done every three years. There must be health surveillance too; from all available information, it is not certain KRPC fulfilled any of these obligations.

    Sources inside the National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency, (NOSDRA) said the agency had instructed KRPC to draw up a Gas Flare Out Strategy (GFOS) which should be submitted to the agency. KRPC is yet to do this, according to top sources.

    A generation of abnormal children

    There is a generation in Rido which has not known peace or good health. Many in this generation were born with disabilities or they simply grow into them. In the village, they are called the ‘smoke generation.’

    Every child born after the refinery was built belongs to this generation. While those with the means have left the community, others with no choice remained. In Rido, it is a curse to be born here, almost. Not all the children survive to adulthood and many who did have one form of disability or the other. Take Hassana Nura, for example, at the age of four, she cannot talk and had a massive bow leg- a very common disability in children of Rido- and it seems her growth just suddenly stopped.

    Nura was brought into the assembly of protesters and shown to The Nation. Questions were posed to her but she remained silent with a confused look on her face. Kabiru Shuaibu was brought. He had been developing a growth problem for nine years which had made his backside to carve inside, so he had to walk sideways. At the age of 10, he was just in Primary Two and had difficulty learning.

    Nura and Kabiru are not the only children who stopped growing in Rido, Haruna Rabiu too. At the age of 16, he is a perfect picture of an eight-year-old. When he was brought, many of the adults kindly informed the reporter that he was no small boy despite his looks.

    There were many children with speech problems, like 15-year-old Zainab Abubakar; she finds it difficult to construct words and her speech was halting. According to her mother, she was born with the speech problem and there was never a time she was able to speak freely. “There are about 200 children with this kind of sickness,” said Abdulrazak Lawal, who is also one of the village spokespersons.

    For many months, little Zaharawu Liman had been kept inside the house by her parents, who claimed she was going blind. For fear of going blind, she was kept in darkness, buried in her fears which to the five-year-old seems to assume the form of reality every day.

    When she emerged from her darkness, her face was swollen in places and her eyes were bloodshot red. It was apparent she was in pain and unaccustomed to the bright lights as she squinted severely in frustrated attempt to adjust her sight. Her right eye was particularly affected, dripping with sticky substances that had partially shut down the eye. To anyone seeing her for the first time, this disease would be an advance stage of Conjunctivitis. But the adults rejected this idea, insisting Zaharawu’s disease had gone on for many months.

    Apart from the abnormality of a halt in growth development and other diseases, the parents of Rido have had to bury some of their children and the woman leader was very angry about it. She spoke excitedly and angrily in Hausa, using her hands in wild gesticulations to drive home her point. She accused the refinery of culpability in the deaths of the children of the village in Rido, death lurks around for the children and it usually gets them before they reach their teenage years.

    70-year-old Sabo Maikaji should know. A wrinkled old man, aged more by poverty than anything else, he wore a dirty blue caftan under which two other apparels are visible, he pushed himself through the crowd and insisted on telling his sad story. The smoke that is coming from the refinery is killing us; two of my children died because of the flare they inhale, they had stomach upset and at the end, they started vomiting some black substances and before we can get them to the hospital, they died,” he said.

    Maikaji’s two children Hajara and Yahaya, three and two years respectively died within three days of each other. That was seven years ago. But his case is still incomparable with that of Alhaji Saidu Liman, who lost three children to the deadly toxin allegedly from the KRPC.

    “I lost my three children; after they inhaled the toxic waste, they started having stomach ache and before we can treat them they died,” Liman said. The names of the dead are: Mailafia, Sherif and Fatima all under 10 years old.

    Nura Badamasi also had tales of woe about his children. In 2012, his wife gave birth to a set of twins but within weeks, one of them fell sick. “She fell ill and I held her to my chest and ran to the hospital. I was very afraid and determined to save her, but on the way, she died.

    “The other one took ill as well; we took her to the general hospital but she did not survive. I lost my twins to the work of the refinery,” he said. But his woes were just beginning, his four older children also fell ill one after the other; the symptoms were all too common. It was the same symptoms with the other sick children in the village, that is, stomach ache, vomiting of black substances and then hospitalisation. Four of my children also fell sick and we had to transfer them to the general hospital in Sabon-Tasha where they were treated. Even now, from time to time they still fall sick,” he said.

