Tag: Kaduna

  • Kaduna varsity begins post-graduate programmes

    Management of the Kaduna State University (KASU) will begin post-graduate and Master’s degree programmes (MSc) in the 2014/ 2015 academic year.

    KASU’s Vice-Chancellor Prof Barnabas Williams Quirix said the introduction of the programmes followed their approval by the National Universities Commission (NUC).

    “Ten years after the establishment of this university, we are pleased to let you know that NUC has approved 44 out of the 52 courses that we applied for as Post Graduate Programmes,” the Vice Chancellor said.

    Quirix said they were commencing lectures in the 2014/2015 academic year with MSc in Procurement Supply in Management, Criminal Justice, Crime Management and Security Studies, Environmental Biology, Renewable Energy, Geographic Information System and PGD in Investigative and Sport Journalism.

    The VC disclosed that as part of their research interest, the university was embarking on a research on ginger adding, “Ginger is a natural resource and we are embarking on an extensive research of the product. Some people are coming to our university on sabbatical for this purpose.”

    Quirix thanked the Kaduna State Government for their support that led to the approval of the programmes, adding, “We will run both academic and non-academic programmes.”

  • Robbers kill fuel station manager in Kaduna

    Robbers kill fuel station manager in Kaduna

    Gunmen suspected to be armed robbers on Monday evening attacked a fuel station in Kaduna and killed the manager.

    It was learnt they went away with an unspecified amount of money.

    Five armed men in a Golf car drove into the filling station, Ruma Petroleum, at Ungwan Muazu on Nnamdi Azikwe way, Kaduna South local government area, about 7pm.

    The Nation gathered that after filling the tank with petrol, they brought out guns and dispossessed the attendants, the station owner, Alhaji Shaibu Abubakar, and owners of two vehicles at the station, of their money and phones.

    An eyewitness, Malam Ismail Musa, said they shot the station manager, Stephen Anebi, in the head, when he said he had no money on him.

    Musa said: “It was not quite 30 minutes when I bought fuel from the filling station when the incident occurred. I was still around but not in the filling station. When they came in, there were two other vehicles in the station.

    ‘’After filling their tank, they brought out guns and ordered the pump attendants, the owner and occupants of the other vehicles to bring out their phones and money.

    “They asked the manager for money but when he could not give them, they shot him in his head. I entered the station and called the ‘Hakimi’ (District Head) Ungwan Muazu and told him of the situation. He asked me to call the ‘Dakaci’ (Ward Head) of the area.

    “The Hakimi called the Divisional Police Officer, who came and rushed the manager to 44 Army Reference Hospital, where I learnt he died few hours after,” Musa said.

    Sources said residents threw stones at the robbers as they drove off towards Abuja junction.

    The victim, Anebi, an Igala man, hailed from Kogi State, and was married. He has four children.

    At the deceased’s family home yesterday in Kakuri, sympathisers were condoling with his wife and family.

    Station owner Abubakar was also at his late manager’s home.

    Speaking to reporters, he narrated: “When I heard noise downstairs, I rushed down from my upstairs’ office, and I was ordered to lie down with the rest.

    “The gunmen were five; they collected our handsets and the day’s sales. But unfortunately it was only my manager that they killed.

    “Stephen was a good man; he was gentle, trustworthy and hard working. I just promoted him to manager a few weeks ago.

    “I reported the incident to the police, and the police took my statements at Ungwan Muazu police station, and I believe the police will get to the root of this sad killing of my manager.

    Anebi’s body was deposited at Saint Gerald Catholic Hospital, Kakuri.

    Police spokesperson Aminu Lawal confirmed the attack and the shooting of the manager, saying investigations were on.

     

  • Five die, 15 injured as women suicide bombers hit Kano

    Five die, 15 injured as women suicide bombers hit Kano

    Bomb scare in Kaduna

    Kaduna was gripped by a bomb scare yesterday. An ordinary waste polythene, packaged in a sack, wrapped with cello tape and dumped by the side of the ever-busy Ahmadu Bello Way, caused panic within the metropolis.

    Residents ran helter-skelter; vehicles were diverted and shop owners around the scene scampered for safety before calling the attention of the police anti-bomb squad. The content of the sack was suspected to be an explosive device.

    The news of the “bomb” which went round Kaduna town with the speed of light, created panic. Motorists hurriedly took to other routes, causing serious traffic jam.

    Shops owners quickly locked up their shops.

    Security personnel comprising men of the police anti-bomb squad, army and others arrived the scene and cordoned off the area.

    After checking with the aid of an anti-bomb equipment, the sack was discovered to contain waste polythene bags wrapped in the sack.

