Tag: Mohamed Ibn Chambas

  • Ibn Chambas to speak on insecurity in the Sahel at NAN lecture

    Ibn Chambas to speak on insecurity in the Sahel at NAN lecture

    • Abdulsalami is chair

    Former Head of State, Gen. Abdulsalami Abubakar, and top diplomat Mohamed Ibn Chambas, are billed for the inaugural lecture of the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN).

    The lecture is slated for October 3, according to a statement by NAN Managing Director/ Editor-in-Chief  Ali Muhammad Ali.

    Chambas, a renowned diplomat and versed in security and conflict resolution, will speak on the topic, “Insecurity in the Sahel (2008-2024): Dissecting Nigeria’s Challenges – Genesis, Impacts and Options, “ while Abdulsalam will chair the forum.

    The agency said the lecture will hold at the Nigerian Army Resource Centre, Abuja.

    Also invited are President Bola Ahmed Tinubu and  members of the Federal Executive Council as well as the top echelon of Nigeria’s political establishment and  top brass of the military.

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    The statement said members of the diplomatic corps and the academic community and media executives from local and African news agencies have also  signified intention to attend.

    The Sultan of Sokoto, Muhammadu  Sa’ad Abubakar,  Ooni of Ife, Adeyeye Enitan Ogunwusi, and Obi of Onitsha, Nnaemeka Alfred Achebe are leading traditional rulers who have been  invited, the statement said.

    It said the lecture was “part of the national efforts to enliven public discourse on the debilitating challenges of terrorism, banditry, kidnapping for ransom, militancy and violent ultranationalism among others in the country.

    “What are the causal factors responsible for driving violence in this benighted region?

    “Who are the non state actors at the heart of this ring of violence? How is it impacting on Nigeria? How do we as a nation contend with this present and clear danger?

    “What prognosis can we make going forward? The lecture is expected to elicit responses to these posers”, the statement said.

    It added that the lecture will also interrogate the root causes of the violence troubling the Sahel, examine its impact on Nigeria’s territorial integrity and lay bare the options available to policy strategists based on the country’s security architecture.

  • UN sues for calm, patience among Nigerians

    The United Nations has sued for calm and patience  in Nigeria ahead  of the elections.

    The  Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General, Mr Mohamed Ibn Chambas, commended “Nigerians for a pre-election period that had been largely, peaceful and participatory”.

    Chambas, who is also Head of the United Nations Office for West Africa and the Sahel (UNOWAS), “encouraged all Nigerians to continue to maintain calm and to exercise patience and restraint throughout the voting process and the announcement of the final results”.

    While welcoming the signing on February 13, of the Second National Peace Accord by Presidential candidates, Chambas urged them to “mobilize their sympathisers and supporters to adhere to the tenets of free, fair, transparent, inclusive and credible elections, devoid of hate and denigration of each other”.

    He called on “all Nigerians to firmly reject all undemocratic and negative voices that may seek to disrupt the elections and promote conflict between Nigerians”.

    The UN Special Representative encouraged Nigerians to come out in their numbers and cast their vote peacefully in exercise of their civic responsibility.

    He affirmed that the success of the polls is the responsibility of all Nigerians and relevant Nigerian institutions, particularly the Independent National Electoral Commission, security agencies, political parties, candidates, religious leaders, civil society.

    The UN Special Representative for West Africa and the Sahel urged “all candidates and party leaders to seek redress of any grievances they may have through legal and constitutional means”.

    While calling on the all stakeholders to prioritise the interest of the country, Chambas hoped “that the successful conduct of peaceful, free, fair, transparent, inclusive and credible elections would set another example for the elections coming up in West Africa and Africa, and underscore Nigeria’s leadership in the region”.

  • I didn’t start vote-buying in Nigeria – Jonathan

    Former President Goodluck Jonathan on Wednesday denied the claims that he started massive vote-buying in the country.

    The Chairman of All Progressives Congress (APC), Adams Oshiomhole, was quoted to have said that the unfortunate trend of vote buying started under former President Dr. Goodluck Jonathan.

