Tag: Kashim Shettima

  • Borno is not about Boko Haram alone, says Shettima

    Borno is not about Boko Haram alone, says Shettima

    Governor Kashim Shettima of Borno State says there are many good things in the state other than the Boko Haram insurgency.

    Shettima, speaking at the 2013 Press Week and Northeast zonal meeting of the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) in Maiduguri, said the state is better now than it was two years ago and that the current insurgency will soon fizzle out.

    “Most Nigerians have imagined fears about Borno mainly due to what they hear or read as news about us. I am sure that our visitors now have a different or less scary opinion of Maiduguri,” he said.

    “You must have seen the traffic on the roads contrary to impressions you might have formed that roads were empty; you must have seen commercial activities in place as against fears you might have had that no businesses existed.

    “You might have seen some projects, few I must say, from what we are doing across the state; in sharp contrast with an impression you might have had that government was at stand still.”

    He asked the journalists to tell other Nigerians and the rest of the world what Borno is and not what it is thought to be.

    He added:”Borno is not all about Boko Haram and I will call on the media to tell more of our real stories. There are many good things happening in Borno State on all sectors.

    “I am glad that Maiduguri is today safer than it ever was in the last two years and the rest of the state is also picking up even though we still have some challenges we are working very hard to surmount.”

  • Shettima, Geidam reject Jega’s proposal

    Shettima, Geidam reject Jega’s proposal

    •Say election must hold in states 2015

    Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima yesterday said plans to suspend election in Borno, Yobe and other insurgency flashpoints in 2015 is a defeatist approach and a setback for Nigeria.

    His Yobe State counterpart, Ibrahim Geidam, said the plan will give Boko Haram a feeling of triumph.

    Their comments followed a statement by the Chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prof. Attahiru Jega, that election might not hold in flashpoint states.

    But Geidam said the December 28 local government election will go on as planned.

    Shettima said he is hopeful that peace would have returned to states which Boko Haram has been holding hostage.

    He said a special security arrangement for the affected states would have been better than out rightly succumbing to Boko Haram threats.

    The governor stated that Borno is safer now than when the 2011 poll was conducted.

    In a statement by his Special Adviser on Communication, Mallam Isa Gusau, the governor said: “One important thing we should not ignore as a sovereign country is that suspending national election on account of Boko Haram activities would amount to making the insurgents supreme over the republic, it will be defeatist on our part as a nation.

    “The goal of Boko Haram is to impose its beliefs on us, subvert our constitution and our democracy and replace them with inhuman laws that support killings and destructions and should we suspend election in any part of the country, the insurgents would be presupposed successful on their part and itching close to achieving their goals and we cannot allow that.

    “We must insist that Nigeria is our sovereign country, we are the majority and a few cannot violently force their views on us.

    “I expect that as a strategy, Borno and Yobe and indeed any place so affected by the insurgents, should be the main focus for conduct of the 2015 elections so that we send a clear message to those who want us to go into extinction that we will not cave in to their violent needs, we will move on.

    “This is why, governance hasn’t for one day, stopped in Borno State. With Allah’s help made through the sacrifices, rooted support and prayers of our citizens, we have continued to rebuild and reinvent our very dear state.

    “I, therefore, call on the Federal Government, stakeholders and friends of Nigeria to look at the issue with analytical mindset far beyond what reasons we might be talking about now.

    Geidam made his position known in a statement through his Special Adviser on Press Affairs and Information, Abdullahi Bego. He said: “There is no reason why Boko Haram should not be routed out by security forces.

    “The state of emergency in Yobe, Borno and Adamawa states, renewed for additional six months last November, is due to expire in April.

    “By INEC’s own estimation, the 2015 general elections will hold in January-February 2015. That’s at least eight months after the current state of emergency would have lapsed. Is the INEC National Chairman therefore predicting that the emergency situation will extend indefinitely?

    “The Yobe State government also believes that there is no reason why Boko Haram terrorists would not be routed, their activities stopped and peace and stability restored within the remaining months of the current emergency rule.”