    A military officer addressed shop owners, urging  them to be more vigilant.

    Kaduna police spokesperson Aminu Lawan confirmed the incident, praising residents of the area for their consciousness.

  • Waste polythene causes panic in Kaduna

    Waste polythene causes panic in Kaduna

    Ordinary waste polythene, packaged in a sack and wrapped with cello tape and dumped by the side of ever busy Ahmadu Bello Way, caused panic within Kaduna metropolis Monday.

    Residents ran helter-skelter, vehicles were diverted and shop owners around the scene hurriedly scamper for safety before calling the attention of the police anti-bomb squad, as content of the sack was suspected to be an explosive device.

    The news of the ‘bomb’ which went round Kaduna town with the speed of light created serious panic and motorist hurriedly took to other routes thereby causing serious traffic jam at such routes.

    Shops owners within Kaduna metropolis also locked up their shops and took to their heels as our correspondent who rushed to the scene observed that people were running for safety and shouts of bomb generated tension around the area.

    Meanwhile, combined team of security personnel comprising of men of the police anti-bomb squad, army and other none uniform security operatives arrived the scene and condoned off the area, while people were asked to stay away from the area pending when the content could be ascertained.

    After carrying out necessary checks with the aid of anti-bomb equipment, the sack was discovered to contain waste polythene bags wrapped in the sack.

    Meanwhile, a military officer who addressed shop owners around the area had earlier confirmed that it was a wheel barrow man that dropped the sack there, urged them to be more vigilant, and henceforth ensure that such persons are not let go un-interrogated.

    When contacted, Kaduna Police spokesperson, SP Aminu Lawan confirmed the incident while commending the people of the area for their consciousness.

    According to SP Lawan, “ there was such scare and panic but there was nothing as speculated, our men upon receiving the call were deployed to the area, it was immediately condoned off while our anti-bomb squad carried out the required checks, and it was discovered that the sack contained waste polythene, no Improvised Explosive Device (IEDs) was found it.”

    Meanwhile, as at the time of filing the report, normalcy had returned to the area, with few shops re-opened for business.

  • Kaduna blast: NEMA donates 100 beds

    Kaduna blast: NEMA donates 100 beds

    National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), at the weekend, donated 100 pieces of eight-spring beds, mattresses and blankets each to 44 Army Reference Hospital, Kaduna, as part of its response to last Wednesday’s twin bombing in Kaduna.

    Many injured victims are being treated at the hospital.

    The Nation had reported that many victims were receiving treatment on stretchers and mattresses placed on bare floor.

    Receiving the items, the hospital’s Deputy Director, Brigadier General Muritala Abdullaziz Abdullahi, said NEMA’s response and other stakeholders helped to save the lives of many victims.

    According to him, by Thursday the hospital had 37 victims but four had been discharged.

    He said the 33 still in their care are doing well, adding that many of those in critical condition were responding to treatment after being operated on.

    Abdullahi hailed NEMA’s donation of money and beds, saying “many victims were lying on mattresses without beds.”

    NEMA’s Northwest Zonal Director Musa Ilallah said the agency was touched when they saw some victims sleeping on the floor.

    He said they were happy with the professionalism with which the doctors handled the victims and urged them to continue to do more.

    Ilallah added that the donation did not foreclose any future assistance, as the agency was committed to doing more to uplift the welfare of Nigerians and bring succour to those affected by disaster.

  • The unfortunate Kaduna twin bomb attacks

    The twin attack on the two prominent Nigerians which took place in

    Kaduna could be described as dangerous, callous and unfortunate to the peaceful and cooperate existence of this country.

    The attempt on the lives of the two highly respected Nigerians who are revered in different parts of this country for political and religious affiliations, shows those desperados of this dastardly act are out to throw this country into political and religious crises, which would not augur well for the peaceful co-existence of this country.

    Both Sheik Dahiru Bauchi and Gen. Mohammed Buhari have contributed to the development of this country in their chosen fields, hence their being accorded esteemed respect across the country.

    The activities of those responsible for the twin attack did not take into cognisance the great implication of what they intend to do the collective interest of the country, which would have a great impact on the stability of this country.

    We must appreciate that God in his infinity mercy did allow this unpatriotic persons to achieve this myopic and undesirable desire of plunging this country into another mayhem, which no responsible Nigerian will support.

    We should continue to be vigilant in our daily activities to stem the ugly trend we are witnessing at this critical period of our nation’s history, that has never been seen, not even during the civil war that took place in the 60s.

