Tag: Kashim Shettima

  • New ministry for Boko Haram victims in Borno

    New ministry for Boko Haram victims in Borno

    Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima has announced the creation of a new ministry that would take care of Boko Haram victims in the state.

    The governor announced the new ministry in Maiduguri on Wednesday at the swearing in of 21 new commissioners and Local Government care taker committee chairmen in the state and the swearing in of members of some boards.

    Named the ministry for Reconstruction, Rehabilitation and Resettlement, the new ministry is saddled with the burden of all internally displaced people in the state and the reconstruction of the affected communities.

    The establishment of the ministry marks a significant step in the post insurgency plan of the Borno State government.

    The new ministry is to be manned by Dr. Babagana Zulum who until his appointment was the Rector of the State owned Ramat Polytechnic in Maiduguri.

    According to the governor, the choice of Dr. Zulum for the ministry was “because of the manner he prudently initiated and supervised many buildings within Ramat Polytechnic out of passion for development of Borno State.”adding that,

    Dr Zulum had also successfully supervised the execution of some public buildings donated to the University of Maiduguri by Borno State Government, all of which were not only delivered in good time but also of very high quality despite use of less resources through direct labour”.


    Meanwhile, the Secretary to Borno Government, Alhaji Usman Jidda Shuwa has announced portfolios for the 20 commissioners sworn alongside Dr Zulum.

    The posting shows that Dr Mohammed Bulama retained his office as Commissioner for Home Affairs, Information and Culture; Adamu Alhaji Lawan takes on ministry of works and transport as commissioner, Hajiya Inna Galadima, Poverty Alleviation and Youth Empowerment, Yerima Lawan Kareto Trade, Investment and Tourism, Usman Ali Zanna Local Government and Emirate Affairs, Mohammed Aliyu Dilli Agriculture and Natural Resources, Zainab Gimba Water Resources, Dr. Haruna Mshelia Health and Human Services, Sugum Mai Mile Land and Survey and Babagana Tijjani Banking Housing and Rural Electrification.
    Others include Ahmed Usman Jaha as Commissioner Higher Education, Abubakar Ibrahim Babale Sport Development, Mohammed Kauji Finance Budget and Planning, Hon. Fanta Baba Shehu Women Affairs and Social Development, Hon. Musa Inuwa Kubo Education, Waziri Imam Environment, Hon. Kaka She hu Lawan Justice, and Magaji Wandeo Animal Fisheries and Develoment. The posting also has Hon. Ali Abatcha incharge of Inter- Governmental and Special Duties and Mustapha Fannarambe is Commissioner for Religious Affairs.
    Shettima had also sworn in caretaker chairmen of 27 local government areas whose names were released last week. The Governor also swore in Hassan Aminami as a permanent secretary.

  • Buhari brings new hope for Nigeria – Shettima

    Buhari brings new hope for Nigeria – Shettima

    Borno State governor, Kashim Shettima, has described the sequence of events that followed the inauguration of President Muhammadu Buhari on May 29 as a silver lining in the dark clouds that have hovered on the northern region for too long.

    According to Governor Shettima, the problems of insurgency, poverty and bad governance among others have turned the region into a laughing stock in recent years despite the good legacies handed over to the present generation of leaders by past leaders, especially the late Sardauna of Sokoto, Sir Ahmadu Bello.

    The governor spoke in his capacity as the chairman of the Northern Governors’ Forum at the opening ceremony of the maiden meeting of the Governors at State House, Kawo, in Kaduna, on Friday.

    He lamented the predicament of the region, saying things have become so bad that the region has “become a thriving nest for war, terrorism, deep seated social divisions, senseless violence, mind-boggling intolerance, injustice, destitution, joblessness, and all manners of other social vices, the height of which is the madness called Boko Haram.”

    “Things have become so bad, so much so that we can say without fear of contradiction that in Nigeria today poverty glaringly wears a bold Northern face. We have turned our region into a laughing stock, derided by friends and foes alike, and, not without justification, as having dragged the rest of the country down with us.”

    Governor Shettima told his colleagues that it was time to change and embrace “the cusp of a new era, the promise of a transition from seemingly interminable years of hardship, poverty and turmoil – the proverbial Locust Years – to a period of hope, prosperity and calm” as personified by the present national leadership.”

