Tag: Michika

  • Michika head takes over palace vandalised by Boko Haram

    The District Head of Michika, Ngida Zakawa Kwache, who has kept out of his palace five years after his election, has formally taken over the palace.

    Ngida Kwache won election which kingmakers conducted for the office of district head on December 31, 2013 but Boko Haram seized Michika in September 2014.

    It remained a Boko Haram territory until federal forces reclaimed it on January 29, 2015.

    But fears of Boko Haram reigned long afterwards with the district’s head office, which was vandalised, locked up until Thursday afternoon.

    Ngida Kwache, a grandson of the founder of Michika, Kwada Kwakaa, is the first indigenous and substantive district head since Nigeria’s independence.

    Read Also: Boko Haram: Troops kill four, recover weapons in Borno

    His predecessor, Mohammed Maude, held it on acting capacity for 53 years and died in 2013.

    Relating a bit of the history of the district office during the takeover ceremony, Ngida Kwache said: “I am the first indigenous district head of Michika.

    “The founder of this land is my great grandfather known as Kwada Kwaka. After him we had nine people who were kings of this place.

    “When the colonial masters were about going back, they wanted this palace to have a district head.

    “Election took place and my uncle (Stephen Kontikwara) won, but they said he was too young and he was not married.

    “They gave the position to someone else on acting capacity. He stayed on the throne in that capacity for 53 years and then died in 2013.”

    The Michika District comprises Michika 1 and Michika 2, which constitute the heart of Michika, a principal town and headquarters of the Michika Local Government Area overseen traditionally by the Emir of Mubi.

    The Chairman of the Michika LGA, Hon Mathew Vendi Favandzaer, said at the official opening of the palace he had been authorised by the state government to hand over the district head office for Ngida Kwache’s use after fulfillment of the requirements of the office.

  • Social Investment: FG targets 1,000 households in Adamawa

    The Federal Government says it is targeting more than 1,000 Households under its Social Investment and Security Programme in Adamawa.

    Mr Ahmad Abba, the State Director, National Orientation Agency ( NOA ), made this known in an interview with our reporter in Yola on Wednesday.

    Abba said that the programme was designed to improve the living conditions of vulnerable families in the country.

    He explained that under the programme, each vulnerable household selected would receive free unconditional grant of N5, 000 monthly for the duration of three years.

    “In Adamawa, the pilot project of unconditional cash transfer has been piloted in Six Local Government Areas of the state.

    “In two areas of each Senatorial Zone,  fifty households were carefully selected as beneficiaries,’’ Abba said.

    He disclosed that the programme was going on smoothly and the core target of the project was vulnerable families, especially widows.

    Read Also: Buhari, Atiku mourn ex-Adamawa Governor Michika

    Abba listed the benefitting local government areas as Madagali, Michika, Song, and Girei from Northern and Central Senatorial districts.

    The director listed others to include Numan and Lamurde from Southern Senatorial zone.

    He confirmed that very soon, the project would commence in the remaining 15 local government areas.

    Similarly, he said that government would soon begin the award of scholarship to more than 100,000 students nationwide.

    The programme according to the director is designed to support Science and Mathematics students across the country.

    According to him, the amount to be offered and time to state registration of the students will be announced soon.

    NAN

  • Buhari, Atiku mourn ex-Adamawa Governor Michika 

    The first democratic governor of Adamawa State, Alhaji Saleh Michika, is dead.

    Michika died on Saturday night at the Federal Medical Centre, Yola, Adamawa State, after a protracted illness.

    Governor Muhammadu Bindow’s media aide, Macaulay Hunohashi, confirmed Michika’s death in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) yesterday.

    According to him, the governor visited Michika at the hospital on Saturday but he was told of his death later at night.

    President Muhammadu Buhari has condoled with the government and people of Adamawa State on Michika’s death.

    A statement by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, commiserated with the family, friends and professional colleagues of the “astute administrator, political strategist and community developer”, who worked with reputable international organisations before bringing his experience and skills to contribute to the development of Nigeria.