  • Re-open Maiduguri Airport, Shettima urges NAMA

    Re-open Maiduguri Airport, Shettima urges NAMA

    Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima has urged the Nigerian Airspace Management Agency (NAMA) to re-open the Maiduguri International Airport.

    The governor directed the Secretary to the State Government to visit Arik Airline to discuss resumption of flight operations to Maiduguri from Lagos and Abuja.

    Shettima told NAMA’s Managing Director Mazi Nnamdi Udoh that he was there to appeal for the re-opening of the Maiduguri Airport, which was closed two weeks ago.

    The governor noted the airport is very critical to Borno people as one of its major links to rest of Nigeria and the world.

    He noted that the government, in collaboration with security agencies, has taken measures to ensure enhanced security of the airport and its facilities as well as increased surveillance of roads to secure the lives of both land and air passengers.

    Shettima said the government was ready to support NAMA to ensure successful flight operations.

    He noted that being a transit airspace, the airport is critical to international travellers departing from other parts of Nigeria.

    Udoh said the visit was a testimony to Shettima’s concern and commitment to the progress of Borno State.

    He said NAMA will begin the repairs of some of its facilities at the airport, indicating that the airport would be opened when the repairs are completed.

    The NAMA MD, however, called for security assurance because of the strategic nature of the airport.

    The airport was closed on December 2, following attacks by Boko Haram insurgents on Army and Airforce bases, located metres away from the airport.

    Shettima also met with officials of the Nigeria Customs in Lagos over the clearance of 400 containers of agricultural equipment imported by the state.

  • Shettima: Warming up  for second term

    Shettima: Warming up for second term

    Uneasy lies the head of Kashim Shettima, the governor of Borno State, as he confronts the menace of Boko Haram and mounting internal opposition to his government by his estranged godfather, Senator Ali Modu Sheriff.

    The governor is not a run-of-the-mill politician. He is a professional in politics trying to do things differently. But his attention has been diverted by the insecurity in the Northeast zone, where the insurgents are on rampage. At least, four local governments are paralysed by the sect. Shettima inherited the challenge, but he has not been able to overcome it, despite the declaration of a state of emergency by the Federal Government. The only solace is that Maiduguri, the state capital, is now relatively peaceful.

    When the All Progressives Congress (APC) governors visited Borno early in the year, they marveled at the achievement of the governor, who they described as a silent worker. He was hailed for his strides across the sectors. “You will be surprised that Shettima has achieved a lot, despite the problems facing the state. He has lived to expectation”, Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi, who was on the entourage, later told reporters in Lagos.

    Described by stakeholders as a kind, intelligent and humble administrator, Shettima has demystified power by not allowing power to use him, instead of using power for public good. His strength lies in the power of his ideas and devotion to principles. Those attributes came into play during the Nigerian Governors’ Forum (NGF) crisis. Guided by his conscience and principle, he refused to sign on the NFG consensus candidate, Plateau State Governor Jonah Jang, despite pressures. Shettima reasoned that, although he belonged to the Northern Governors’ Forum, he could not go against the position of the APC Governors’ Forum, which stood in antithetical relationship with the mission of the Northern governors.

    Sources said that, when he was also contacted to show interest in the NGF chairmanship, the Borno State governor objected, saying that Boko Haram insurgency was enough challenge. He said nobody in his position should covet another responsibility that will frequently take him out of the state.

    To many people, Shettima has made a lot of difference in the state. His consensus building spirit has inspired him to extend frontiers of cooperation and spread tentacles of influence in the troubled state. Following his inauguration, he appealed to the indigenes to jettison politics and brace up for the work of development. Ahead of the poll, he collaborated with influential blocs in the state. In fact, a source said that his deputy was nominated by Kasim Imam, a prominent Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftain.