    No sane Nigerian would support these dastardly acts of spilling blood of innocent Nigerians who are already impoverished going about securing their day-to-day means of livelihood.

    We pray that those who lost their lives in the Kaduna twin blast would have peace of grave and God would console their families, while also praying for those injured to recover quickly.

    The government should not rest from its responsibilities by assuring the citizens of providing security to all. Nigerians should report any form of suspicious movement within their environments.

    Nigeria will surely overcome such agonising period she finds herself and

    It will continue to remain steadfast in loving one another.

    By Bala Nayashi

    Lokoja, Kogi State.

  • The unfortunate Kaduna twin bomb attacks

    The unfortunate Kaduna twin bomb attacks

    The twin attack on the two prominent Nigerians which took place in Kaduna could be described as dangerous, callous and unfortunate to the peaceful and cooperate existence of this country.

    The attempt on the lives of the two highly respected Nigerians who are revered in different parts of this country for political and religious affiliations, shows those desperados of this dastardly act are out to throw this country into political and religious crises, which would not augur well for the peaceful co-existence of this country.

    Both Sheik Dahiru Bauchi and Gen. Mohammed Buhari have contributed to the development of this country in their chosen fields, hence their being accorded esteemed respect across the country.

    The activities of those responsible for the twin attack did not take into cognisance the great implication of what they intend to do the collective interest of the country, which would have a great impact on the stability of this country.

    We must appreciate that God in his infinity mercy did allow this unpatriotic persons to achieve this myopic and undesirable desire of plunging this country into another mayhem, which no responsible Nigerian will support.

    We should continue to be vigilant in our daily activities to stem the ugly trend we are witnessing at this critical period of our nation’s history, that has never been seen, not even during the civil war that took place in the 60s.

    No sane Nigerian would support these dastardly acts of spilling blood of innocent Nigerians who are already impoverished going about securing their day-to-day means of livelihood.

    We pray that those who lost their lives in the Kaduna twin blast would have peace of grave and God would console their families, while also praying for those injured to recover quickly.

    The government should not rest from its responsibilities by assuring the citizens of providing security to all. Nigerians should report any form of suspicious movement within their environments.

    Nigeria will surely overcome such agonising period she finds herself and

    It will continue to remain steadfast in loving one another.

    By Bala Nayashi

    Lokoja, Kogi State.

  • Kaduna blast shows nobody is safe, says Anglican primate

    Kaduna blast shows nobody is safe, says Anglican primate

    The Primate of the Anglican Church, Most Rev. Nicholas Okoh, yesterday said that despite the devastating effect of Wednesday bomb blasts in Kaduna, it has its positive aspect, which is a signal that nobody is safe irrespective of his religion and ethnicity.

    Asked to comment on the bomb blast during the 3rd Session of the second synod of the Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion) Diocese of Kubwa, Abuja, he called on Nigerians to unite and end terrorism.

    He said: “That is a signal of insecurity. And again, it sends another signal, which I think has an aspect of it that is positive.

    “ That is let everybody east, west, north, south, Christian, Muslims, African traditional religionists, let’s put hands together and stop this terrorism. Nobody is spared, nobody is free, nobody is safe.”

    Okoh said that the abduction of the Chibok school girls has aggravated the state of insecurity in the country.

    According to him, the entire problem would have been solved only when the Boko Haram sect militants lay down their arms and make themselves available for dialogue.

    Asked whether he was satisfied with the Federal Government’s effort at rescuing the kidnaped school girls, the cleric explained that: “More than that, if the Federal Government wants to do bravado, all those girls will all be dead.”

    He described the militants as very complex people who could distribute the girls to different locations.

    Okoh admonished Nigerians that any attempt to forcefully rescue the school girls could result in a worse problem.

    He said: “So, allow the government to take its time to rescue these people the way it knows how to and bring them back alive.

    “To my mind, bringing them alive is more important than allowing them to destroy lives of those girls. They could easily be rehabilitated when they are out. They could be sent to schools locally or abroad, there could be medical facilities to take care ogf them. Please lets be patient so that these girls can

    come back alive. Otherwise, Boko Haram has shown to everybody that it can kill.”

    Also speaking, the Bishop, Diocese of Kubwa, Reverend Duke Akamisoko, revealed that the National University Commission (NUC) has given approval for the commencement of academic activities in Anglican University in 2015.

  • Our close  shave  with death  in Kaduna  blasts -Injured survivors

    Our close shave with death in Kaduna blasts -Injured survivors

    July 23, 2014 might have passed like any other day, but not so for 37 innocent Nigerians who are currently receiving treatment in major hospitals in Kaduna. They will remember the day for yers to come as a black Wednesday.