    He added:”For the first time since the early 1980s, the political leadership of the Northern states is poised to reverse the negative trends that had so readily sown the destructive seed of mutual suspicion, distrust and animosity among the teeming people that occupy the vast lands of our states. I can see the signs of sincere effort and genuine optimism to draw strength in our diversity and change the narrative of our troubled history in the interest of our region’s history, and indeed, the rest of Nigeria.

    “As leaders of our people at this crucial epoch of our history, and democratically elected ones at that, we are left with no choice but to rise up to the occasion and live up to people’s perfectly understandable  expectations. We must seize this moment, for history is beckoning at us.”

  • Boko Haram: The vindication of Shettima

    Boko Haram: The vindication of Shettima

    For the Governor of Borno State, Kashim Shettima, February 17 last year was probably one of the most unforgettable days in his life. On that day he went to Aso Villa, Abuja, the country’s presidential residence, to brief ex-President Goodluck Jonathan about, and seek succour, from the Boko Haram insurrection in his Northeast region, which had turned his state in particular into the main theatre of the war. He briefed the president alright, but instead of succour, he suffered excoriation not only from the president himself, but also from some of the president’s men, who tried to sound angrier than their principal.

    Shettima’s offence was to have spoken truth to power when he told the Aso Villa correspondents shortly after briefing the president that our soldiers were losing the war against Boko Haram not because they lacked courage, but because they were under-armed and poorly motivated.

    “In fairness to the officers and men of the Nigerian army and the police,” he told the journalists, “they are doing their best, given the circumstance they have found themselves. But honestly Boko Haram are better armed and better motivated than our own troops.”

    The following day, Dr Doyin Okupe, a senior presidential spokesman, apparently unimpressed by Shettima’s careful choice of words, countered the governor by describing him as an “illiterate” in military matters, who wouldn’t understand the mysterious ways in which soldiers moved to defeat the enemy.

    Not to be outdone, the Minister of Information, who at the time happened to be the Acting Defence Minister, Mr. Labaran Maku, also said Shettima committed “serious indiscretion” by apparently denigrating the military. He, along with the military top hierarchy, barely stopped short of dismissing Shettima as unpatriotic.

    The boss himself was more measured in his choice of words, but he was apparently no less angry with Shettima than his men. “If we pull out the military from Borno State,” he said seemingly jokingly, “let us see if he will be able to stay in Government House.” He was never really likely to have carried out his threat. But that he issued it at all spoke volumes about how he felt about the governor.

    Shettima was not the only person to have spoken out about his concern with the effectiveness of our soldiers in fighting Boko Haram. Indeed, in doing so he merely echoed widespread public worry with the slow speed of the war against the sect. Definitely his words were less harsh than those of a military officer, whose letter to his commander-in-chief was published by Saharareporters on December 15, 2004. ”The fact about NE (North-East) operation,” the officer said, “is that we are poorly equipped, understaffed, high corruption from Army Headquarters down to battalion level. Commanders see it as opportunity to make money.”

    The Governor of Adamawa State, retired Admiral Murtala Nyako, said even worse things about the prosecution of the war. The ostensible war against Boko Haram, he said in effect at a three-day symposium in America, was “a nurtured war against the people in Northern Nigeria.” This was at a symposium on “Current Economic, Social and Security Challenges Facing Northern Nigeria” organised by US Institute of Peace between March 17 and 19, 2014.

    On his return home, the governor repeated the same accusation in an open letter to his 19 northern colleagues. He paid a price with his office when he was impeached, ostensibly for corruption, and even went on self-exile for his dear life.

    Yet, Shettima’s much more cautious criticism of the conduct of the war last year barely saved him from being declared persona non grata from Aso Villa.

    Events since July 30 when the erstwhile Chief of Defence Staff (CDS), Air Marshal Alex Badeh, was pulled out of service following his recent retirement along with the other service chiefs, must have since made Shettima both happy and sad at the same time – happy that he has at last been personally vindicated and sad that his vindication is hardly a thing any sensible person should celebrate, given the prolonged suffering of Nigerians from the Boko Haram insurrection, especially those in its main theatre.

    For Shettima, personal vindication couldn’t have come better than the say-so of Air Marshal Badeh as CDS. “The last time any piece of equipment was bought for the army,” he said during an interview with Channels TV several days after his pulling out parade, “was some APCs (armoured personnel carriers) that were bought in 2006 and how many were they?” The Air Force, he said, flew “the oldest airplanes in the whole world.” He had made similar remarks in his valedictory speech during the parade.