    He lauded the deceased’s strong sense of patriotism and commitment to national development, which prompted him to alter his career path from the private sector and take up public office.

    The president believes the country will miss the wise counsels, visionary leadership and disciplined lifestyle of the former Adamawa State governor.

    A Federal Government delegation, led by the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Mr. Boss Mustapha, visited the family and prayed God to grant the deceased eternal rest and comfort his family.

    Born in 1941, Michika was Adamawa governor between January 1992 and November 1993, following the creation of Adamawa out of the defunct Gongola State by the then National Republican Convention (NRC).

    He was buried yesterday in his hometown, Michika.

    Former Vice President Atiku Abubakar also expressed his grief over Michika’s death.

    Atiku, in a statement by his media office in Abuja, condoled with the family, people of Michika and the government and people of Adamawa State over the loss.

    He prays God to grant him Jannatul Firdaus.

  • Police confirm killing of four in Adamawa

    Police confirm killing of four in Adamawa

    The Adamawa Police Command has confirmed the killing of four people at Kamale village in Michika Local Government Area of the state.

    The command’s Spokesman, SP Othman Abubakar, told the newsmen that the member representing Michika/Madagali Federal Constituency, Rep. Adamu Kamale, narrowly escaped the attack.

    Abubakar, who did not give details of the incident, however said that the attack was carried out by unknown gunmen who came with a list, going from house to house calling the names of their victims.

    Read also: Adamawa assembly jerks up 2018 budget by N15bn

    Abubakar said no arrest was made and that investigation is ongoing.

    Meanwhile, a new Commissioner of Police, Mr Ibrahim Yerima, has assumed duty in Yola.

    Yerima, who assumed duty on Friday, was until his appointment the Deputy Commissioner of Police, Armament Operations, Force Headquarters, Abuja.

    Yerima took over from CP Moses Jitoboh.

    NAN

  • Presidential delegation visits Madagali blast victims

    Presidential delegation visits Madagali blast victims

    A Presidential delegation led by the Special Adviser on Policy Development and Strategy, Alhaji Ibrahim Bapetel, visits Michika, Adamawa to console with government and victims of Madagali twin bomb blast.

    Presenting drugs, consumables and money to the victims at Michika General Hospital on Tuesday, Bapetel said President Muhammadu Buhari was very concerned with their plight.

    According to Bapetel, the president wants to assure you that his administration is committed to containing the insurgency.

    “Mr president has received with deep shock, the news of the unfortunate incident and immediately directed me to come and commiserate with you, identify with your plight and access your health condition.”

    Receiving the items, the Principal Medical Officer of Michika General Hospital, Dr Tanko Bathuel, thanked the delegation and promised to utilise the drugs and other items donated judiciously.

    Also briefing the delegation, Regimental Medical Officer of 115 Battalion Michika, Lt. Abdul Saliu, said that five patients out of the 76 admitted to the hospital had died.

    According to him, the remaining ones are responding to treatment as eight of them have undergone major surgery.

    The Chairman of Madagali Local Government, Alhaji Yusuf Mohammed, who also briefed the delegation, thanked them for the gesture.

    Mohammed said that normalcy had returned to the area and the people were now going about their normal businesses.

    Reacting, one of the victims of the blasts, Sajoh Buba, thanked the delegation for the support.

    Buba also lauded other groups and organisations such as Military Medical Corps, NEMA and Red Cross for their support.

  • Civilian JTF, Boko Haram and the Michika/Madagali battles

    Civilian JTF, Boko Haram and the Michika/Madagali battles

    A disturbing indication of the crisis bedeviling the Nigerian military in the ongoing war in the north-eastern part of the country is the involvement in the war of the so-called Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF) assisting soldiers in combating Boko Haram insurgency. Had their involvement been limited to scouting activities, serving as guides to troops in finding their bearing in the warren that a large part of the Northeast has become, both the reputation of the military and the scouts themselves could have been left untainted. But, out of desperation and without a thought for the implications, the federal and state governments have either encouraged the CJTF to raise the tempo of their involvement in the war to include bearing and using arms or to turn a blind eye to the now armed civilians who have neither been trained in warfare and its complex and variegated doctrines nor schooled in its rules of engagement. Now, alarmingly, the CJTF recruits have tasted blood; it will be difficult henceforth to determine just how far they will go during future challenges, be it in politics or war.

