Tag: Plateau State

  • Civic engagement: Nigerian youth stands up against violence.

    Civic engagement: Nigerian youth stands up against violence.


    “I want the light in the life of every YALI Network member to shine so bright that others might, through their light, find their way”. These were the words of Prosper Egeonu.

    By the time he was 30, Prosper Egeonu had witnessed too much violence in Jos, the capital city of Plateau state – central Nigeria. He didn’t want to see any more.

    Thousands have died in conflict that has erupted in outbreaks of violence for more than a decade. Indigenous people and settlers from other ethnic groups clash over land, power and resources.

    Having experienced the horrific acts of inter-community violence in his youth, Egeonu began to devote his business, civic and personal activities to ending violence.

    Prosper Egeonu and other young leaders participate in a daylong National Youth Leadership Summit in October 2014.

    In 2009 Egeonu, a YALI Network member, joined the Jos Crisis Appeal Fund (JCAF) as a volunteer, determined to get more people in the state capital to stand up to the horrific acts.

    JCAF is a partnership between Christians, Muslims and civil society groups that raises funds to provide financial assistance, medical attention and education to local families affected by conflict.

    This grass-roots civic group also helps displaced families find stable homes, and funds organizations that work for peace.

    In 2010, Egeonu started Swagg News Africa, a media entertainment group, and Stanperz Conceptz, a roofing business. He combined the outreach efforts of both enterprises to start the “Stop the Violence” campaign.

    The campaign aims to promote awareness of peace and to provide a talent showcase for youth from all religions. He partnered with a local radio station to provide youth with the entertainment program Friday Night Dance Party with Joey.

    He went on to partner with the Performing Musicians Employers’ Association of Nigeria to further get the message of peace to music fans. He even recruited young U.S. hip-hop artist Akon and actor J.D. Williams to craft messages to “stop the violence.”

    Continuing his pursuit of peace, in 2013 Egeonu joined the national nonprofit Dialogue, Reconciliation and Peace (DREP) as a volunteer trainer.

    According to him, DREP brings together youth, women, and local leaders of various religious and ethnic groups to learn from each other about how they can “resolve issues that would otherwise result in violent confrontation” and create peace.

    While Egeonu admits that his efforts to reach his goal can sometimes be frustrating — volunteers become disinterested, illiteracy among some in the target groups limits his ability to get messages through, and financial constraints limit DREP’s peace building efforts from reaching more rural communities – he remains determined.

    “Responses I get from people I reach have been positive,” he said. He suggests more training in leadership and team-building for fellow volunteers in order to help them stay interested.

    Egeonu is active in the YALI Network and especially likes the #YALICHAT discussion forum. He has earned YALI Network certificates for online courses in civic leadership, business and entrepreneurship, and public management.

    “I have learned a lot from YALI resource information. It has built me to be a better leader,” he said, adding that the highest call of leadership is ‘unlocking the potential of other people.’

    He therefore urges other youth to join YALI and to engage their communities to help solve problems.

    “I want the light in the life of every YALI Network member to shine so bright that others might, through their light, find their way,” he summed.

  • Man shot dead, while attempting to highjack ballot box

    One person was shot dead by security agents in Jos, the Plateau State capital, during the election yesterday.

    The victim, whose identity cannot be immediately ascertained, was suspected to be on a mission to disrupt voting process and snatch ballot box from a polling unit at Alikazaure, Jos North local government of Plateau.

    An eye witness who is one of the domestic observers at the polling unit said, “The guy came to the polling unit to make trouble, he was trying to create a chaotic scene while the voting was going on. I saw the security agents warn him twice not to cause any commotion, but the boy did not listen. He later turned on the police, and was shot while attempting to attack them in their vehicle.”

    His shooting did not, however, disrupt the voting, as voters on the queue continued to cast their votes after the incident.

    Aside that lone incident, the election was, however, generally peaceful in Plateau State.

    The killing was confirmed by the Special Task Force (STF) on Jos crisis.

  • Journey to the cold city

    Journey to the cold city

    Plateau State is known mostly for its cold and interesting weather. Located at the coldest part of the country, coupled with its mountainous terrain, fun-seekers and tourists usually visit this beautiful state popularly known as “Home of Peace and Tourism” even though recent events in the state seem to question the verity of peace in the Plateau. People troop into the state to relax and reflect due to the coolness which is caused by its weather.