    Lababatu Sanni, found her way to the front of the crowd. She had a large blue hijab, which left only her babyish and pretty face. She did not smile even though a smile would have further lightened her pretty but sad face.  Lababatu is 25 years old but she looked much younger, her problems began long ago when she was born with a speech defect which had refused to abate over the years. But this is the least of the worries of Lababatu, who though married with three children, lost two of them allegedly to the toxic dump on the community. It was the usual scenario: abdominal pains, vomiting and certain death.

     

    Contaminated air and water

    The people of Rido also complained about their source of water, which has allegedly been contaminated by oil residue from the refinery. They also complained about the air which they claimed had caused severe health problems for the children.

    “If you dig a well, you will see many particles inside it and this has caused health problems for us, especially for the children. Now, in this village, those who can afford it drink pure water,” Harisu Habibu said. This is especially so for Islamic Scholar, Suleiman Abdulkadir, whose children fell sick and were hospitalised. “The doctor asked us the source of our drinking water and I told him. He said my children should not drink from that water again because it is contaminated,” he said.

    It was a different sort of contamination that affected Ibrahim Mataki’s children, In August this year, he claimed to have spent about N200,000 to treat his children of various diseases. At Biba Hospital in Tundun Wada, his children were treated for several ailments, including abdominal pains. The same is also true for four-year-old Rabiatu Abubakar, who has fallen ill of constant fever and diarrhea.

    In the whole of Rido, there are few cases that can match that of Amir Zuberu, a three-year-old invalid. According to his brother, Illiah, he has never spoken a word and has never walked.

    Illiah brought his brother out and shielded his face against the sun. Amir is a curious case, his legs are weak and foundling, his head is bigger than his body and he cries all the time.  Though three years, he looks like a ten-month-old baby.

    Illiah told his story: “Amir was not born like this; in fact, he was not born in this village but one month after he was brought back in to this village, his problems started. We have gone to the hospital but there is no solution. I know it is because of the gas flare in this community, if not, why did he fall sick only when he came into this community?”

    Some of the sick children never really get well. Such is the case with Abdullahi’s daughter, who has been bleeding for many months. “The doctors said it is the smoke that we inhale that is causing all these problems,” Abdullah said. In Rido, the children cry without ceasing, there is hardly a household without a sick child and in houses where there are no sick children, they are probably dead.

    But the case is far from over, even though the KRPC was not in operation when The Nation visited the community, the villagers live in a temporary relief. “We dread when they will start again,” Abubakar Saheed said. He has cause to be anxious as he said his entire household fell sick during the toxic waste saga and has been in constant ill-health.

    “When they flare the gas, in the afternoon it is heat and in the night you could see the black smoke. That is what we have been inhaling and it is the reason for all these sicknesses,” he said.

    Some of the victims of the toxic wastes were said to have been treated at the Barau Dikko Specialist Hospital in Kaduna. The Nation met the Chief Matron, Hannatu Garba, who said the hospital has been undergoing renovation for two years and there would be difficulty in tracing the specific cases of the victims. “If you can get the cards, please bring them, that is the only way we can trace their case files,” she said.

    In the meantime, the land is dry and dusty with the wind blowing in different directions. There is no evidence that Rido is a host community to an oil company, as the air had the scent of poverty, sickness and despair. There is another thing which is synonymous with Rido, however: “If you go around Rido, you only see cases of death,” Abubarkar said.

  • Kaduna DISCO to roll out 80,000 meters yearly

    The Kaduna Electricity Distribution Company (KEDC) has promised to roll out 80,000 pre-paid meters annually for the next five years.

    Its Managing Director, Haruna Garuba spoke during the Nigerian Electricity Regulatory Commission (NERC) public consultation on electricity metering  in Kaduna.

    The forum had The Credited Advance Payment  for Metering Implementation ( CAPMI) as its theme.

