Tag: Northern

  • ‘Bumper maize, soybean harvest for Northern farmers’

    Struggling Northern farmers could press their luck with soybeans and maize, as  international organisations move to improve farmers’ capacities to increase   yields  across   acreage  as demand nationwide  offers a potential lifeline.

    Globally and nationally, rising exports demand is providing a path to profitability for farmers pushing increasing soybean plantings.

    To this end, 15,000 maize and soy farmers in Katsina and Kaduna states will benefit from the collaboration between the West African Soy Industries Limited (WASIL) and the Business Innovation Facility (BIF) to enhance maize’s and soy farmers’ productivity.

    In line with this a Memorandum of Understanding has been signed between WASIL and BIF on improving the productivity of maize and soy farmers in a replicable manner in Nigeria,

    WASIL, a sister company to WACOT Limited is a member of the TGI Group,  an international investment and holding company with diversified interests and investments in Nigeria, Ghana, Republic of Benin, Morocco, UAE, South Africa, China and several other emerging markets with Mr. Rahul Savara as Group Managing Director. On the other hand, the Business Innovation Facility (BIF) is a five-year (2014 – 2019) DFID-funded market systems development programme that aims to improve the lives of the poor in three countries: Malawi, Myanmar and Nigeria.

    BIF identifies and addresses constraints in selected markets, providing technical assistance (and some grant funding) to businesses and other market players.

    According to the General Manager, Corporate Affairs of TGI Group, Mr. SadiqKassim, “WASIL is currently working with the Federal Ministry of Agriculture & Rural Development and the Central Bank of Nigeria under the Food Security Programme of the Federal Government to improve the productivity of maize and soy farmers in a replicable manner. The company has commenced the setting up of a large oil milling facility in Nigeria which will provide off-take of Soybeans from out-grower farmers while its affiliate company, CHI Farms will procure maize for its feed milling from the out-grower farmers as well”.

    “WASIL is targeting 14,000 farmers in Katsina and 1,000 farmers in Kaduna State in both maize and soy value chains making a total of 15,000 farmers during the current cropping calendar”, Kassim added.

    With the signing of the MOU, BIF will provide WASIL with technical assistance in realizing its objectives.

    Identified areas of collaboration include data capturing and building data base of farmers and cooperatives in Maize and Soy. While WASIL/WACOT is expected to provide its current database of existing cooperatives which had been formed earlier, BIF will support the Group in designing a pre-assessment survey form to assess the farmers’ socio –economic conditions, determine the sample size and assist with getting the same administered on ground.

    BIF will also provide the required Information Technology (IT) support and database software and trained field staff to conduct registration of 15,000 new farmers while also conducting farm mapping and re-validation of database of farmers collected by WASIL staff and provide continuous supportive supervision

    The  Managing Director of WACOT Limited. Mr. Ujwalkanta Senapati disclosed that WASIL and BIF through the collaboration will create new farmers’ associations and cooperatives alongside expansion of existing cooperatives. Facilitate the involvement and support of relevant public agencies and state governments in formation and registration of cooperatives and Self-Help Groups. Ensure inclusion of registered farmers into the National Farmers Database and also conduct a joint exercise to mobilise and strengthen farmer cooperatives in areas such as conflict resolution, group functioning, record keeping, etc.”

    Senapati said the agreement includes training and capacity building for maize and soy farmers. In this area, WASIL will assistBIF in setting up a project office in Funtua, Katsina State. While, BIF will provide soy and maize crops’ experts as resource persons to develop manuals and training resources for the farmers.

  • VON chief hails Emir of Katsina as APC praises Northern governors

    Director General of Voice of Nigeria (VON) Osita Okechukwu has commended the Emir of Katsina, Alhaji Abdulmuminu Kabir for his uncommon patriotism in the face of unfortunate crisis being simulated by fringe groups and politicians whose objective is personal and imimical to our collective existence.

    The Emir, had, while addressing leaders of the Igbo community and other Nigerians residing in Katsina said, “Nigeria will continue to remain one and that am ready to sacrifice my last drop of blood to ensure peace and protection of all Nigerians residing in the state. I am ready to protect Igbos with my last blood.”