    A statement by Ikechukwu Eze, who is the Media Adviser to Jonathan, entitled “Oshiomhole: The burden of blame game and tumultuous leadership”, said that the allegations were false and misleading.

    He said ‘Our attention has been drawn to a media report in which the national chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Mr. Adams Oshiomhole was alleged to have claimed that Former President, Goodluck Jonathan, started vote buying in Nigeria.

    “While featuring on a Channels Television programme, Roadmap, Oshiomhole was quoted to have said the following: “President Jonathan started this massive vote buying in Nigeria and the Media must play back and do proper interview and proper investigation to discover the origin of vote buying.”

    “We really do not know the real reason for this misleading falsehood, at this point in time. However, we can only guess that Mr. Oshiomhole who is currently operating under tremendous stress in the bid to steady the already floundering ship of his administration as the new leader of his party, may have got himself entangled in a voyage of tactless desperation.

    “His recent flip flops where he praised Governor Samuel Ortom and Senator Rabiu Musa Kwankwaso one day only to denounce them the very next day, is enough evidence of his fragile psychological state.

    “Not only is he content on squabbling with members of the opposition, we note the self-destructive tendencies of Oshiomhole who is locked in a feud with members of his own party including the minister of labour, Chris Ngige, and a host of APC Governors. It appears that Mr. Oshiomhole’s psychological strain may have reached boiling point.

    “On the vexatious issue of ‘vote-buying’, which has unfortunately found its way into our election lexicon, this is what we know: It is obvious that the shameful development in our democratic experience became very glaring during the 2016 gubernatorial elections in Edo State; an exercise that took place more than one year after President Jonathan had left office.

    Read Also: Jonathan hails Saraki’s leadership

    “It is therefore disingenuous for any politician or group to link the former President with the anomaly, no matter how they want to stretch the now-failing blame game.” he said

    He said that the issue of vote buying didn’t come up in the assessment of elections while Jonathan was in Office as President between 2010 and 2015.

    “Jonathan conducted many elections including the 2011 and 2015 general elections, and many off-season gubernatorial and parliamentary elections in some states like Anambra, Ekiti, Ondo and Edo; and not for once did the issue of vote buying come up.

    “It is instructive that in each case, the former President was given a clean bill, with both local and international observers commending him for having supervised a credible and transparent process.

    “One of those who gave the former President a clean bill of health, was Mr. Oshiomhole himself who on July 16, 2012 said: “What the Edo election has confirmed is that when the President and Commander-in-Chief puts the country first and he conducts himself as a statesman not just as a party leader, credible elections are possible.”

    “When you juxtapose the above statement with Mr. Oshiomhole’s current statement, it becomes obvious that the APC Chairman is suffering from multiple personality syndrome and has a Jekyll and Hyde schizophrenia.

    “We would like to point out that the wave of commendation for Dr. Jonathan’s electoral conduct has continued, long after he had left office. In November 2017 a United Nations delegation led by Ambassador Mohamed Ibn Chambas, the Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General for West Africa and the Sahel, and Chairman of the Cameroon-Nigeria Mixed Commission (CNMC) commended former President Jonathan for the positive outcome of the electoral reforms he initiated during his tenure, and prayed that the institutions he built and the high standards he set in organizing credible and peaceful elections are maintained and sustained by his successors.” he added

    He said that it was instructive that Jonathan also received plaudits from the visiting UN team over his conduct of the same 2015 elections which “Oshiomhole had casually singled out for condemnation.”

    “This was how Ambassador Chambas verdict differed from Mr. Oshiomhole’s jaundiced assessment: “What we noticed in 2015 was that there was a display of maturity in the way the elections were handled. There was hardly any major incident between the then ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) and the All Progressives Congress (APC). The problems were mostly internal to parties.”