    The governor also set up a cabinet of talents. Although he deferred to the party elders in selecting the members of the State Executive Council, he refused to sacrifice merit and standard on the altar of partisanship. Besides, the governor is a bridge builder and unifying factor. In his cabinet are special advisers of Igbo, Hausa and Niger Delta origins. Many believe that he has an unfinished business, which makes a second term compelling.

    The governor has a cosmopolitan disposition. That is the point of departure. His benefactor, Sheriff, has converted his rural essence into a potent political asset. He is the man of the people. Those who hate him politically, owing to this political aggression and ruthlessness, have not seen another alternative leader in the state. As vindictive as the senator is, the public perception of his personality as the towering strategist and tactician has not diminished. Thus, party followers, despite their admiration for Shettima, still wait for instruction on the way forward in Borno in 2015 from him.

    Sheriff is a popular progressive politician with deep links with the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). As the All Nigerian Peoples Party (ANPP) governor for eight years, he had largely succeeded in insulating the state from the PDP control, despite his intimacy with former President Olusegun Obasanjo. Now, even as the APC leader in the Northeast, he still enjoys close relationship with President Goodluck Jonathan. A source said that the relationship may even yield a ministerial slot for his camp.

    The APC has become a blessing to Borno under Shettima. Defectors from the ANPP are returning to the new mega party.

  • Shettima visits Konduga

    Shettima visits Konduga

  • Borno governor accepts emergency rule, begs citizens

    Borno governor accepts emergency rule, begs citizens

    The Governor of Borno State, Alhaji Kashim Shettima, on Wednesday backed the imposition of a state of emergency on the state.

    He begged the citizens of the state to avoid being caught by the strange rules.

    He also warned the military to operate under the rules of engagement so that innocent lives and their properties are jealously preserved and protected.

    Shettima, who made the government’s position known in a state broadcast pleaded with Boko Haram to accept dialogue offer by the Federal Government.

    He said: “Fellow citizens, as you may be aware, the President, Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, has in exercise of his constitutional powers, declared a State of Emergency in our dear state, following the spate of killings and destructions of properties that have pervaded us.

    “It is the constitutional responsibility of the President to take such measures. It is also the duty of any responsible state government, to support lawful efforts that would guarantee the security of lives and properties.

    “It can never be the wish of any guarded democratic government to have the military directly involved in the affairs of any federating unit except for unfortunate and painful causes.

    “As the military leaders have said in discourses, the armoury of the Nigerian soldiers is not meant to fight fellow Nigerians, the armory is meant to protect fellow Nigerians.

    “A human life is sacred, more so, the life of every good Nigerian, no matter whose’ it is; and we all have moral, spiritual and social obligations to preserve and respect the lives of one another as we would want ours to be so preserved and respected. Allah has said emphatically in the Holy Quran that he has dignified every human being, He has placed high premium on the sacredness of human lives and as His dignified creatures; we should obediently respect the lives of fellow creatures.

    “Let us be our brothers’ keepers, hold our arms in the true Borno spirit that we were hitherto known for, so that we rise together as one people with shared passion for our collective progress.

    “We are facing a trying time that I believe without blind optimism, that we will overcome in no distant time bi iznillah.”

    The governor urged the people of the state to avoid being caught by the strange rules of emergency situation.

     

  • Ali Monguno released

    Ali Monguno released

    Elder statesman Shettima Ali Monguno, who was abducted on Friday, has re-united with his family after he was released by the kidnappers on Monday.

    Governor Kashim Shettima of Borno State told journalists in Maiduguri that Monguno was released by his abductors on Monday morning in Kirenowa, in Marte Local Government Area of the state.

    The News Agency of Nigeria reports that unknown gunmen had abducted the 87-year-old Monguno after Friday prayers at his mosque in Mafoni, Maiduguri.

    Shettima, who visited the elder statesman at his Government Reservation Area residence, explained that no ransom was paid for his release.

    He said, “We are all elated and overwhelmed to hear of his release.

    “I congratulate all of us for his release, hoping that God will give him the good health and strength to continue with his humanitarian gestures.”