    Okechukwu said: “I salute the Emir of Katsina and all those patriots in both south and north, who preach peace and recognise the truism that the hardship and misery in the land today is temporary and cannot truncate our corporate existence. For history tells us that many decades after the American civil war frictions between north and south more serious than as we currently have dominated discussions. America is strong and united today, ours cannot be different.”

    “We cannot fall victim to minority and fringe groups in the south east who call for secession and their ilk in the north who gave the quit notice. Civil war is not a panacea to the misery and hardship in the land, which is temporary and transient, given the infrastructural renewal going on in our dear country.” Okechukwu quipped.

    On the rumour that some unscrupulous politicians are fanning the embers of Igbos Must Return, and indeed raising money for that, Okechukwu in a rage said, “I don’t respond to rumour, but if there is any truth in that, it becomes the business of the security agency to track them down.”

    Similarly, South- East chapter of the All progressive Congress (APC), has condemned in its entirety, the recent three months quit notice given to Igbos residing in parts of Northern Nigeria by the Coalition of Arewa Youths.

    It described it as “a joke taken too far”, just as it applauded governors of the Northern region for condemning the statement.

    A press statement by the zonal chairman of the party, Chief Emma Enukwu, said: “The attention of the leadership of All Progressives Congress (APC) in South East has been drawn to recent outbursts by some youths in Northern Nigeria under the name “Coalition of Arewa Youths” urging the Igbos to vacate their habitats in the North on, or before 1st October 2017.

    “In our opinion, this call is a joke taken too far, it is an ill wind that blows no good to anyone. And we hereby, call on all well-meaning Nigerians to rise and condemn this and other outbursts by some people from other sections of this great country, Nigeria.”ý

    The statement which was released by the Zonal publicity secretary, Hon. Hycienth Ngwu stressed said:  “It is high time we all stood in one accord to put a stop to the growing hate speeches and bickering going on now in our dear country from all quarters.

    The party said, “Let us love all and hate none, as love is the panacea to peaceful co-existence, economic and social growth. We have faith in the ability of the APC led Federal Government to safeguard lives and property of all Nigerians living within Nigeria.

    “Consequently, we urge all Igbos living in any part of Nigeria to go about their normal businesses without fear, but in loving disposition toward their neighbor and environment.

    “We hereby thank the Governors of the Northern States of Nigeria for their quick condemnation of this act by the Coalition of Arewa Youths. We particularly, thank the Governor of Sokoto State, Rt. Hon. Aminu Tambuwal for his love to the Igbos in this trying period.”

  • Bello, northern leaders pray for Buhari’s quick recovery

    THE Kogi state governor, Alhaji Yahaya Bello, on Friday led eminent people of the country to pray for quick recovery of President Mohammadu Buhari, who is on medical vacation in London. The governor at the prayer said the President would soon return to the country to continue the good work of redirecting the course of the country. The prayer which was held during the jumat prayer observed at the Government House mosque, Lokoja, was attended by a former governor of Kano state, Senator Kabiru Gaya.

    The governor said “President Muhammadu Buhari is the man the world see when they look at Nigeria. He is Africa’s number one anti-corruption crusader whose integrity has helped rebound the nation’s global respectability. “We are gathered here today to pray for the full recovery of Mr. President for him to return to the country and continue his good work of refixing Nigeria. May Allah grant him good health and our nation, greatness”.

    Governor Bello called on Nigeria to intensify prayers for the recuperating President and also the Acting President who has shown the President made a good choice in the first place. According to him, Nigeria has been regaining its rightful place in the comity of nation since the assumption of office of the president, noting that what the president needed was the prayers and support of everyone in the country.

    Bello however lauded the acting president for upholding the ideals of President Buhari and the All Progressives Congress (APC), saying the party remained the only hope of the people. The Chief Imam of Government House mosque, Mallam Musa Bashir, offered prayers for the quick recovery of the president and the peace of the country.

  • Northern women urged to join military

    Former Comptroller, Passport Office of the Nigeria Immigration Service (NIS), Hajia Fatima Ahmed Godowoli, has called on northern women to join the military, arguing that service to Nigeria, through the military or para-military, is not for men alone.