    That was the day a twin bomb explosions rocked the Kaduna metropolis. The blast dispatched no fewer than 49 persons to the world beyond. Their 37 kinsmen are also in agonising pains just because they were unlucky to be at the right place at the wrong time.

    At the time of writing, majority of the victims were at the military hospital in the heart of Kaduna metropolis, receiving treatment on mattresses placed on bare floor.

    One of the injured survivors, nine-year-old Abubakar Usman, had left his family house at Hayin Damani in company with two of his siblings to Kawo Market to shop for Sallah wears. It was in that process that a deafening sound swept his feet off the ground.

    Damani said: “I heard the sound and the ground shook. At first, I thought I had gone deaf with the echoes of the sound from the explosion resounding in my ears. I could not hear what people were saying any longer. And I thought that was all until I tried to get up but could not. That was when I started feeling pains in my legs.

    “Some government workers came an carried me. They brought me to this place and told me that my leg is broken.”

    While two of Abubakar’s siblings survived the blast, he may have to celebrate his Sallah on his sick bed at 44 Army Reference Hospital. He sustained first degree burns and a fracture on his left leg.

    For Abdulrazak Suleiman, a generator repairer, it was the drive for business that turned him into a victim of bomb blast. His shop is located on Kano Road, about two kilometres to the scene of the incident. He told our correspondent that he was only honouring the call by a client to come and check a faulty generator.

    “I received the call with excitement, believing that I was going to make some money because I had been sitting down all day long without a job. So, I quickly jumped on my bike and rode down to Kawo.

    “On approaching my client’s shop, I was suddenly thrown off my bike and I hit my head on the ground. I still thank God that I didn’t die,” he said.

    Suleiman was being treated for head injury on account of the incident.

    A female victim, also at 44 Nigerian Army Reference Hospital, identified as Habiba Adamu, said she had travelled all the way from Birnin Kebbi to attend the grand finale of Sheik Dahiru Bauchi’s Ramadan Tafsir. She said she arrived in Kaduna safely, and like many other admirers of the Sheik, she waited to wave at the great Islamic scholar as he was driving out of the venue of the Tafsir.

    She said: “I was at the roadside when the Sheik passed. So, I wanted to leave immediately too, but I didn’t know what happened next until I woke up in the hospital in the night.

    “Now, look at me, It is as if hot water was poured all over my body. If I had known, I would not have left Birnin Kebbi yesterday. Now my children will have to celebrate Sallah without me.”

    At Yusuf Dantsoho Memorial Hospital, the victim still on admission there was a young man whose eye was blown off by the blasts. He was crying for help from government so that he could be flown abroad for treatment.

    The 18-year-old man named Ahmadu Bala was in critical condition on his hospital bed when The Nation correspondent visited the hospital.

    Narrating his ordeal to our correspondent in a faint tone, he said he was caught by the blast after leaving the venue of the Ramadan lecture by Sheik Dahiru Bauchi.

    According to him, “I was on my way back from the Tafsir (Ramadan lecture) at Murtala Square when I heard a loud sound. Before I knew what was happening, I found myself on the floor far away from where I remember standing.

    “I felt my head was very heavy. Before I realised it, my right eye had been blown off by the bomb and I lost consciousness. I was rushed to Yusuf Dantsoho Hospital here by a good Samaritan, as I was told after I regained consciousness.”

    The bomb victim said he came from a village called Labar, near Jaji, in Kaduna State just to attend the Sheik Dahiru Bauchi lecture. He pleaded with the concerned authorities to come to his aide so that he could stay alive.

    “I am pleading with the Kaduna State Government to look into my plight and take an urgent measure to save my life and the lives of others affected by the bomb,” he said.

    The Nation gathered from a source at the hospital that out of the five victims brought to the hospital, Bala’s case was the most serious. “His right eye is blown off. When they brought him in, we quickly took him to the operating room, took care of the wound and he is now stable and partially responding to treatment,” a male worker in the hospital said.

    He however said that Bala needed to be flown abroad for treatment. “We suggest that the government should, as a matter of urgency, fly the young man abroad for proper treatment because his eye as well as part of his skull was affected by the blast. If it is not treated promptly, the wound can get infected and it may have a long-term effect on the victim,” he said.

    He added that five victims of the bomb at Alkali Road were brought to the hospital when the blast occurred on Wednesday, but four of them came in with minor injuries and had been treated and discharged.