    The governor said the abductors of Monguno made contact with the family after several appeals from Nigerians for his release.

    He added that the abductors were touched by the numerous appeals and they decided to release him unconditionally.

    The governor said, “They contacted his family after several appeals from Nigerians for his release.

    “But his family also made an appeal to the abductors to release him.

    “They sent words that he should be picked in the morning, so we sent his personal aides with a vehicle to get him home.”

    Shettima insisted that no money was given for the release of the elder statesman as he had no money to give.

    He said, “Obviously Monguno was a philanthropist, who had spent all he had in the cause of humanity.

    “So the issue of money was out of it because the family had no money to pay. “It is just that the abductors decided to release him after numerous appeals from Nigerians.”

    Monguno was a one- time Minister of Internal Affairs, as well as Minister of Defence in charge of the Nigeria Air Force.

     

  • Listen to the oracle called Kashim

    Listen to the oracle called Kashim

    There are some occasions in one’s life, one French philosopher once posited, “which neither time nor circumstances can change nor obliterate from one’s memory,” the administration of Borno State by Governor Kashim Shettima constitutes one of such occasions. Caught from the onset in the web of socio-economic hydra-headed problems compounded by serious security challenges, Kashim had to bolster through the debris of catastrophe. Poverty was staring its ugly face on the masses, unemployment surging, hunger looming and above all threat to lives and properties became manifest. If most governors who took the mantle of office on May 29, 2011 were jubilitating and dancing, Kashim couldn’t because his was a legacy of problems and blood stained banner. In short, he inherited a debit balance sheet interms of peace which is pivot and a hallmark of any meaningful development. Thus the assumption of Governor Kashim into office was indeed a watershed in the history of Borno as it was an era born into uncertainties to fend to certainties. The state was becoming a no go area due to Boko Haram onslaught and other security challenges resulting into deaths, arson and even assassination.. Borno was now begging for survival from downward precipice.

    However, not withstanding the enormity of challenges, Kashim chose to embark on this tortuous journey guided by the inspirational words of Edgar Guest who said “there are thousands to tell you it cannot be done; there are thousands to prophesy failure and there are thousands to point out to you one by one the dangers that lie ahead. Just take off your coat and go to it, just start to sing and you tackle the thing that cannot be done and you’ll do it.”

    Today, Kashim’s administration through various poverty alleviation programmes has put smile on the faces of many youths. While some of the dormant industries are getting lease of life employing new hands, issues of strikes by teachers of primary and tertiary institutions inherited have been resolved; students allowances increased, farming getting boost through provision of fertilizers and other equipment and victims of security onslaught gradually being rehabilitated and compensated. Inshort, in its relentless pursuit to good governance, Kashim’s administration has put in place interim and long term measures to address the socio-economic challenges facing the state. Some of the measures have yielded results, some are yielding and others expected.

    Inspite of the gains recorded so far, the security challenges are still very much around, though there have been some respite. Fully aware that peace is the cardinal point of all development, Kashim from the onset of his administration has been very outspoken and blunt in his address or meetings with the stakeholders in this regard. His persistent brutal frankness and disposition have endeared many to him and giving hope to the hopeless. Some are however not comfortable with this disposition of his while others are watching. For example, speaking at the Government House in Maiduguri recently when a delegation of the Military led by the Chief of Defense StaffAir Marshall Oluseyi Petirin called on him, Governor Kashim reiterated once more that the unity of Nigeria is not negotiable. According to him it is not feasible to tell Christians in the north to leave just as it is not tenable to tell Muslims in the south to leave.

    In his major address titled “Islam and Peace in Borno” to the people of Borno on July 16th 2011, Kashim said, among others, “….. the current state of insecurity and deplorable state of affairs is not unconnected with the attempt to impose the opinion of a small group on a larger society, a situation which clearly abridges the freedom to freely hold and express one’s opinion which is fundamental and inalienable in any given society.”