    She made the call during her pulling-out ceremony.

    Godowoli said she was able to weather the storms during her 35-year service through perseverance, dedication and passion for the job.

    Her words: “Being the first female Passport officer was really a great challenge for me, but I weathered the storm and here am I today retiring, but not tired. I will like to borrow a leaf from our former Head of State, Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, to say I am stepping aside. Some of my colleagues are not here to witness their retirement and at 55, I thank God for serving this nation for 35 years.

    “Moreso, this job is a distinguishing one. You meet a lot of people with differences, coupled with series of challenges within the security setup, and if you are not up and doing, or fail to challenge yourself to be academically and physically bold as a woman, you won’t perform.

    “I will like to see more women in uniform, coming up as highly educated and learned persons, most especially in the north. This world is not for men alone, they should give us chance as women too.”

  • Ango Abdullahi backs quit notice for Igbos

    Ango Abdullahi backs quit notice for Igbos

    Despite condemnation by Northern Governors and other groups, the Northern Elders’ Forum (NEF) has backed the call by the three months ultimatum given to Igbos to leave the region by Arewa Youth Consultative Forum.

    Speaking to newsmen in Zaria on Friday, NEF’s spokesman, Professor Ango Abdullahi, said it was hypocritical for the Igbos to continue to live in other parts of the country while agitating for Nigeria’s break up.

    Insisting that what the northern youth groups did was not a sin, Abdullahi said whoever feels Nigeria “is not conducive for him” should quit.

    “I am disappointed in the decision taken by Northern Governors’ Forum disowning and condemning the agitation by this young agile and progressive youth groups.”

    “Let me ask these Northern governors, whom are they representing, are they representing spirits, ghost or people of the north?

    “Recently, people from eastern part of this country, specifically Igbo, were busy calling for the Sovereign State of Biafra and from all indication their leaders including governors are behind them,” Abdulahi stated.

    He lamented that none of the Northern governors reacted to the persistent call for the actualisation of Biafra and other agitations.

    Abdullahi said when Nnamdi Kanu was released on bail recently, over 100 vehicles escorted him to his residence including big personalities from the south-west and south-east.

  • Northern youths demand referendum for Igbo to go

    Leaders of the northern youth groups that  issued a three months ultimatum to Igbo yesterday called for the conduct of a referendum by the Federal government to enable Nigerians take a decision on whether the Igbo should be allowed to secede as being requested by separatist groups.

    The group spoke from hiding following Kaduna State Governor Nasir El-Rufai’s call for its members’ arrest.

    In the statement, the group lambasted the Chairman of the Northern States Governors Forum, Borno State Governor Kashim Shettima and El-Rufai for condemning their controversial statement and ordering the arrest of its signatories.

    Yesterday’s statement signed by Abdul-Azeez Suleiman, who signed the earlier statement, urged the Federal Government to urgently initiate the process for a peaceful referendum to allow the Igbo to go.

    The group however denied calling for violence in its initial quit notice.

    The statement said: “At the end, we came up with a position paper which we presented as the Kaduna Declaration in which we primarily called on the authorities and the international community to step in to formerlise the actualisation of the dream of a people who say in words and in action, and the whole nation appears to concur, that they are Biafrans, not Nigerians.

    “We further urged those Biafran nationales to relocate from the North to their newfound country in order to allow other people have peace. We are today compelled to make this further statement to clarify our stand on some issues that trailed the Kaduna Declaration made on Tuesday June 6, 2017.

    “After meeting to review the fallout of that Tuesday’s Declaration, our groups have noted hat some elements have for reasons best known to them, mischievously distorted the intent of our original script by alluding such words as ‘violence, ‘ ‘threat, ‘ ‘war’ and ‘mass action’ to it.

    “We find this mischievous because as cultured thoroughbred Northerners we have never anywhere and at anytime, under whatever circumstances, called anybody to violence as a means of conflict resolution.

    “In strict observance of that tradition we never employ violence as a means of pursuing our interest and, at every opportunity, we opt for peaceful engagements and implore people to eschew violence in all its ramifications.