    Plateau State is located in Nigeria’s middle belt. With an area of 26,899 square kilometres, the state has an estimated population of about three million people.

    The state is named after the picturesque Jos Plateau, a mountainous area in the north of the state with captivating rock formations. Bare rocks are scattered across the grasslands, which cover the plateau.

    Though situated in the tropical zone, a higher altitude means that Plateau State has a near temperate climate with an average temperature of between 18 and 22°C. Harmattan winds cause the coldest weather between December and February.

    What most may not link to Jos is that the state itself can be a tourist attraction which cannot be exhausted in a hurry. The mountainous terrain of the Jos environment which has saved its people from invasion in the olden days can now be turned into an attraction for fun-loving individuals.

    Apart from its Zoo and wildlife park, Jos also has bodies of waters which the fun-loving people have gladly turned into resorts. The Rayfield resort for instance, although most of the residents turn the river into their source of water for building and other domestic uses, is also a place of strolls, picnics, parties and in some instance, recreational boating.

    However, the most interesting feature of Jos, apart from the above, is its rocks. The Sheri Hills, for instance, consist of different individual rocks which leaves a person in wonder of the greatness of God, mostly unique in its features, all cocooned in an environment.

    The rocky area of the Sheri Hills used to be known for the crowd of young people who gather on the rocks for picnics and parties. It used to draw large crowds but recently, like most parts of Jos, the hills are quiet even for the Yuletide period when most people go to their homes in different parts of the country.

    Sunday Damshit, a resident of Jos believes that the city is, most times, cool and not as noisy as bigger cities like Abuja.

    Damshit, who resides in far away Bukuru (a suburb of Jos) said: “Bukuru is actually a little far from Sheri Hills but I love to come here once in a while to relax and read books. This is really a good place to think and get creative.

    “The fact is that this place used to attract a lot of young people, family and friends who enjoy partying here. Recently, however, due to insecurity, Jos and most of the interesting places in this town have become a shadow of itself.”

    Another resident, Esther Lere, who is a florist in Rayfield said: “If not for the insecurity in the town, Jos is a very nice town. Check your history and you will find out that a lot of influential and important people used to stay in Jos at a point. A lot of Europeans love the weather because it is very similar to theirs and the city used to be multi-cultural and with all the religions all living in peace until the recent state of insecurity in the town.

    “We are optimistic that Jos can get back to what it used to be again. In time, the security situation will be resolved and people will come back to Jos to reside. The fact is Jos has a lot to give in terms of its people and environment.”

    Another important attraction in Jos can be found in Kyarang in Mangu Local Government Area.

    “Kyarang is the place where the famous Swan Water factory is located. The village houses a natural spring pond where locals believe that a huge swan lives and only comes out on rare occasions to repair the water. The water that comes out from a rock is crystal clean and villagers drink from it freely without fear. The biggest landmark of Kyarang is the volcanic mountain that is also seen drawn on the swan water bottle.

    Abigail is indigenous to Kyarang but teaches in Jos. She said: “I grew up in the village and drank from the spring water. The water is very pure. Although some people worship the swan, I don’t. But she comes out ones in a while and has been there for more than 100 years. At least, that is what my people believe in.”

    Another notable place is Gindiri which has huge cave-like rock known as dutsen lamba (meaning the rock with a mark), the popular dancing bridge which was used as a bridge before the construction of a better bridge and lots more.

    These and many more are places that a fun-lover and visitor to Jos can visit without spending much money unlike other tourist sites outside the country.

    A lot of Europeans love the weather because it is very close to their own and the city used to be multicultural and with all the religion all living in peace until the security situation.

    “We are optimistic that Jos can get back to what it used to be again, in time the security situation will be resolved and people will return, the fact is that, Jos has a lot to give in terms of its people and environment.”

    Another important attraction in Jos can be found in Mangu local government, in a place called Kyarang, Kyarang is the place where the famous Swan water factory is located; the village houses a natural spring pond where locals believe that a huge swan lives and only comes out on rare occasions to repair the water. The water that comes out from a rock is crystal clean and villagers drink from it freely without fear and the biggest landmark of Kyarang is the volcanic mountains that is also seen drawn on the swan bottle.

    Abigail, a teacher in Jos who comes from Kyarang said, “I grew up in the village and drank from the spring water, the water is very pure and although some people worship the swan, I don’t but she comes out ones in awhile and have been there for more than 100 years, at least that is what my people believe in.”