    He said: “We have a plan to roll out about  80,000 meters every year. In Kaduna, the customer base is about 480,000. We believe it could be more than that. So in our plan, we know more houses are being built and more customers are coming on stream. That is why we have the plan to bridge the gap.”

    He said  under CAPMI,  it is expected that customers should willingly make advance payment for pre-paid meter which the electricity distribution company is obliged to install within 45 days of provision of notice of payment by the customer.

    But Garuba said the company will rehabilitate most of the equipment and invest in infrastructure in its electricity market that cuts across over a distance of 1,000Km in Kaduna, Zamfara, Kebbi and Sokoto states.

    The NERC Commissioner, Government and Consumer Affairs, Dr. Abbah Ibrahim had earlier urged the distribution company to bridge the 60 per cent metering gap in the market.

    He said: “More that 50 per cent, in some cases 60 per cent of consumers are not metered and this led to a situation where customers are estimated.”

    He also said the commission has directed the DISCOs to publish their  electricity load shedding plan as from next year.

    Ibrahim said: “By next year, all the DISCOs will publish and they will also announce on the television in their coverage area the time they are going to do their load shedding.”

    KEDC Head, Customer Service Market, Mr. Sunday Yahaya said the company which has commenced verification of customers has installed 8,601 meters under the CAPMI scheme.

    He told the commission that the challenge in the provision of meters to the customers was the large area of coverage by the company and the distance from where the  vendors transport the meters.

    He added that some of the customers hardly notify the company that they have paid for the meters.

    A customers who simply identified himself as Buba Umar from Kwaro, complained that his community earns low income  therefore NERC should review the method of CAPMI payment, which according to him was  a burden for the customers.

    He urged the commission to make room for part payment, noting that since the companies are private  investors,  they should be prepared for long time investment.

    Another customer, Sunday Olusegun complained that his electricity bill suddenly rose to N60,000 monthly in June this year.

  • Amnesty for 547 inmates in Kaduna

    Over 34,000 out of the estimated 48,000 prison inmates in the country are awaiting trial, said Minister of Interior, Abba Moro. This is unfair and unhealthy. So, what to do? Free up some awaiting trial detainees sand give them a reason to make good.

    That was what Kaduna State Governor Mukhtar Ramalan Yero did. He has decongested the prisons in the state by releasing 547 inmates. Among the pardoned inmates was one sentenced to life imprisonment whose release the governor ordered on health grounds.

    The Nation gathered that high rate of awaiting trial inmates in various prisons within Kaduna State alone poses security challenges to the government and society. Government sources said that considering the serious the issue is, the government discussed the issue if decongesting the prisons at several security council meetings.

    At one of such meetings, Governor Yero was said to have directed the Attorney-General of the state to work out modalities to solve the menace of the high number of awaiting trial inmates. The government also set a committee to fast-track the process with the Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice, Mr Garba Uba Shehu as chairman, while state Controller of Prisons, Alhaji Abubakar Garba, Justice D-H Khobo, ASP Bawa as members while the Solicitor-General of the state Daris Bayero serves as Secretary.

    Between January and September, the committee visited all prisons  across the state and released 547 awaiting trials inmates with minor offences, while over 600 cases were terminated including those who were granted bail but who by nature of their cases ought not to be in the prisons in the first place.

    As for those serving capital punishment, the Attorney-General sought and obtained the approval of the governor to engage the services of private legal Practitioners to defend them when their case are taken to court.

    This, according to him, will enable the accused persons to have access to lawyers which ordinarily they would not have and will have the cases against them expeditiously tried and their fate determined. Apart from that, the committee liaised with police to have a comprehensive list of those to benefit from the government largesse and were selected according to the severity of their offences and character of evidence.

    The commissioner said that in compliance with Section 212 (1) and after due consultation with state committee on prerogative of mercy, the  governor granted amnesty to four inmates who were convicted and sentenced to three years imprisonment and above with six months recently. Some of those whose release was  ordered having attained the age of 60 years and above, and whose conduct was found to have changed for the better are Nuhu Yusuf, Danjuma Adamu, Hardo Barau, Abdullahi Adamu, Aliyu Muhammad, Muntari Hassana, Ali Hassan, Lawal Alhaji Bature and Salisu Ya’u.