    “This informs why, a majority of discerning Nigerians, not necessarily northerners alone, understood and identified with our express call for the Biafrans to be allowed to actualise their long-held secessionist aspiration.

    “We restate that we have never called anybody to violence and that people should discountenance the elements of fear and threat introduced by the distortions of merchants of mischief. We wholeheartedly endorse the moves made variously by our leaders to allay those fears and urge people to be peaceful and law-abiding while at the same time resolutely insisting on having the right thing done by allowing the Igbo to have and move to their dream country in accordance with the universal fundamental right to self-determination.

    “We restate our determination and commitment to ensuring that the North will never partake in any contrived arrangement that would still have the Biafran Igbo as a component. We reiterate our call on Nigerian authorities and recognized international bodies such as the ECOWAS, AU and UN to hasten the initiation of the process for the final actualization of the Biafran nation and with it the excision of the Igbos out of the present federation”.

  • Intervene in Emir Sanusi probe now, Timi Frank urges Sultan, northern governors

    Intervene in Emir Sanusi probe now, Timi Frank urges Sultan, northern governors

    A chieftain of the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC), Comrade Timi Frank, has called on the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Sa’ad Abubakar , other traditional rulers in the country and the Northern Governors Forum to step into the ongoing probe of the Emir of Kano, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi.

    He appealed to them to intervene in order to stop the matter from degenerating into the unexpected. In a statement made available to in Abuja, Frank also appeal to the Kano State governor, Abdullahi Umar Ganduje and the state House of Assembly to handle the probe of the Emir with utmost care.

    He also appealed to the governor and other top government functionaries in the state not to promote any move that will lead to the dethronement of the Emir, saying such could become a bad precedence against traditional institutions in the state and the country at large.

    The Kano State House of Assembly had set up an eight-man committee to investigate the outspoken Emir on the allegations bordering on his purported misconduct and alleged misappropriation of funds belonging to the Kano Emirate Council. Frank asked Ganduje to overlook some of the perceived excesses of the Emir who he described as a kind of “a new generation Emir.”

    He said: “I will call on our traditional fathers to quickly intervene now before this controversy between the state government and the Kano Emirate degenerates into the unexpected. “While I want to make a passionate appeal to our dear Governor Ganduje and the state lawmakers not to exercise their full strength against whatever perceived wrong doings by Malam Sanusi led Emirate in Kano, I believe like other opinion leaders have said that there should be a way to amicably settle the differences.”

  • Good morning, Northern leaders

    What an epochal day it was last Monday when the first ever joint meeting of  the Northern elite was held under the auspices of the Northern Governors’ Forum; Northern Traditional Rulers Council; Arewa Consultative Forum and Northern Elders forum, among others. The Sultan of Sokoto, MuhammedSa’ad Abubakar III, must be commended not only for spearheading this landmark gathering, but for his frank, brutal words.

    This column had also written so much about the issues at stake in the North in the last five years. It will suffice to say ‘Good morning’ to this august gathering and reproduce below, an article written on July 31, 2015 under the title:#harsh-truths-to-northern-elite. Some points here may be helpful to the resolution drafting committee:

    About four years ago, (precisely July 29, 2011) I had written in this column that then fledgling Boko Haram was the shame of the Borno elite. Expectedly, I was vilified to no end. But little did we (yours truly, his readers and drillers alike) know that what was happening then was mere child’s play. Between 2011 and now, so much innocent blood has drenched the Nigerian soil to the point that atonement may be impossible. But the point remains now as then, that the extreme criminality that the terror of Boko Haram has become, is the shame of the elite of the North. This point must be made without equivocation.

    Three recent issues have warranted a reiteration of this view which is even more valid today. First is the ‘face-off’ between Governor Nasir el Rufai of Kaduna State and the beggars of Kaduna. The second is the new-wave sacrificial offering of nubile little girls in an endless festival of suicide bombings and thirdly, the recent $2.1 billion World Bank loan for the reconstruction of the Northeast of Nigeria.