    “It may be that Mr. Oshiomhole’s false accusations against Dr. Jonathan stem from his own guilty conscience arising from the unenviable behaviour he exhibited during the September 2016 gubernatorial election in his state, when his bid to anoint his successor pushed him into desperate measures and a win-at-all-cost mentality that introduced flagrant vote merchandising in our polity, thereby making Edo State the clear starting point of that cankerworm.

    “After observing the Edo 2016 gubernatorial election, the Transition Monitoring Group (TMG) a coalition of over 400 civil society organizations spread across the country, said the following about the exercise: “The most frequent reported incidents (of electoral irregularities) are vote buying/voter bribery.” The trend was later to spread to Ondo, Anambra and Ekiti States governorship elections, all taking place after Jonathan had left office as President.

    “What also changed was that Oshiomhole’s emergence as the national chairman of APC and the burden of ‘delivering results to his party’, has pushed him into exporting and escalating this vote buying dexterity to other states, as recently witnessed in Ekiti governorship poll.

    “The fact is that inducement as a tool in the hands of politicians is an old malaise that no Nigerian can be proud of.

    “It is bad enough that this has been allowed to fester and morph into the ugly trend that is today called vote buying. Given this circumstance, you would expect a statesman of Oshiomhole’s standing to offer perspectives on how to solve this problem that is already making our country an object of scorn in the eyes of the international community.

    “That Oshiomhole only resorted to blame game rather than offer any useful suggestions to the election management bodies on how to solve this shameful problem, in the cited television interview, is a sad commentary on the quality and character of today’s political leaders.

    “A Government that continues to blame its predecessor rather than show its scorecard, less than one year to the end of its four-year tenure, is only giving the impression that it is already at its wit’s end.

    “We believe that it is high time Mr. Oshiomhole began to put a leash on his unhelpful, ill-conceived comments and tumultuous style of leadership, to enable him offer quality service to the party he currently leads.” he said

  • UNOWAS condemns deadly attack against a UN team

    UNOWAS condemns deadly attack against a UN team

    The Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Office for West Africa and the Sahel (UNOWAS), Mohamed Ibn Chambas, strongly condemns Tuesday’s deadly attack against a United Nations Technical Monitoring Team that was conducting a field mission along the border of Nigeria and Cameroon in the vicinity of Hosere Jongbi, near Kontcha, Cameroon, as part of the Cameroon-Nigeria Mixed Commission (CNMC) mandate.

    According to preliminary reports, on Tuesday 31 January 2017 around 2:00 pm, an unknown armed group attacked the UN Team and killed five persons and injured several others. The victims were one UN independent contractor, three Nigerians nationals and one Cameroonian national

    Mohamed Ibn Chambas presents his sincere condolences to the families of the fallen persons and wishes a prompt recovery for those injured.  He calls upon the authorities of Cameroon and Nigeria for swift action to bring the perpetrators of these attacks to justice.

    Mohamed Ibn Chambas reiterates the vital role of the CNMC in accomplishing the border demarcation, in compliance with a judgment of the International Court of Justice, and in contributing to stability and security in the region.

  • Boko Haram: Regional troops set to begin raids

    Boko Haram: Regional troops set to begin raids

    A long-awaited regional task force is set to begin raids on Boko Haram’s last enclaves when the rainy season ends soon, the United Nations’ top official in West Africa said.

    Nigerian and Chadian forces early this year forced the militant group, which has sworn allegiance to Islamic State, to cede large swathes of territory in northern Nigeria, undermining its six-year campaign to carve out a caliphate.

    But some fighters have since regrouped and ramped up suicide attacks and guerrilla raids in the remote border areas around Lake Chad where Chad, Niger, Cameroon and Nigeria meet, Reuters reported.

    “They will take advantage of the end of the rainy season now to really go after them,” Reuters quoted Mohamed Ibn Chambas, UN Special Representative for West Africa, as saying in an interview on Wednesday.

    The rains in northeast Nigeria typically end in September but have lasted longer this year.

    The 8,700-strong joint force, headquartered in Chad’s capital N’Djamena with troops from Chad, Niger, Benin, Nigeria and Cameroon, was supposed to be fully functional in July.