    Other places like Gindiri with its huge cave like rock known as the dutsen lamba (meaning the rock with a mark), the popular dancing bridge which was used as a bridge before the construction of a better bridge and lots more.

    These and many more, are places that a visitor and fun lover to Jos can visit without spending much unlike visits to other tourist sites outside the country.

  • Jang dissolves LG caretaker committees

    Gov. Jonah Jang of Plateau state on Wednesday dissolved the caretaker committees of the 17 Local Governments Areas and appointed interim administrators to manage them.

    The Commissioner for Information and Communication, Abraham Yiljap, announced the dissolution when he briefing newsmen in Jos.

    Yiljap said the action was part of the build-up for the local government elections slated for Dec. 7.

    “Gov. Jonah Jang has approved the dissolution of management committees of the 17 Local Governments of the state.

    “We have seen it as a government to take further step to concretise our plans and commitment to the people of Plateau and to conduct free, fair and credible local government elections.

    “This step taken will give a level playing ground to all actors seeking offices at the local governments.

    “You may be aware that some of the local government caretaker committee chairmen are also interested in seeking elections into the local governments.

    The commissioner said that the Deputy Governor, Ignaitius Longjan, met with the outgoing caretaker committee chairmen on behalf of the governor on Wednesday to bid them farewell.

    “On the other hand, Jang has approved the appointment of interim administrators for the 17 local governments,’’ he said.

    He said the administrators were career civil servants, comprising eight permanent secretaries and nine directors.

  • 48 die in Langtang violence

    48 die in Langtang violence

    … Gunmen kill 28, lose 20 – STF

    At least 48 people have been killed in violence in Langtang South Local Government Area of Plateau State since it started on Thursday, the Special Task Force (STF) in the state said.

    The STF spokesman, Capt. Salisu Mustapha, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Jos on Friday that invading gunmen killed 28 persons in Magama, Bongong and Karkashi communities, while the STF killed 20 of them  “in a gun duel that lasted several hours.”

    He said that many other assailants sustained gunshot wounds and were arrested by the STF.

    “Some motorcycles, weapons and ammunition were also recovered,’’ he added.

    Mustapha said the attackers were suspected to be Fulani herdsmen and that they withdrew toward Yamini, Yelwa-Shendam and Agikamai villages in Shendam Local Government Area after the attack.

    He, however, said the situation had been brought under control as more troops had been deployed to secure the area.

    Mustapha said “STF personnel are conducting a robust patrol to guard against further attacks on innocent persons.’’

    He advised the people to go about their normal businesses and warned that security men would deal with anyone caught making trouble in the area.

    “Individuals or groups of persons that have made themselves the enemies of the people will be treated as such because we shall fish them out and deal with them,’’ he warned.

    Meanwhile, the Chairman of Langtang South Local Government, Mr. Naanman Darko, said that more than 6,000 displaced persons were taking refuge at the local government headquarters in Mabudi.

    “In fact, more people are still trooping into the secretariat following rumours that more attacks are underway,’’ he said.

    Darko said nine injured persons were being treated at Langtang South General Hospital.

  • Plateau requires N2.5b to revive fish farm

    PLATEAU State Panyam Fish Farm is looking for N2.5 billion which can generate N1.7billion yearly.

    The state Commissioner for Agriculture and Natural Resources, Mr Steven Barko, said in Jos, the state capital that the farm could repay the loan in two years.

    He said the farm would have been in operation by now, if not for funds.

    The commissioner said the government had spent the past one year looking for partners to resuscitate the farm.

    ‘’I would have kicked-off the Panyam Fish Farm by now, but I am still looking for funds for the past one year. I have been going around, looking for investors to partner with and revive the farm.

    ‘’The visibility studies are completed and the farm’s revenue potential is great. With the projected N1.7 billion as annual revenue, the farm can pay off the N2.5 billion in two years.

    ‘’The farm, which spans 309 hectares, can produce 3,900 tonnes of fish annually and more than 10 million fingerlings could also be raised there.

    ‘’It also has the potential to generate employment as so many people would be engaged in different activities.

    ‘’Some could buy the adult fish and process it while others may engage in the marketing of the fingerlings,’’ he added.

    The commissioner explained that the state opted for investors in resuscitating the farm because the banks contacted offered a very high interest rate.

    He, however, expressed optimism that by this time next year, the farm would start operations and that it would be run as a company for effectiveness.