    An elite in retreat The point today as I made it then is that from the period of the violent outbreak of the Boko Haram (BH) sect up to this moment, the elite of the North have failed woefully to put up a well-reasoned and concerted response to deal with the evil.  As the sect callously made an ocean of blood especially in the Northeast, the elite of the North, (religious, intellectual, political and business) even more callously favoured a tacit accommodation of the scourge for the first few years.

    Where was the funding for BH coming from? Where was BH drawing its intellectual and logistical resources? Who purchased the arms, ammunition, rocket launchers and the dozens of armoured carriers the BH deployed to overrun many Nigerian towns at a time? For a region that boasts of about half a dozen former heads of state; current and former governors; respected traditional rulers; hundreds of well-trained retired military officers and a good number of men of means in the land, not one committee has been set up to date to as much as give a thought to the BH tragedy.

    An initial acquiescence grew into fear and cowering. Hardly anyone was known to have stood up boldly to the gang in defiant condemnation. It was convenient for many leaders of the North to hide behind the North-South politics of the Goodluck Jonathan era. Some simply found comfort in their corners and said to themselves: “since he chose to ‘usurp’ power, let him stew in the juice of insurgency”. It did not matter that hundreds of their compatriots were daily wasted in the heedless blood fest.

     

    BH as brainchild of the northern elite The point must also be made clearly that BH is the creation of some leaders of the North. While it may be argued that it may be the unforeseen outcome of poor quality leadership and ineptitude in high offices, it is elite failure albeit. Of course the feudal system of the North continues to take its vicious toll, fuelled by an uncontrolled and exponential population growth. Further, while it was the trado-religious lords who held sway in the days of yore, today, the political class has taken over with even more deadly intuition. As we know, in feudalism, there are only kings and serfs; or the ruling class and the hoi-polloi; hardly any middle ground.

    In the mid-80s while one was on National Youth Service in Sokoto, it was a culture shock then to witness a horde of scruffy, unclad children invade the camp refuse dump each day foraging for food. That scene has lingered most graphically in one’s psyche more than 30 years after. We must admit that it is anunconscionable and indeed wicked elite that would look on as children roam the streets with begging bowls; feed straight from dunghills or even lead cattle from Maiduguri to Majidun!

    Between medieval and modern states The elite of the North must be told to make those hard choices between living in ancient times as it still subsists largely in the North now or building a modern country as we have in Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Dubai, UAE and the rest of the Muslim world.

    This is where El Rufai’s feud with the beggars of Kaduna comes of note. He, in concert with his colleagues of the 19 states of the North must immediately abolish the pernicious almajiri culture (if indeed it can be regarded as culture). It must be the highest act of irresponsibility for a man and woman to sire children and set them loose into the world with begging bowls in hand. The wickedness of marrying off little young girls in the name of tradition MUST also stop. If you brought a child into the world, you must take some responsibility to rear him or her. This must be the essence of our humanity and the crux of a legislation being proposed here.

    El Rufai and his colleagues must enact – and if possible – a pan northern Nigeria law to abolish almajiri culture and under-age marriage tradition immediately. This singular legislation will greatly stem the social dysfunction in the North. We must begin to deliberately uphold and emphasisefamily values, child rearing and early education. Why has the local government system which ought to lift our rural population become near extinct in Nigeria?

    In the same manner, we must begin a phased abolition of nomadic life. It is ignorance that has pushed the Myetti Allah Cattle Breeders to seek to metamorphose into an alternate ‘army’ instead of a regional economic construct. Where in today’s world, dear reader, do people still lead cattle over thousands of kilometres just to make basic living? Not in many sensible places any more. The result is that they may have slaughtered more compatriots than cattle in the last five years mainly in a bid to fend off rustlers and defend against farmland owners as they take livestock through long trails.

    Again, El Rufai and his brother governors of the North must begin a concerted and expedited rethink of the milk, beef and hide economic value chains. Think for a moment that Nigeria imports almost 80 percent of milk consumed by her 170 population. Animal protein production in Nigeria is still an ad-hoc business while animal wool and processed leather are massively imported. This is multi-billion naira business.