    While Abdullahi Ibrahim and Chukwuma Eze who were convicted and sentenced to 21 years and has served 12 years and 12 years,  seven months respectively regained their freedom for good conduct, Usman Salahuddeen who was sentenced to death by hanging had his sentence reduced to life imprisonment. Nine inmates were released on account of age while one, Aminu Adamu, who was serving life sentence was freed on health grounds.

    All the inmates who were freed by the governor were cautioned against committing any offence that may bring them back to prison. The amnesty beneficiaries looked  happy walking out of prison having spent years there with no hope of being freed.

    Government at all levels were however called upon to rise up to the challenge by not only decongesting the prisons but also to reconstruct them to international standards so that they serve the purpose they were built and not to serve as centre for breeding criminals.

    Justice dispensation system must also be looked into with a view to minimise the ever increasing number of awaiting trial inmates.

     

  • Inside Kaduna master fabricators’ home

    Inside Kaduna master fabricators’ home

    Name what you want and they will fabricate it within minutes. Their raw materials are usually disused items: discarded soft drink cans, wires and anything aluminum-based. Such is their proficiency that many say they are second only to the famous technologists of Aba, Abia State. In the North, however, everyone agrees that the fabricators of Panteka Market have no rival.

    Its popularity in Kaduna State and across the North is based on nothing else but the fabricators’ phenomenal use of local technology to produce a variety of products and turning waste to wealth.

    When our reporter visited the market, the technology of their displayed products was striking, especially because the craftsmen never to school.

    A 30-year-old man told the reporter that it takes him less than 10 minutes to produce four big aluminum pots.

    Ahmed Modibbo, leader of the aluminum pots fabricators took the reporter through the process of aluminum pot production. The first step, he said, is collecting aluminum material, like cans, deodorant containers and wires, among others, and melting them into liquid.

    According to him, “it is compulsory to subject the aluminum to constant heat. So, we have a fanning system made with bike wheel, which is connected with a pipe to the melting pot. When the fire gets to the highest degree, the aluminum will start melting into liquid and dripping into a container kept under the pot through a hole.

    “After that, the liquid is collected and poured into another pot where it is further subjected to heat. Inside the workshop as you can see here, clay sand is moulded round a sample of the pot, with required inscriptions on the sand.”

    North Report’s crew was still at the ‘mini factory’ when the highly heated aluminum liquid was poured into the four carved sand to solidify. Amazingly, within five minutes, four big pots were ready for use. But it requires finishing, which is giving to another section to file and make the pot shine.

    Modibbo who said he inherited the trade from his father, said he and his team produce minimum of eight big aluminum pots a day, depending on the availability of aluminum material at their disposal. He also disclosed that, each of the big pots is sold for N10,000.

    However, Modibbo said the greatest challenge they face in the job lack of support from government, arguing that, countries like Singapore, China and Japan are industrial giants today, because of efforts of craftsmen like us. But, unfortunately our own government lays emphasis on paper qualification and not productivity.

    His plea to the government is to create an enabling environment for craftsmen to strive in their creative world and support them through provision of working tools and protective wears, which would help reduce accidents in their work.

    According to him, “as you can see, this work is dangerous and risky. Sometimes, we have accident, if one is not careful, some of the insecticide or deodorant cans we put in fire do explode and injure us. But, if we get protective jackets and industrial wears from government, the accident will certainly reduce. So, with government’s support, there is nothing we cannot produce in this market”.

    Modibbo’s claim was later confirmed by North Report, when it visited another section of the market, where ‘Ice block’ making freezer is fabricated. This section is equally very busy with highly skilled, but apparently not educated craftsmen at work.

    One of the leading craftsmen who identified himself as Ashimu Baba, but popularly called ‘Engineer’ among his colleagues said, everything used in constructing the freezer is sourced from within Panteka market. The materials used include iron sheet, aluminium sheet, compressors and cooling pipes among others.