    At a point last week during the battles for Michika and Madagali, border towns between Borno and Adamawa States, Boko Haram insurgents reportedly ran out of ammunition. Curiously, said the reports, soldiers neither pursued the invaders nor arrested them on any significant scale. Instead, the CJTF pursued the insurgents and slaughtered between 80 to 100 Boko Haram militants. If the insurgents ran out of ammunition, then they were most likely killed in cold blood. Did soldiers knowingly turn a blind eye? Or did they think it an inconvenience to pursue and arrest the militants, thereby conveniently leaving the reprisal killings, the crimes against humanity, the violation of the Geneva Convention squarely on the heads of the CJTF? Whatever the answers, a threshold has been reached, and notwithstanding the inordinate pressures under which Nigerian troops fight this war that threatens to embarrass them, answers must be provided and efforts made to tidy up what already looks like a messy war in the Northeast.

    What sets us apart as a country from insurgents and terrorists is our submission to and enamouredness of the rule of law in both peacetime and wartime, a virtue that was nearly undermined by uncoordinated military responses in a number of testy battlegrounds such as Baga, Borno State. The apparently undiscriminating CJTF, who do not appear to owe allegiance to any modern laws of war, and have operated openly in such big towns as Maiduguri itself, must not be allowed to carry out the kind of reprisal killings attributed to them in Madagali and Michika. The military must not give the impression they do not mind the CJTF carrying out the kind of unlawful killings international and domestic laws frown at. Either through CJTF or by any other intermediary, unlawful killings reduce us to the standards and abysmal records of terrorists and extremists.

    But the greatest fear is not just the breaching of the laws of war, or of the excesses battlefield successes against Boko Haram insurgents might lead the CJTF to perpetrate, but how to cope with the future predilections of the vigilance groups who have now tasted blood. There will definitely be consequences for security, law enforcement and stability in the near future as a large body of young men seemed certain to be unleashed on the country after the war, men and vigilance groups for whom killing has become demystified but without any restraining leash of rules and regulations of war. The kind of killings that reportedly took place in Michika and Madagali by vigilance groups early last week must never be countenanced. It was a mistake to arm the civilian scouts; it will be a more egregious mistake to turn a blind eye to their atrocities, irrespective of how Boko Haram insurgents behave or whatever successes the insurgents might achieve.

    The tragedy of war in the Northeast is daunting enough in terms of its dislocating effects, killings and economic devastation; it will be catastrophic to complicate it with untrained and armed groups unleashed into the country’s uncertain future simply because they are invaluable now. And yes, we do have a choice, even the luxury, to determine how this war should be fought, and what standards we must uphold. Our humanity, not to say civilization, demands it.

  • Boko Haram: We slept in hills – Michika residents

    Some residents of Michika town in Adamawa said they slept in the in the hills and nearby bushes during Wednesday night attack on the town by suspected insurgents.

    Some of the residents told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on phone on Thursday that the attackers arrived the town around 9pm to unleash the mayhem for about five hours.

    “They burnt three banks, police station, shops and part of the Michika Local Government Council secretariat.

    “They came in nine Toyota Hilux vans firing guns and throwing explosives,” a resident who simply identify himself as Fide said.

    Fide said he saw corpses of two victims whose remains were recovered on Thursday morning.

    “One of the dead body is that of a staff of Bank of Agriculture,” Fide said.

    NAN also gathered that the attackers raided Kirchinga, Kubla and Shuwa villages on their way to Michika.

    “They burnt places of worship and the house of a former commissioner Idris Nuhu in Shuwa village,” said a resident, Mr. Sule Idris.

    Confirming the report, the spokesman of the 23rd Armour Brigade, Yola, Capt. Ja’afaru Nuhu, said the insurgents attacked communities in Madagali and Michika Local Government Areas.

    Nuhu also promised to give details of the attacks later.