    State governments can catalyse the livestock value chain and unleash the inherently huge economic potentials of milk, beef, leather and wool production. Countries like Argentina, Brazil and Australia would make good benchmarks. Let us develop ranches in the vast swathes of Borno, Bauchi, Yobe, Adamawa, Taraba, Kaduna and even Niger. We could start with pilot schemes. Pastures are nurtured these days and many species of grass mature in weeks. Why arewe still trapped in pre-medieval nomadism?

    Again, a savage elite The North, let it be said plainly, has some of the richest people in the world. One could count at least two dozen individuals richer than their states: TY Danjuma, the Dangotes, the Dantatas, the Mai Deribes, the Babangidas, the Yar’Aduas, the Indimis, Sani Bello, Rilwan Lukman, Abdulsalami Abubakar, Atiku Abubakar, Ado Bayero and Abdulsamad Rabiu, to name a few. This is not discounting the numerous new-rich politicos; all the former governors for instance.

    The World Bank has granted a loan of $2.1 billion to revamp the Northeast. This class of northern elite in concert, probably has more net-worth than the World Bank, they can raise $21.1 billion for the same purpose. They must consciously resolve to help lift the North from its present morass of despair and sub-humanity. They can start a sustained change campaign on family values for instance. They can build early learning centres and primary schools in areas too remote for government to reach. There are a thousand and one ways they can give back to this earth that has proved very clement to them.

     When the nose cry, the eye cries too The people of the South of Nigeria may choose to be aloof and comfortable about the backwardness of the North, but that would be basking in blissful ignorance. The Federal Government has spent trillions of naira in the last five years battling BH. That is cool cash that would have been spread round the country on development projects. The World Bank loan mentioned above for the reconstruction of the Northeast will be paid back by you and I, for instance.

    But we need more than loans; we need elite change of attitude and resolve.

  • Why Northern Governors are in Washington 

    When I arrived at the entrance of the United States Institute of Peace a short while ago, I recalled the last time I was here in March 2014, when the Institute organized a security symposium for members of our forum. Since my last visit here, I can point to many benefits that my primary constituents –the people of Borno State –have derived, since they sponsored my trip here. The 2014 symposium was dominated by issues of security and the Boko Haram insurgency, of which Borno State was the epicentre.

    The discussions we had then must have contributed in many different ways to the commitment and responses of the United States government and the international community in helping Nigeria to fight the insurgency. Our visit here in 2014 proved to be highly beneficial in the fight against Boko Haram, which affected Borno State the most but also had a destabilizing effect on nearly every other state in Northern Nigeria and the country at large.

    Soon after that symposium, the United States government increased humanitarian and development support for Borno State through the United States Agency for International Development, USAID.  But then, my visit today for the 2016 symposium is not just about Borno State. My colleagues and I are here to seek benefits that should accrue to all the 19 Northern States of Nigeria.  We look forward to many more benefits that will accrue to our region after this important symposium.

    Ongoing economic recession in Nigeria has made life very challenging for our citizens but the federal and state governments are tackling it in many different ways. As you would shortly see in a 14-minute documentary, the North of Nigeria is grappling with all kinds of problems.

    Your Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen, by the time we wake up tomorrow, print, online and broadcast media houses in Nigeria would have screaming headlines, that “Ten Northern Governors storm Washington” in the midst of economic recession, when our national currency, the Naira, has sharply depreciated against the U.S Dollar. Majority of our citizens will quickly conclude that we are here on a jamboree. Well, leadership isn’t only about popular decisions; leadership is about doing what is right at a time that is right.

    Our visit to Washington is an opportunity to re-engage with our American partners on the most vital issues that can help us to quickly make transition from volatility to a phase of peace and development in the Northern States of Nigeria. Over the past few years, we have realized that the indices of development in our region have not only been some of the most damning in our country, they have also been the background against which the problems in our region have manifested. These range from the deepening problems of Boko Haram, rural banditry, spontaneous religious and inter-tribal violence, deadly clashes between pastoralists and farmers, cattle rustling as well as the Mother of them all, which is pervasive poverty that gives birth to the many forms of crime.   The emergence or the re-surfacing of insurgencies are not episodic events. They manifest through lingering processes which eventually symptomatize into aprons like Boko Haram and ISIS.