    Baba explained that, though the freezers are locally made, they produce ice blocks faster than the imported ones. And the freezers sell for between N100,000 to N700,000, depending on the size, number of compressors and quality of materials used in producing them.

    Panteka can become the industrial haven of Northern Nigeria, considering the variety products being produced in the market. From household materials like candle, candle stand, kerosene lamp, cooking stove, utensils to industrial materials like shovel, rake, digger and working tools are produced in the market. It was also gathered that, automobile parts are produced in the market.

    Panteka is an untapped goldmine for Nigeria. Federal Government and its relevant agencies need to put necessary machinery in motion to reap the benefits of this unique market.

    In the interim, the government needs to wade in to ensure that standard and safety are complied with to reduce hazards associated with the wonderful inventions taking place in Panteka Market.

    Be that, that as it may, Panteka will continue  to remain the ‘China Market’ of Northern Nigeria.

     

  • Oyedepo, Kaduna monarch, others for award

    Oyedepo, Kaduna monarch, others for award

    OLD students of ECWA Secondary School, Igbaja, Ifelodun Local Government Area of Kwara state will today bestow awards of excellence on the presiding Bishop of Living Faith Church Worldwide, Bishop David Oyedepo, Chief Raimi Oladimeji and Kpop Ham of Kwoi, Kaduna state, Jonathan Gyet Maude.

    The awards are in recognition of these individuals’ contributions to the educational development of the country. HRH Maude, ex-student of the school is the paramount ruler of Jaba people of Kaduna state.

    The ceremony is to mark the 70th anniversary of the school formerly known as Igbaja Teachers’ College. Bishop Oyedepo and Alhaji Oladimeji are founders of Covenant University, Landmark Universities and Al- Hikmah University located in Ogun and Kwara states.

    Seven old students of the school have also be decorated with ambassadors of the school for their notable contributions to the development of the institution over the years, the Chairman Anniversary Committee, Elder Olaitan Makanjuola has said.

    Elder Makanjuola added that the event would witness the launching of N100 million development funds for the school. He lamented the degeneracy in the infrastructural development of his old school. Said Makanjuola: “We want to register our appreciation to the state government for its sustenance of the school, particularly with regards to providing teachers for the school and paying their salaries, as well as other peripheral actions; at the same time we are very sad to note that this institution which was the second teachers’ college in the former northern region of Nigeria, after Katsina College and the second non governmental post primary institution in the present Kwara state.

  • Kaduna partners SMEDAN to create 5,000 jobs

    Kaduna partners SMEDAN to create 5,000 jobs

    Kaduna State Government has entered into a partnership with the Small and Medium Enterprise Agency of Nigeria (SMEDAN) for the establishment of business support centres to provide support services and capacity building to MSMEs.

    It has, also, consummated an agreement to conduct Graduate Vocational and Entrepreneurship Skills Training (GVEST) to build capacity of 1,000 graduates expected to create 5,000 jobs in the state.

    Governor Mukhtar Ramalan Yero disclosed this yesterday while declaring open a three-day opportunity exhibition and trade fair for Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) in the North West region organised by SMEDAN in Kaduna.

    Yero said, as a deliberate policy, the government has established the Kaduna State industrialisation and micro-credit management board as a special purpose vehicle for micro delivery to support the growth of SMEs.

    Represented by the Director in the Ministry of Commerce and Industries, Mr. Mamman E. Danka, Yero urged the participating entrepreneurs to take advantage of the fair and exhibition to ensure the sustained development of the SMEs sub-sector in their states.

    “Just recently, the government entered into a matching fund partnership with two major development banks, the BoI and BoA and created a pool of funds to the tune of N2 billion to be disbursed to MSMEs as micro loans as well as for the development of agriculture in the state,” Yero stated.

    The representative of SMEDAN Director-General, a Deputy Director in the agency, Alhaji Shehu Sada, urged the participants to take advantage of the exhibition/trade fair to showcase their skills, and interact with one another to build capacities through idea sharing among other opportunities.