  • Our close shave with death in Kaduna blasts -Injured survivors

    Our close shave with death in Kaduna blasts -Injured survivors

    July 23, 2014 might have passed like any other day, but not so for 37 innocent Nigerians who are currently receiving treatment in major hospitals in Kaduna. They will remember the day for yers to come as a black Wednesday.

    That was the day a twin bomb explosions rocked the Kaduna metropolis. The blast dispatched no fewer than 49 persons to the world beyond. Their 37 kinsmen are also in agonising pains just because they were unlucky to be at the right place at the wrong time.

    At the time of writing, majority of the victims were at the military hospital in the heart of Kaduna metropolis, receiving treatment on mattresses placed on bare floor.

    One of the injured survivors, nine-year-old Abubakar Usman, had left his family house at Hayin Damani in company with two of his siblings to Kawo Market to shop for Sallah wears. It was in that process that a deafening sound swept his feet off the ground.

    Damani said: “I heard the sound and the ground shook. At first, I thought I had gone deaf with the echoes of the sound from the explosion resounding in my ears. I could not hear what people were saying any longer. And I thought that was all until I tried to get up but could not. That was when I started feeling pains in my legs.

    “Some government workers came an carried me. They brought me to this place and told me that my leg is broken.”

    While two of Abubakar’s siblings survived the blast, he may have to celebrate his Sallah on his sick bed at 44 Army Reference Hospital. He sustained first degree burns and a fracture on his left leg.

    For Abdulrazak Suleiman, a generator repairer, it was the drive for business that turned him into a victim of bomb blast. His shop is located on Kano Road, about two kilometres to the scene of the incident. He told our correspondent that he was only honouring the call by a client to come and check a faulty generator.

    “I received the call with excitement, believing that I was going to make some money because I had been sitting down all day long without a job. So, I quickly jumped on my bike and rode down to Kawo.

    “On approaching my client’s shop, I was suddenly thrown off my bike and I hit my head on the ground. I still thank God that I didn’t die,” he said.

    Suleiman was being treated for head injury on account of the incident.

    A female victim, also at 44 Nigerian Army Reference Hospital, identified as Habiba Adamu, said she had travelled all the way from Birnin Kebbi to attend the grand finale of Sheik Dahiru Bauchi’s Ramadan Tafsir. She said she arrived in Kaduna safely, and like many other admirers of the Sheik, she waited to wave at the great Islamic scholar as he was driving out of the venue of the Tafsir.

    She said: “I was at the roadside when the Sheik passed. So, I wanted to leave immediately too, but I didn’t know what happened next until I woke up in the hospital in the night.

    “Now, look at me, It is as if hot water was poured all over my body. If I had known, I would not have left Birnin Kebbi yesterday. Now my children will have to celebrate Sallah without me.”

    At Yusuf Dantsoho Memorial Hospital, the victim still on admission there was a young man whose eye was blown off by the blasts. He was crying for help from government so that he could be flown abroad for treatment.

    The 18-year-old man named Ahmadu Bala was in critical condition on his hospital bed when The Nation correspondent visited the hospital.

    Narrating his ordeal to our correspondent in a faint tone, he said he was caught by the blast after leaving the venue of the Ramadan lecture by Sheik Dahiru Bauchi.

    According to him, “I was on my way back from the Tafsir (Ramadan lecture) at Murtala Square when I heard a loud sound. Before I knew what was happening, I found myself on the floor far away from where I remember standing.

    “I felt my head was very heavy. Before I realised it, my right eye had been blown off by the bomb and I lost consciousness. I was rushed to Yusuf Dantsoho Hospital here by a good Samaritan, as I was told after I regained consciousness.”

    The bomb victim said he came from a village called Labar, near Jaji, in Kaduna State just to attend the Sheik Dahiru Bauchi lecture. He pleaded with the concerned authorities to come to his aide so that he could stay alive.

    “I am pleading with the Kaduna State Government to look into my plight and take an urgent measure to save my life and the lives of others affected by the bomb,” he said.

    The Nation gathered from a source at the hospital that out of the five victims brought to the hospital, Bala’s case was the most serious. “His right eye is blown off. When they brought him in, we quickly took him to the operating room, took care of the wound and he is now stable and partially responding to treatment,” a male worker in the hospital said.

    He however said that Bala needed to be flown abroad for treatment. “We suggest that the government should, as a matter of urgency, fly the young man abroad for proper treatment because his eye as well as part of his skull was affected by the blast. If it is not treated promptly, the wound can get infected and it may have a long-term effect on the victim,” he said.

    He added that five victims of the bomb at Alkali Road were brought to the hospital when the blast occurred on Wednesday, but four of them came in with minor injuries and had been treated and discharged.