    As if to counter Badeh’s damaging admission that the military has long suffered neglect, PR Nigeria, a controversial media consultant to some of our security services including the DSS and the military, said in a statement it issued on August 6, that in its twilight, the administration of former President Jonathan did acquire sophisticated weapons to fight Boko Haram in spite of the obstacle thrown in its path by Western nations. The weapons, PR Nigeria said, “were acquired  in the last one year after years of frustration by Western powers…We utilised some of these equipment to recover more than 22 local governments under Boko Haram terrorists and ensured that (Abubakar) Shekau (its leader) did not disrupt the 2015 elections as he had threatened.”

    However, far from debunking Badeh’s admission that the military had suffered neglect for too long, PR Nigeria only succeeded in buttressing his point. The war against Boko Haram has been on since 2009 when the military first moved against it and routed the sect from its Maiduguri stronghold. Or so we thought. For, the sect returned in 2010 with vengeance, kidnapping girls, destroying property, maiming and killing people, civilians and uniformed men alike, with greater ferocity than it did before 2009.

    By PR Nigeria’s own admission, the military was only properly equipped to fight the insurrectionists only a year ago. The excuse was that the West had refused to cooperate with Nigeria in acquiring weapons because it said it had ample evidence that the military used them indiscriminately against civilians.  PR Nigeria’s excuse is plausible. Even then it does not answer the obvious question of what happened to the tens of billions of Naira that were budgeted year in year out for the weapons and for the welfare of the security forces.

    If the authorities had regarded Shettima’s cautious criticism of the operation against Boko Haram last year as food for thought rather than cause for anger, they would probably have realised that the answer to what happened to the billions lied partly in their decision to shift the procurement of weapons from the Ministry of Defence (MOD) where it rightly belonged to the office of the National Security Agency under the favoured late General Andrew Owoye Azazi, who, as a General Officer Commanding, 1 Division, Kaduna, between January 2005 and July 2006, was implicated in, but was never charged with, the massive stealing of arms under his division and selling them to Niger Delta militants.

    The shift of the procurement of weapons from MOD to NSA was ostensibly to make it more efficient and corruption-proof. Instead it made matters far worse on both counts because the checks and balances that limited the scale of corruption at MOD were completely absent at NSA.

    If, as is obvious, corruption was part of the answer to the poor capacity of our armed forces in fighting Boko Haram, another answer came to the surface in the valedictory speech by the Chief of Army Staff, Lt-General Kenneth Minimah, during his pulling out parade on August 5.

    Like Badeh along with whom he was retired, he correctly observed that the army had suffered neglect for a long time. “I was,” he said, “confronted with the decay in the service due to long periods of neglect the army had suffered.” However, like Badeh, he conveniently forgot to identify those who, for about 15 years after the civilians took over power in 1999, hardly did anything to end the self-neglect by the previous military regimes. Instead he chose, implausibly in my view, to blame some faceless people for using the insurrection to advance what he said were their sectional, tribal, religious and personal interests.

    “Because,” he said, “if we had all stood against the terrorists at the onset through public condemnation of their activities and active collaboration with the military to confront them rather than use it as a tool to advance sectional, tribal, religious and political interests, we would not have been where we are today.”

    Even without naming names it is pretty obvious that Minimah’s accusation was directed at the erstwhile opposition, which is now in power. But if the general cared for the truth, he would have been the first to admit that those in power until May – and that includes himself – were even more guilty of his charge as they tried to use everything they could to retain power.

    The lesson in all this is obvious: we cannot neglect our armed forces by stealing their budgets and expect them to stand up to an enemy of the State, while at the same time we cannot expect public support for any war against the enemy of the State if our armed forces indiscriminately attack civilians under the guise of ending the war.

  • Boko Haram ‘seeks talks with govt’

    Boko Haram ‘seeks talks with govt’

    [dropcap]S[/dropcap]ome Boko Haram elements are seeking dialogue with the Federal Government, the Centre for Crisis Communication (CCC), an independent Non-Governmental Organisation, said yesterday.

    The development—should it be genuine— will bring a ray of hope that the seeming intractable insurgency in the Northeast will stop.

    Breaking the news, the CCC confirmed that some insurgents approached it to facilitate a channel of dialogue between them and the Federal Government.

    The Centre’s Executive Secretary, Air Commodore Yusuf Anas (rtd), made the disclosure at a news conference in Abuja.