    He assured that the agency is doing all it can to encourage entrepreneurs in all ways, and further urged entrepreneurs to tap into government policies aimed at bettering their lives and businesses.

    Speaking earlier, SMEDAN Consultant Hajia Safiya Adamu of Messrs Leadership Paradigm Consultants Limited welcomed the participants, stressing that the exhibition and trade fair was for entrepreneurs to showcase their talents and skills, and also create an enabling market environment for them.

    She said the fair would also introduce them to financial opportunities that could be assessed from relevant agencies, such that they would help strengthen their businesses and make them employers of labours, and reduce the rate of unemployment.

    The participants commended the opportunity availed them by SMEDAN to showcase their businesses and talents.

  • Inside Kaduna’s kid mechanics’ workshop

    Inside Kaduna’s kid mechanics’ workshop

    They come from different family backgrounds but share many things in common. They are young, some barely 10. TONY AKOWE caught up with the child mechanics of Kaduna, and reports on their drive and vision

    They are heroes in their own right. Theirs are low-income families, but the last thing they want to do is sit around and bemoan their challenges or join idle mates on the playground. Or, worse still, take to petty crimes. They rather chose to learn auto-mechanics after their public school hours.

    Little Sadiq, just 10 year old, goes to the workshop everyday to learn to fix cars. His dream is that when he graduates from the workshop, he would one day be called upon to repair the cars in the presidential fleet.

    He told The Nation: “I like the mechanic’s work, but not spraying of cars, and that was why I abandoned painting work my uncle asked me to learn and ran to learn car repairs in order to become a mechanic. I am busier in learning car repairs than painting, and that was why I did not want painting apprenticeship. I hate to be idle; I want to be seen doing something all the time. It is my hope and prayer that one day, after my graduation as a qualified mechanic I will be called upon to repair Mr. President’s cars. It could be President Goodluck Jonathan or any other president after him”.

    Sunday is another underage mechanic apprentice. He is a primary five pupil of Command Primary School located inside the old Artillery Barracks in the Kakuri area of Kaduna metropolis. He has what could be regarded as two different lives. He is a student between the hours of 8.00am and 2.00pm every week day. He is also an apprentice mechanic between 2.00pm and 6.00pm daily, as well as on Saturdays and throughout the holiday period. He is only 11 year old and prefer to spend his time at the mechanic village rather than play around with his mates after school hours or during the holidays. He told The Nation that he chose to do that as a way of planning his future.

    Already, Sunday has started performing some simple tasks in vehicle repairs and is optimistic that when he completes his secondary education, he would have qualified as an auto mechanic. He said he hoped to raise enough money from the trade to sponsor himself and help his family.

    Sunday and other young boys in the mechanic village have a tall dream. Some of them want to be mechanical engineers; some want to join the military, among other professions.

    Gabriel Adejo under whom Sunday and two other young boys are training, told The Nation that Sunday actually lived with him and he has decided to engage him rather than leave him to mix with children and be a liability. Gabriel believes that  the decision to engage Sunday has paid off as he has become useful to himself.

    Across the bridge is yet another mechanic village located in the Oriakpata area of the metropolis. Even though the area is known more for the sale of spare parts by Igbo traders, the mechanic village located there also boasts a good number of small boy mechanics.

    Saqid’s master, Mishood Adewale, told The Nation that Sadiq’s family initially wanted him to learn how to spray cars. He said when his uncle brought him to the workshop, he wanted Sadiq to learn car spraying, but after some time, Sadiq decided to abandon that, picking interest in the repair of cars.