    But plans were not finalised until late August, and some observers have bemoaned a lack of progress since.

    The African Union and the Lake Chad Basin Commission signed a memorandum of understanding in October giving final implementation guidelines and the United States has sent troops to provide intelligence and other assistance.

    The expected joint raids will have to adapt to the changing nature of the enemy, which once attacked with hundreds of fighters aboard scores of vehicles but has been reduced to isolated bands, Chambas said.

  • UN expects Nigeria to do more in Boko Haram fight

    The United Nations expects the Nigerian military to do more to combat Boko Haram and urged Nigeria and its neighbors – Chad, Niger and Cameroon to allow hot pursuit of the militants across borders as this was key to a regional offensive.

    Boko Haram is the main security threat facing Nigeria, Africa’s biggest economy and top oil producer, and increasingly threatens neighboring states.

    Nigeria has postponed a February 14 presidential election until March 28 due to security concerns, Reuters says.

    Cameroon, Chad, Niger, Nigeria and Benin agreed on Saturday to create an 8,700-strong force to tackle Boko Haram. Once they have agreed how the force will operate, the African Union plans to seek United Nations Security Council support.

    Mohamed Ibn Chambas, UN Special Representative for West Africa, said on Friday that Nigeria needed “to demonstrate greater resolve than it has previously done in this fight against a serious enemy, Boko Haram.”

    “We all expect more from the Nigerian military,” Reuters quoted Chambas as saying to reporters in New York via a video link from Abuja.

    “They have been contributing to peacekeeping around the world for years and demonstrated robustness, now we want to see that same robustness in the fight against Boko Haram.”

    He suggested that the presidential elections “might be a little bit of a distraction at this point.”

  • Boko Haram: Africans must overcome distrust to succeed – UN

    The four African nations most threatened by the Boko Haram must put aside mutual distrust and agree on a command structure and strategy for a fledgling regional force if they want to defeat the militants, a top United Nations official has said.

    Mohamed Ibn Chambas, UN Special Representative for West Africa, said the international community could only help Nigeria and neighbouring Niger, Chad and Cameroon once they clearly laid out the assets they lacked to fight Boko Haram.

    A month before presidential election in Nigeria, Boko Haram has seized swathes of new territory. It has killed hundreds of people in northern Nigeria, displaced several thousand more and seized the base of a regional military task force meant to fight it.

    The fall of Baga this month, where as many as 2,000 people are reported to have been killed, led to increased calls for international support to halt an insurgency that has spread from northern Nigeria to threaten parts of Niger, Cameroon and Chad.

    “It is clear now that the countries should not be left to tackle it individually. That has been the approach so far and it is not winning the fight,” Chambas told Reuters.

    He said it was up to the four states bordering Lake Chad to draw up better coordinated plans. He called for a clearer command structure and rules of engagement, amid resistance from some countries to see their troops deploy outside their borders under foreign command.

  • Three UNAMID peacekeepers killed in Darfur

    Three Senegalese peacekeepers were killed and another injured in West Darfur after their convoy was ambushed, UNAMID said.

    Police from the combined African Union-United Nations operation was escorting a water convoy from El Geneina town to the UNAMID regional headquarters in West Darfur, the operation said in a statement.

    The Sudanese military pursued the unidentified armed attackers and engaged them “in a fire fight,’’ according to Mohamed Ibn Chambas, UNAMID’s joint special representative.

    He said there were reports of casualties on both sides in the clash.

    “Such incidents are a reminder to all of us of the great price everyone pays in the absence of peace. Our peacekeepers have made the ultimate sacrifice while attempting to bring peace to Darfur,” the News Agency of Nigeria quoted the UNAMID’s joint representative as saying in the statement.

    The incident occurred on the same road where a UNAMID patrol was ambushed in October 2012.

    UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon condemned the attack.

    “All too often UNAMID peacekeepers are attacked and killed in the line of duty, while helping the Sudanese bring peace to Darfur,’’ he said.