    Commodore Anas, who was the immediate spokesman for the Nigerian Air Force, also spoke on other national issues including: terrorism, cattle rustling, National Assembly crisis, pipeline vandalism, kidnapping, armed robbery and  Radio Biafra among others

    He said: “The Boko Haram challenges have continued to become an intractable crisis situation to our nation. Borno State Governor, Kashim Shettima said that more than three million innocent Nigerians from Borno, Yobe, Adamawa and parts of Nigeria live in deep agony having lost their sons, daughters, fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, relations and neighbours after brutally being attacked by members of Boko Haram.

    “Indeed, many of our citizens are now orphans, widows and forced to become refugees within and outside our country.

    “Over the years, government has been pursuing the terrorists with the aim of ending insurgency.

    “Although, some level of successes has been recorded in degrading the volatility of the terrorists, they are far from being defeated.

    “Some prominent Nigerians have in recent times canvassed the idea of dialogue with the Boko Haram.

    “The option of dialogue, according to them, at the moment provides a leeway of not only safely rescuing the abducted Chibok schoolgirls alive, but also possibly bringing to an end the orgy of violence unleashed on innocent citizens by the group.

    “Considering the unspeakable atrocities which the group has visited on Nigeria and Nigerians, this option is no doubt a hard sell. However, the recent statement by President Muhammadu Buhari on government’s readiness to negotiate with credible members of the sect has rekindled the hope for dialogue.

    “The centre views this gesture as good. It has opened a window of opportunity for dialogue for those insurgents that are willing and ready to lay down their arms.

    “This position is predicated on calls made to this centre by some members of the Boko Haram requesting for genuine and comprehensive dialogue that could lead to hundreds of them coming out to renounce their membership.

    “The centre, however, suggests that such dialogue should be done with every sense of caution and responsibility, bearing in mind the previous disappointments that attended attempts at negotiations.

    “Nevertheless, the centre will continue to support and encourage all efforts towards bringing insurgency to an end in our country.”

    The retired Air Force chief warned against the resurrection of militancy in Niger Delta by the outlawed Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta (MEND).

    He said if there were genuine grievances with the Amnesty Programme, legitimate avenues and appropriate channels should be exploited.

    His words: “The centre is equally agitated by the recent moves to resurrect the once rested Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta (MEND).

    “It was purported to have planned a meeting of its old brigade members on 25, July 2015 in Yenagoa. The arrow head of the meeting is no other person than Mr. Tompolo along with some Ijaw youth.

    “Although, Mr. Tompolo denied attempting to resurrect the rested militant group, the last may not have been heard on the issue. Nigerians will recall how this deadly group almost crippled the nation’s oil production from 2005 until when late President Umaru Yar’Adua initiated the Amnesty Programme.

    “Since the inception of the Amnesty Programme, billions of naira has been and is still being spent to address the youth challenges of the region.

    “The appointment of Brig.- Gen. Peter Boroh (rtd) will no doubt energise the programme. If there are genuine grievances with the Amnesty programme, legitimate avenues and appropriate channels should be exploited.

    “However, the full wrath of the law should be brought to bear on any individual or group that wants to engineer crisis aimed at militating against the socio-economic development of our dear nation.”

    On the herdsmen clashes with farmers, the CCC chief said it has reached an alarming proportion as ‘it always precipitates bloody clashes’ leaving scores of people dead in different parts of the country, especially in Taraba, Plateau, Benue, Kaduna, Nassarawa, Niger and other states over grazing rights.

    He said: This recurring but often violent crisis perpetrated by unknown hoodlums has continued to traumatise innocent and enterprising Nigerians engaged in cattle rearing and farming.

    “The crisis is perhaps accentuated by the economic hardship and joblessness. The Centre has received hundreds of calls from several parts of the north over this issue.

    “Instances abound where hoodlums send letters to cattle breeders especially Fulanis and farmers to pay hundreds of thousands of naira or even millions as ransom to avert attacks.”

    He praised Kaduna State Governor, Nasir El-Rufai for setting up the ‘Cattle Initiative’ to curtail the excesses of cattle rustlers.

    Anas said: “The Centre is calling on governments at all levels to ensure every action aimed at finding a lasting-solution to enable the return of normalcy in every nook and crannies of our communities.

    “The Centre believes that more discussions and legislative actions at the states and National Assembly levels are needed now on the propriety or otherwise of creating or delineating grazing areas in the country.”