  • Crises record 135 deaths,12,051 displaced people – NEMA

    Communal crises in Plateau in the last one month claimed 135 lives and displaced 12,051 others, according to a report submitted by the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and four other agencies.

    The agencies are the Plateau State Emergency Management Agency, Nigerian Red Cross Society, Nigeria Police Force and Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC).

    The report,was obtained by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Jos on Friday,

    It expressed concern over the spate of crises in the state, and particularly observed that the crises are becoming too frequent.

    According to the report, the on-the-spot assessment shows that four local governments – Barkin-Ladi, Riyom, Bokkos and Wase – were affected, during which 584 houses were burnt.

    A breakdown of the report shows that 71 persons were killed in Wase, where 3,032 people were displaced and 36 villages affected.

    In Riyom, 14 people were killed, 1,881 displaced, five injured and 269 houses burnt, while 42 persons were killed in Bokkos where 7,121 were displaced, three injured and 313 houses destroyed.

    The report further shows that eight were killed in Barkin-Ladi, two injured, 17 displaced, and two houses

  • Breaking the cycle of revenge

    Breaking the cycle of revenge

    In the city of Jos in the Plateau State of central Nigeria in early July this year, a group of Christian Berom tribesmen gathered together at a somber funeral for over 60 innocent individuals recently murdered in the home of a pastor by Muslim Fulani herdsmen. While in shared mourning, they were descended upon under a rain of bullets from a number of armed men, again Fulani. Twenty more were killed, including two leading Berom politicians: a Nigerian Federal Senator and the Majority Leader of the Plateau State Assembly. In response, a number of Berom, the dominant ethnic group in the area, retaliated the following day by killing any person in the area they identified as Fulani, bringing the weekend’s death toll to over 200.
    Despite the bucolic slogan of Plateau State – “The Home of Peace and Tourism” – the area has been plagued by this vicious cycle of violence between the Christian Berom and Muslim Fulani populations for over a decade. As both groups are motivated by codes of revenge and honour, any violent act is set to trigger a series of other bloody counter-attacks.
    Amidst the seemingly sectarian nature of the conflict, the central government’s role, both directly and indirectly, in the violence against the Muslim periphery goes largely unnoticed. The sequence of events above was triggered by the Nigerian security forces who the Fulani associate with the Berom. Shortly before the Fulani attack, the security forces burned to the ground 50 Fulani homes in retaliation for a Fulani herdsman being accused of killing a Nigerian soldier.
    Many are shocked at the brutality of these attacks, with commentators quick to blame attacks against the Christians on “al-Qaeda-linked” Boko Haram, the murky and undefined group located in northeastern Nigeria among the Muslim Kanuri people. The leader of Boko Haram, Abubakar Shekau, cited the incidents of cannibalism against the Muslim population in Jos in his defence of the Christmas Day bombings in 2011.
    The Fulani as well as the Kanuri could have responded to attacks upon them by means of traditional tribal justice using dialogue through councils of elders or through the religious leadership. They, however, took a route which negated both their tribal and religious traditions, and in the mutation, slaughtered innocent Christians in churches and their homes, including infants. Therefore, their story, their cause and any sympathy for them are lost.
    In order, however, to understand the present violence which plagues the heart of West Africa, we must look to the history of this region itself and the place the Fulani herdsmen have held on the periphery of Nigeria.
    Prior to British colonisation, the Fulani had supported the Fulani religious leader Usman Dan Fodio, who claimed descent from the Prophet, in overthrowing the Hausa States and establishing the Sokoto Caliphate in the early 19th century in what is today northern Nigeria. When the British established the Protectorate of Northern Nigeria in 1900, they instituted indirect rule over Sokoto with its Fulani and Hausa inhabitants, relying on the pre-existing state structure and Muslim leadership. Britain even went so far as to declare itself “the greatest Mohammedan Power in the World” in the Nigeria Gazette during World War I in order to bolster support from the Muslim population. In 1914, the British united Northern and Southern Nigeria into a single colony. It proved to be an unhappy marriage.
    Throughout these political changes, the Fulani herdsmen remained firmly on the periphery, continuing to evade taxes and searching for adequate grazing lands for their vast herds of cattle, their sole means of economic livelihood. Major JA Burdon, an early 20th century British administrator in northern Nigeria, spoke of the intense attachment the Fulani have with their cattle: “The herdsmen are peaceful and inoffensive; they became warriors through the necessity for self-defence… trusting for the defence of their treasured herds, their one possession, to neither horses nor armour, but only to their spears and their desperate courage.” Tending their cattle was an important aspect of their code of honour, Pulaaku, or “Way of the Fulani”, which was also a means of providing social order among their nomadic clans.