    We have the greatest respect and admiration for the American government and we hold the United States Institute of Peace in very high esteem due to its track record. It is for these reasons that even though we anticipate criticism at home for this visit, we came here with high expectations. We believe that our hosts, USIP and officials of the U.S government will work with us with the utmost sincerity of purpose to guarantee quick benefits that will improve the living conditions of our people. As governors of the 19 northern states, we hope to secure tangible benefits that we can point to our people as proof, that our visit here is not a jamboree as they would assume.

    We in the Northern States Governors Forum recognize that our partnership with USIP is strategic. Some of the benefits we derive from this partnership include deepening cooperation towards eliminating conflicts. We may not be able to point this benefit tangibly to our people but we know for instance, that the United States is the world’s pre-eminent agricultural power and the number one food exporter. On the other hand, No land in the world is better suited for agricultural cooperation than Northern Nigeria.

    Your highly adored and respected first lady Mrs. Michelle Obama has a programme for intervention on girl-child education in Africa. We eagerly look forward to benefit from this programme as well as many other areas in which we can partner with our American friends to tackle our under-development and weak infrastructure. What is needed is the will and I can assure you that all the governors of the northern states here and those at home, are irrevocably committed to these partnerships in the service of our people. The Northern Nigeria provides a good eco-system for all developments and development partners. What we need is sincere will from our development partners and I am sure that our development partners have the will.

    Finally, on behalf of my colleagues, let me express our profound gratitude to the American government, to the Board and officials of the United States Institute of Peace, to the United States Agency for International Development, to the European Union and to all partners who have stood in solidarity with us through development support in different parts of Northern Nigeria. We are also grateful to USIP for organizing this symposium that once again, brings the underdevelopment in Northern Nigeria to the front burner of discussion. But even as we discuss, we cannot ignore the fact that the outcome of the U.S election in 21 days to come, may affect the full implementation of our goals after this symposium. Favourably, our country is not as close as Mexico for us to worry about a ‘wall’ that could come between our forum and the United States after January 20.

    Ladies and gentlemen, what works in today’s world is coming together with sincerity because like the American Henry Ford said, COMING TOGETHER IS A BEGINNING, KEEPING TOGETHER IS PROGRESS AND WORKING TOGETHER IS SUCCESS.

    We look forward to successful partnerships.

     

    • Shettima, Governor of Borno State and chairman of Northern States Governors’ Forum, delivered these remarks on Tuesday, October 18, at the opening of a three-day symposium hosted by the United States Institute of Peace in Washington.

     

  • Northern group hails Buhari on security

    Northern group hails Buhari on security

    A civil society organisation, Northern Youth Leaders Assembly has commended the government of President Muhammadu Buhari for its achievements in the fight against insecurity.

    The group, which made this in a communiqué issued at a meeting held in Makurdi, Benue State and attended by members drawn from the 19states including the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), where they praised the president in his efforts to stabilise the security situation in the country.

    They, however, noted that the security breaches in the country have been misconstrued for political millage by enemies of the country, stating that some of those that Mr. President appointed as Security Chiefs have been demonised for the simple reason that they are from the north even though they have done well in addressing the nation’s security challenges.

    The statement by its Chairman, Communique Drafting Committee, Yakubu Danlami acknowledged that with the efforts by his administration, the nation has become relatively peaceful.

    “This is evident in the fact that Nigerians now sleep with their eyes all closed. We must not hide our joy but to commend the Nigerian Army in particular for their gallant and continuous support to ensure that our democracy is on a steady ride to the Promised Land”. It read in part.

    It, however, accused Political and public office holders of demonising the administration on account of what they stand for, making a note that the height of such demonisation is the rebirth of separatist movements and militant groups in the south of the country to harass the Buhari Presidency.

    “Some of those behind these aberrations have openly declared that they are doing it to express their ethnic discontent. This does not bode well for the country as the concept of our founding fathers was and still remain that of one Nigeria”. They added.

    The group has also warned against sectional attacks on actors who have played important roles in these achievements.