    He went on “My fellow citizens, going by the present spate of things, how can a true Muslim explain let alone profoundly justify the current unfortunate cold blooded murders and bombings in the name of Islam? Islam means “peace and submission to the will of God” and should remain so, in both theory and practice. Islam never sanctioned the killings of non-Muslims and the destruction of their places of worship”.

    Governor Kashim then drew the attention of the people to history saying, “in the early phase of Islam, when Muslims were persecuted by the Makkan pagans, they sought refuge in the present day Ethiopia, under a Christian King Negus. The Muslims stayed in Ethiopia for 15years and all entreaties by the Makkan leaders for Negus to deport them were rebuffed.

    In the same address to the people, Kashim lamented, “ I am personally, deeply pained by the trend of events. I am a native of Maiduguri, born, bred and buttered right in the heart of Yerwa, from Nimeri Korongoso. Most of these insurgents are from the well known neighbourhood of Shehuri North, Shehuri South, Limanti, Lamisu, Gamboru, Fezzan and Hausari wards of the metropolis. I say unto you my brothers what Hamid Karzai, the Afghan President, said at the burial of his brother Wali Ahmed Karzai some few days back:

    “……. My message for them (Taliban) is that my countrymen, my brother, should stop killing their own people. It is easy to kill and everyone can do it, but the real man is the one who can save people’s lives.” At various fora, press interviews or meetings, Kashim has been consistent in calling stakeholders, especially, the governors and elite in the north to confront the security challenges in the north frontally before such confront them. To him, delay could be very dangerous. According to him, leadership failure is responsible for north’s poverty and its present predicament. In a press interview recently, Kashim made it clear that a problem in Borno, or any part of the federation if not properly handled, will certainly spread to other parts of the federation, adding, “right from the onset of this insurgency, I repeatedly said that if this is not contained, it has the capacity to snowball into bigger conflagration that might consume the whole north. Now I am afraid it is assuming a very wider dimension. But with the collective effort of all of us and with our prayers I believe we shall solve the problem. All those who are predicting doom for the country will not succeed.”

    Also speaking in Maiduguri during the presentation of “Excellence in Governance” award presented to him by the Nigerian Union of Journalists delegation led by its National President Alhaji Mohammed Garba, Kashim warned that those with vested interest in the perpetuation of the status quo and entrenched ills of the society will sooner than later discover their stand at best uncomfortable and at worst downright objectionable.

    In Kashim words, “Those of us who are privileged to be in higher positions may have saved as much as we can, build mansions in cities and sent our children to the most expensive schools in Abuja or outside the country, but I can assure you that the children of the poor who we have failed to provide employment for and give quality of life will one day turn against us.” Kashim pointed out that though he was not a prophet or apostle of doom but warned that if the extreme poverty presently plaguing the north is not fastly reversed, hell might be let loose. He predicted, “in the next five years the north may be in trouble because all our assets and infrastructure have collapsed”.

    It will, however be recalled that besides Kashim, some northern leaders including the Sultan of Sokoto, Muhammed Sa’ad Abubakar, Alhaji Maitama Sule, the Dan Masanin Kano, General T.Y Danjuma (Rtd) have expressed utter displeasure at the deteriorating state of things in the north and called for urgent restoration. However, Kashim has been persistent and brutal in frankness in this regard. Let us listen to this blunt oracle from the Sahel so that we might not get to a point where the falcon will no longer hear the falconer.

    The present predicament of the north should inform its forward march. With collective will, dialogue, sincerity of purpose and prayers, the dark cloud will fizzle out and a shinning sun will emerge. This should be the ultimate. Let us remember the saying of Peter Marshall, “when we long for life without difficulties, remind us that Oaks grow strong in contrary winds as diamonds are made under pressure.” In the immortal words of Chief Obafemi Awolowo, “After rain comes sunshine; after darkness comes glorious dawn. There is no sorrow without its alloy of joy, there is no joy without admixture of sorrow. Behind the ugly terrible mask of misfortune lies the beautiful soothing countenance of prosperity. So tear the mask.”