    With independence from Britain in 1960, the national politics of Nigeria was dominated by a series of coups and counter-coups as the major ethnic groups – the Muslim Hausa and settled Fulani in the north, the Christian Yoruba in the south, and the Christian Igbo in the southeast – vied for national dominance, including a deadly civil war in the late 1960s which resulted in the deaths of nearly 2 million people. Apart from this, nearly a hundred other ethnic groups, both Muslim and Christian, found themselves living side by side in the Middle Belt region which serves as the border between the Christian south and Muslim north.
    After independence, Fulani herdsmen began to increasingly shift their herds south into the Middle Belt region and establish more permanent settlements. This was largely due to the devastating Sahel drought of the late 1960s and 1970s which greatly reduced both their grazing lands in the north and the size of their herds. In addition, the development of new farming practices in the Middle Belt region during this period decimated the tsetse fly population which was harmful to cattle and previously served as a barrier to the Fulani herds.
    With the growing number of Fulani in the Middle Belt, the herdsmen were seen to be “settlers” or outsiders by the indigenous population or “indigenes”, especially the largely Christian Berom farmers. The Berom farmers complained of the destructive presence of cattle on their land and resorted to stealing or killing the herds, often at the cost of the lives of the young Fulani boys who would tend the herds, a traditional means of displaying courage. The Fulani responded to these overtures of violence with equal or greater brutality.
    Large scale violence erupted on September 7, 2001 when the palpable tension between Christians and Muslims led to the Jos riots in which over 1,000 people were killed in a week. A Nigerian government investigative committee found that between September 2001 and May 2004, the conflict resulted in the deaths of 53,787 individuals.
    Since 2001, the Fulani have been subject to targeted discrimination by the government and risk being arrested, tortured, or killed as well as seeing their homes destroyed in dragnet operations and “revenge missions” by security forces. In November 2008 after rioting broke out, the Berom Governor of Plateau State implemented a 24-hour curfew and issued the security forces a “shoot-on-sight” directive, resulting in over 130 deaths. After the attack on the funeral where the two Berom politicians were killed in July, there were calls from the Berom community to expel all Fulani from Plateau State. Ahmed Idris, a Representative from Plateau State in the House of Representatives, referred to these deportations as “ethnic cleansing”.
    The losses to Fulani livestock have been equally devastating and represent one of the greatest threats to their identity. The leader of the Fulani organisation Miyetti Allah stated in February 2011 that herdsmen had lost about eight million heads of cattle in the past decade. He warned that for the Fulani, “the race was facing extinction”.
    The Fulani ethnic group stretches beyond Nigeria and across West Africa, where the Fulani are variously known as Fulani, Fulbe, Fula, or Peul, and this same conflict which fuels the violence in Plateau State can be found elsewhere. In Ghana, as the Fulani shifted their herds south, vicious battles erupted pitting the Fulani herdsmen against local farmers and the security forces. One Ghanaian MP captured the hostile attitude towards the Fulani when he publically announced in December 2011, “If in the course of defending ourselves they have to die then it is justified. So killing them I personally support it”.
    In order to find a means to peace in a country like Nigeria with such rich ethnic and cultural diversity, a level of accommodation and understanding is required. The government should respect both the Fulani’s traditional culture, including accommodating land needs with designated grazing routes, and give them their full human and civil rights as Nigerian citizens.
    With the Berom and Fulani of the Middle Belt caught in this cycle of revenge, leadership that underlines compassion and non-violence from both their respective faiths, Christianity and Islam, is desperately needed, such as the August 2012 visit of the Catholic Archbishop of Jos, Ignatius Kaigama, to the Jos Central Mosque where he was hosted by its Imam, Sheik Balarabe Dawud. In Archbishop’s words, he intended “to dispel the notion that Muslims and Christians in Plateau State cannot meet”. Only by heeding the message and example of their religious leadership and living up to the ideals of their respective faiths can peace return to the long suffering people of Plateau State and Nigeria.
    …Professor Akbar Ahmed is Ibn Khaldun Chair of Islamic Studies at American University in Washington, DC and the former Pakistani High Commissioner to the United Kingdom.