    On the lingering National Assembly crisis, the CCC appealed to all the contending individuals, groups or parties to ‘shield their swords’ in national interest “knowing how far-reaching and negative effect political crisis of this dimension could continue to be in inflaming passions, creating divisive tendencies, and ultimately translating in crisis.”

    He urged the legislators to emulate President Buhari and slash their remunerations to “demonstrate to Nigerians that they are also sympathetic to the current financial challenges of the nation and ready to make sacrifices to make Nigeria better.”

  • Borno elders demand Jonathan’s apology over killings

    Borno elders demand Jonathan’s apology over killings

    Following the disclosure by the immediate past Chief of Defense Staff, Alex Badeh that the Nigerian troops were ill equipped for the fight against Boko Haram, Borno Elders’ Forum on Tuesday called on former president Goodluck Jonathan to make an unreserved apology to the people of the state for his failure to handle the crisis.

    The forum in a statement signed by its chairman, Amb. Usman Gaji Galtimari, wondered why Governor Kashim Shettima was “almost hanged to death” when he made the same assertion as Badeh.

    The elders were also shocked that Badeh was complacent with a sensitive issue that led to massive loss of lives and property without justification.

    “What particularly baffles the Borno Elders’ Forum was that at some point in 2014, the Governor of Borno State, Kashim Shettima, had said it publicly after assessing the true situation as the man on ground that troops deployed in the fight against insurgents seriously lacked and required better military equipment and that those at battle fronts were poorly motivated. Several voices were raised in support of the Governor’s position.

    “The Governor’s comments were completely rebuffed by the then President of Nigeria  who went as far as threatening to withdraw soldiers from Borno as he spoke on live television interview relayed by the Nigerian Television Authority, at a Presidential Media Chat. Not only did the President rebuke the Governor and by extension, the people of Borno State, his aides followed suite and roundly condemned the Governor,” the statement said.

    The elders in the light of Badeh’s confession, which according to them has vindicated the governor, demanded the following:

    –  A National Judicial Commission of Enquiry under an incorruptible judge from preferably the Southern Nigeria be set up to ask the immediate past President questions on why his administration refused to provide the military with the required functional and superior equipment whereas our sons and daughters were exposed to mass murder, severe injuries and grave destructions of our communities

    – If the former government is found wanting it should be charged for genocide against the people of Borno State or at least criminal negligence at the International Criminal Court of Justice.

    – The retired CDS retired should also be asked why he kept silent when the military under his command was not provided with the right equipment. He had the option of speaking or resigning as he ought to have done in order to draw attention of the world and by that he would have saved lives of Borno people.

    – A list of citizens of Borno State killed from the time the issue of military capacity became in question, is compiled and relations of those killed are fully compensated for the death of their loved ones as a result of criminal negligence.

    – A list of soldiers sent on missions without being properly equipped and exposed to death at different battle fronts in Borno State, is also compiled and that they are specifically celebrated with their survivors fully compensated since their bread winners died not just in combat but out of negligence of those in authority.

    – An unreserved apology is tendered by the immediate past President and his service chiefs to the people of Borno State, especially those lost relations and also to Governor Kashim Shettima for all the humiliation he was made to suffer for telling the truth about capacity of the military at that time.

  • Maiduguri airport reopens with 82 passengers

    About 82 passengers including Governor Kashim Shettima and the Managing Director and Chief Executive of Med-View Airline Alhaji Munir Alamin Bankole were among the first set of passengers that flew into Maiduguri International Airport on Friday afternoon marking the resumption of commercial flights at the airport  after its closure  due to the Boko Haram activities.

    The Federal Airports Authority of Nigeria (FAAN) has resumed international and local flights at the Maiduguri International Airport, 18 months after its closure by the Military over Boko Haram attacks of Nigerian Air Force (NAF) base on December 2, 2013.

    Governor Kashim Shettima who among the passengers on board  the flight from Lagos to Maiduguri conveyed the joy of Borno people over the resumption of flights at the airport, adding that  “full local and international flights, including the airlifting of pilgrims to Saudi Arabia will now commence at the airport.

    His words: “This bears testimony to the cordial relationship between the Federal Government under the able leadership of President Muhammadu Buhari and the Borno state government. It was quite regrettable for over six million people to been denied flight services, because of the ongoing Boko Haram insurgency in the North East sub-region of this country.

    “Our gratitude goes to the Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of Med-View, Alhaji Munir Alamin Bankole for resuming flights to this airport, 18 months after its closure for any political reason. Flights get in and out of Bagdad, Kabul and Damascus airports, and there was no any other reason for anyone to close this airport for political reason.