    He said, “Since nobody forced him to pick interest in car repairing, I decided to accept him into my workshop and started training him. And so far he has shown a good level of intelligence and sharpness in learning car repairs these few months he had spent in the workshop. But when he was with painting of car, he showed dullness and reluctance in learning the trade of car spraying. As a small boy who is still growing up, I see him becoming a good motor mechanic, and by the time he spent most of his growing age years here, he will master the act very well. He is still a school boy, and whenever he closes from school, he comes back to the workshop to continue with the apprenticeship. However, I cannot tell how many years he is going to spend, but if he is a grown up person, I will say, he will spend five years to graduate from the apprenticeship. He is currently in primary four, and he is just ten years old, and he is learning fast. I can see seriousness in him, and I need to encourage and support him because there is seriousness in him. He is more committed to learning repairs of cars than learning car spraying. In my own workshop, we repair Japanese vehicles, but we have other mechanics that deal in the repairs of Peugeot and other brands of cars here. Personally, I started mechanic apprenticeship when I was in secondary school, and after school hours I would go back to learn how to repair cars, so after I completed my secondary school education, I spent another four years doing the mechanic apprenticeship. I can say that I spent almost nine years in the apprenticeship. There is another boy under me, he has spent close to four years so far under me, and he was very small when I admitted him here, and now he is up to 12 years of age. I am proud to say that I have trained not less than nine persons as mechanics. Today, all of them are on their own. And currently I have six apprentices under me”.

    Adewale has another apprentice nicknamed Senator. He told The Nation that he has already spent four years learning how to be an auto mechanic. Senator who is just 13 years old said “I have completed my primary school education, and I want to go to secondary school while I am still learning how to repairs cars. I see car repairs as a lucrative business, and I hope to make fortunes from it in future in order to help my parents”. Senator, according to Adewale has progressed very well and has shown a high level of commitment in learning the trade. His interest surpassed that of his seniors as he is always inquisitive and ask a lot of questions.

    At the Artillery mechanic village, The Nation discovered that there is quite a large number of kid mechanics learning the trade. Two brothers between the ages of seven and nine whose name could not be ascertained are also engaged in the trade. The elder of the two brothers was said to have taken a special liking to the trade and told the parents that he wants to be learning the trade after school hours. His younger brother also decided to be following him to the workshop. They are seen running errands for the big boys and assisting them whenever they are carrying out any repair. They are already familiar with the names of all the tools used by the mechanics as well as the names of the spare parts for each vehicle. Gabriel in whose workshop the boys are attached told The Nation that if they keep up with their present commitment, the boys will grow to be great mechanics and probably become excellent mechanical engineers.

  • Gone… Kaduna’s fruits market

    Gone… Kaduna’s fruits market

    The Railway Station Market in Kaduna used to be very popular for fruits and assorted food items. It was a beehive of activities where customers purchased fruits and foodstuff brought in from the southern part of the country. Owned by the Nigeria Railway Corporation, it was adjacent to the Kaduna Junction as the railway terminal in Kaduna was called.

    Residents and visitors  took pleasure in buying their goods there because the prices were relatively cheap. That was in the yesteryears.  Currently, what used to be a hub for business activities is now a den for reptiles and drug addicts. The once-busy market is now very bushy as the shops were demolished seven years ago.  The traders were given notice to quit before the market was demolished.

    The intention of the authorities of the Nigeria Railway Property Development Company (NRPDC) in demolishing the market then was to build a modern market that will accommodate more traders. A temporary site had to be provided for some of the traders, while others were left to their fate.

    Our correspondents gathered that several meetings were held with the traders before they agreed to vacate the place, with a promise that they would be the first beneficiaries of the stalls when the market is built.

    Nowadays, there is concern over the safety of the traders and their goods, especially when it rains. Many of the traders who could not find space in the temporary place provided for traders beside the roundabout are forced to display their goods, including perishable ones such as garri, in the open and beside the road.

    The traders are at the mercy of men of the Kaduna Environmental Protection Agency (KEPA), even as they stand the risk of being involved in accidents. Interestingly, the Kaduna Railway Station Market was not only the most popular market in Kaduna State; it was a major foodstuff market in Northern Nigeria. Apparently, because of its strategic location near the railway station, the market was always the first stopping point for foodstuff, particularly yam and fruits from the southern part of the country.

    Even though trading activities are still carried out around the area, the market is currently a shadow of itself. Visitors to the market would weep for the state of abandonment of a once-viable market and the fact that prices of commodities are no longer different from what obtains in other markets after its demolition.

    Many of the traders who once made brisk businesses in the market now depend on the patronage of motorists as they had to display their wares by the roadside. Some of them who spoke to our correspondents said they were not surprised that the market was demolished, even as they said they didn’t expect that they will stay more than a year selling by the roadside.

    A fruit seller, Mrs. Helen Idoko, claimed that her mother was selling foodstuffs inside the market when she (Helen) was in secondary school, adding that there were threats to demolish the market while they were there.

    “I have been selling food items in the market with my mother for several years. Every year, those who are in charge of the market would tell us that they wanted to demolish the market. At first, the buildings were made of zinc. After some years, they said everybody should build with block. Later, they demolished the market and told us that they would build it and share the stalls to everybody. But, up till now, nothing has happened. “

    “First, they said Aliko Dangote bought the place. After some weeks, Dangote denied buying the place. Then they said a former governor of the state bought it. But we are not  sure of who the buyer is. Since then, however,  we have been prevented from entering the market. We don’t have anything to do with the Railway Corporation Market again.”

    She lamented that they had lost customers since the market was demolished. Before the demolition, people came from all parts of Kaduna to patronise traders at the Railway Station Market.

    Tuesdays and Fridays are Station Market days. People bring goods from Niger, Kafanchan and Lafia. Yams and other food items are very cheap in the market.  But now only trains bring food items from Niger on Thursday, Sundays and Mondays.”

    Madam Anthonia Monday, who also sells by the roadside corroborated Mrs. Helen’s statement.

    She said: “I have been selling in the market for many years and in 2007. They demolished it. They told us then that they had sold the market. Some people said Dangote bought it. But, he denied it. It was later we heard that a former governor bought the land.”

    On the challenges of trading by the roadside, Mrs. Monday said: “We face many challenges on the road. For example, the men of the Kaduna Environmental Protection Agency prevent us from selling at the roadside. There is no attempt to rebuild the market, and nobody has come to tell us anything about the land.

    “Also, when it rains, we use umbrella to cover ourselves since we don’t have a shop to run to. If the rain is very heavy, we use leather to cover ourselves and leave our wares in the open. We have not experienced any form of accident.

    On the sale of the piece of land, investigations revealed that the management of the NRPDC might have sold it, but the identity of the buyer has remained unknown.

    There are three versions on the ownership of the piece of land. One is that a former governor bought the land from the management of the Nigeria Railway Corporation. Another is that Dangote bought it to build warehouses for his companies, which he denied.

    The third is that the market was  to be upgraded to a modern one. Those who hold this opinion said the management had sent a delegation to study the Jos Modern Market and the Oba Market in Benin with a view to modeling the market after one of them.

    When contacted, the management of NRPDC declined to comment on the matter. They neither confirmed nor denied the outright sale of the market and to whom.

    For now, and perhaps, several years to come, the once-busy Kaduna Railway Market may continue to be a fallow vast land breeding reptiles in the heart of Kaduna metropolis and probably serving as a hideout for criminals and drug addicts.

  • Man found dead in Kaduna

    A 34-year-old graduate of Business Administration from Kaduna Polytechnic, Moshood Mohammed, was the yesterday found dead at NASFAT Village in Igabi Local Government Area of Kaduna State.

    Mohammed was reported missing last Thursday.

    According to his brother, Kamal Yinka, Mohammed left Kaduna on Thursday morning to join a friend, who was supposed to take him to Ilorin in Kwara State, their country home, for a wedding scheduled for the weekend.

    Yinka said: “We were surprised to see his friend two hours later, who said he waited for Mohammed at Mando Roundabout but didn’t see him. We thought it was joke until this morning (Sunday) when we found his body around NASFAT Village.

    “His death is a big blow to our family because Moshood was a young man with a promising future. He just got married and has a two-month-old baby. He just got employed and his aged mother and immediate family were dependent on him.

    “We suspect that he was assassinated, but by who? We don’t know. So, we are leaving the assassins to God. If it is his position in the office they are interested in, let them have it. God will judge.”

    Police Commissioner Umar Shehu said: “I am not aware of the case, please call the PPRO.”

    Police spokesman Aminu Lawan didn’t pick his call.