    “Our intending pilgrims from now will no more travel by road to any of the airports in Gombe, Kano and Bauchi; and to be airlifted for their pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia,” Shettima said.

  • Shettima visits Bama Town

    Shettima visits Bama Town

    Solicits FG, donor agencies support for rebuilding projects

    Governor Kashim Shettima of Borno State has called on the Federal Government and international donor agencies to help the state rebuild communities destroyed by Boko Haram insurgents.

    Shettima, who visited the ancient city of Bama was visibly sad with the level of destruction in the town after it was annexed by insurgents in September 1 last year.

    The governor, who visited the Shehu of Bama, Alhaji Kyari Ibn- Umar Ibrahim Elkanemi, on Wednesday, commended the military and other security forces for liberating the town from insurgents, urging them not to relent in their efforts.

    He said, “I am here to condole the troops and the people of Bama over the spate of killings and destruction of our communities by insurgents. We will deploy all resources to rebuild the destroyed houses.

    “I have gone round the town and no government structure is still standing, 90 per cent of people’s houses, shops, places of worships, banks have been destroyed. But I can assure you that we are here to assess the level of damage so that government will rebuild them to allow our displaced people come back and continue their normal lives.

    “We have brought in surplus of food items for our troops and men of the civilian JTF who have sacrificed their dear lives for progress of our state and the northeast region.

    “I want to seize this opportunity to appeal to federal government under the incoming administration of Gen. Muhammad Buhari, international donor agencies and philanthropic organizations to come to our aide so that we can rebuild all our destroyed communities for people to go back to their homes.”

  • Free food in Borno

    Free food in Borno

    Borno State government yesterday launched the 29th edition of the Free Food Distribution (FFD).

    The ceremony was performed by Governor Kashim Shettima, who hailed the dedication of the Borno State Emergency  Management  Agency (BSEMA).

    He praised the agency for its commitment in free food distribution in the metropolis since its inception.

    Shettima sympathised with the people.

    He noted that  “the prevailing challeges in the state are  beyond religious and regional or ethnic problems”, assuring that “government will do its best to cater for the  people and restore peace.

    “Insurgency in the state and in the Northeast requires constitutional responsibility. The state government will  show its concern and care for the welfare and living condition of its citizens.”

    Deputy Governor Zanna Umar Mustapha slammed  the Federal  Government  for the insecurity in the state and in the Northeast.

    He said it was sad that the insurgency had displaced many people.

    The deputy governor lauded the initiative of the free food distribution by his boss, stressing that the programme had touched lives.

    He enjoined the people to vote credible candidates,  who would deliver the dividends of democracy.

    The Executive Chairman of the Borno State Emergency Management  Agency,  Shani Grema Terab, said the exercise was the 29th in the series of the FFD.

  • Shettima appoints two ex-deputy governors as advisers, others

    Shettima appoints two ex-deputy governors as advisers, others

    Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima has appointed two former deputy governors as Honorary Special Advisers.

    They are: Alhaji Shettima Dibal, who served under the Senator Ali Modu Sheriff, from 2003 till 2011 and Alhaji Abubakar Jatau, who worked with the late Governor Mala Kachallah from 1999 till 2003.

    A statement by the governor said Dibal and Jatau would serve as honorary special advisers on Politics.

    Other Honourary Special Advisers included Prof. Umaru Shehu (Primary Health Care); Ibrahim Ali (Agriculture); former Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) National Chairman, Chief Audu Ogbe (Industry); Secretary of the Borno Elders’ Forum, Bulami Mali Gubio (Education) and Prof. Dili Dogo, of the University of Maiduguri (Health).

    Malam Isa Gusau was re-appointed, apparently to return to his former office as the Special Adviser on Media.

    Other appointees were selected from the 27 local government areas.

  • ‘Polls must hold in Borno, Yobe, Adamawa’

    Norno State Governor Kashim Shettima has declared that holding elections in the embattled states of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states is not a privilege but a constitutional right of the people.

    Shettima spoke with reporters shortly after the inaugural meeting of the Northeast Presidential Campaign Council of the All Progressives Congress (APC) at the Zaranda Hotel, Bauchi.

    He said: “When people talk about not holding elections in this part of the country, it is not a privilege but a right that we should participate in the elections as contained in the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 as amended and as contained in the electoral act as amended.”