Tag: Plateau

  • Three killed, 150 houses destroyed in Plateau flood

    Three killed, 150 houses destroyed in Plateau flood

    The Zonal Coordinator of the National Emergency Management Agency(NEMA), Eugene Nyenlong, has confirmed that three people lost their lives, while over 150 houses were destroyed after floods caused by downpour wreaked havoc in some communities in Jos North Local Government of Plateau State.

    Nyenlong said the affected areas devastated by flood, include  Ungwan Rogo, Gangere, Rikkos, Bauchi road and Eto-Baba communities which experienced heavy flooding after the torrential rains that began last Saturday and lasted all through Sunday and Monday.

    Nyenlong who spoke to reporters in Jos, said his agency received a distress call to confirm that three persons had died in the flood.

    He said NEMA and other stakeholders were visiting the affected communities to assess the situation.

    According to the zonal coordinator, a tributary connects the communities and makes them susceptible to flood, noting that apart from the tributary, the areas had poor drainage systems.

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    “From the information before us, three persons have lost their lives from the flood that has become a recurring decimal in those areas,” .

    The NEMA official further appealed to the state government to ensure residents vacate flood-prone areas as a matter of urgency.

    “If the people do not want to move out permanently, they can vacate the areas during the rainy season and return during the dry season,” he added.

    The Executive Secretary of Plateau State  Management Agency (SEMA), Sunday Abdu, who also confirmed the incident, said rescue officials had been despatched to the affected communities for an on-the-spot assessment.

  • Youths disgust over contradictory judgment by election tribunal in Plateau

    Youths disgust over contradictory judgment by election tribunal in Plateau

    Youth leaders, under the aegis of the Forum of the Former Youth Leaders (Veterans) in Plateau State, have expressed disgust over what they described as contradictory judgments emanating from the two panels sitting on the National and State Assembly elections petitions in the state.

    The youth questioned why two panels, one led by Justice William Rotimi and the other led by Justice M. B. Tukur, should be conflicting in their judgments when they’re the same courts of cognate jurisdiction.

    Speaking  in Jos,the veteran youth leaders regretted that while the Justice William Panel recognised that the the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) had solid structures, the Tukur-led Panel said the PDP had no structures, the stand upon which it upheld the petitions filed by the All Progressives Congress (APC) on the various elections in the state.

    At the briefing, an executive of the group,  Takubu Ibrahim Itse, said: “We the veterans and well-meaning Plateau people wish to express our worries and concerns on the unprofessional and contradictory judgments delivered by Justice M. B. Tukur in opposition to preceding judgment of the presidential tribunal of corresponding in respect of Plateau state Senatorial and House of Representatives elections against the weight of evidence and the rule of law.

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    “In line with the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the fabricated and extensively speculated question of structure, upon which the aggrieved petitioners anchored their optimism in their suit against the PDP, was unfalteringly thrown out and effortlessly quashed by the earlier judgment pronounced by Justice William Rotimi and his two other justices at s tribunal of same jurisdiction.

    “Having affirmed the validity of PDP’s structure as evidenced by the plethora of earlier judgments that the PDP had complied with the judgments of Justice Gang and Kuda and; in line with the constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as amended), the Electoral Act 2022 as well as Chapter 8 of the PDP constitution, the tribunal in the case between Sen. Simon Mwadkon Vs others; Hon Musa A. Agah Vs others, the professional judgement of the tribunal is resounding and commendable.

    “In a similar professional ruling in the case of Isaac Kwalu Vs others, the tribunal maintained a similar stance, which laid to rest the question of whether or not PDP has structure. The tribunal in these cases unequivocally ruled that nomination and sponsorship of candidates for elections was the singular duty of the party and that the procedure of contesting such nomination was limited to only members of that party, which must be through a Federal High Court.”

    The veterans, therefore, said they were scandalised by the subsequent contradictory judgment delivered by Justice M. B. Tukur on September 11, the victories of Hon. Peter Gyendeng, Hon. Musa Bagos and Hon. Beni Lar of Barkin Ladi/Riyom, Jos South/Jos East and Langtang North/Langtang South federal constituencies as well as the election of Napoleon Bali of Plateau South Senatorial districts were unjustly overturned on the same grounds as the first judgments.

    “We assert that for Justice Tukur to singly contradict his learned colleagues who had earlier upheld the elections of Mwadkon, Agah and Isaac Kwalu on the same grounds tantamount to sowing a seed of  discord and chaos in the state,” the group said.

    The veteran youth leaders added: “While we respect the sanctity of the judiciary, we are perturbed about this recent debacle that is setting the state in a needless strife. This development is awfully troubling to us.”

    They, therefore, assert that Plateau people with one loud voice chose PDP and their choice must be respected; that the learned Justice (M. B. Tukur) erred in law to have unjustifiably interloped into an area external to the core interest and powers of his court (tribunal); hence his justice should be revisited.

    They said: “That the legal technicalities and intelligence should not be used to nullify the victory of Plateau duly elected leaders

    “That the election of PDP members who have been duly returned and sworn in which are still pending in the tribunal should be upheld.

    “That the tribunal National Judicial Council and organs of the law,as well as the anti-graft agencies should investigate the matter for any external or pecuniary motivations that may probably inform the decision of the said justices.”

    It also urged that the tribunal justices and lawyers be made to attend retreats to further sharpen, strengthen and improve their understanding of the law before the commencement of any tribunal case.

  • Three die, 150 houses destroyed in Plateau flood

    Three die, 150 houses destroyed in Plateau flood

    The zonal coordinator of the National Emergency Management  Agency(NEMA) Eugene Nyenlong has confirmed that three people died while over 150 houses were destroyed after floods caused by heavy downpour wrecked havoc in some communities in Jos North local government area of Plateau State.

    Nyenlong said the affected areas devastated by flood include  Ungwan Rogo, Gangere, Rikkos, Bauchi road and Eto-Baba communities which experienced heavy flooding after the torrential rains, which began on Saturday and lasted all through Sunday and Monday.

    Nyenlong ,who spoke with reporters in Jos, explained that his agency received a distress call to confirmed that three persons had died in the flood.

    He said NEMA and other stakeholders were visiting the affected communities to assess the situation.

    According to the zonal coordinator, a tributary connects the communities and makes them susceptible to flood, noting that apart from the tributary, the areas had poor drainage systems.

    “From the information before us, three persons have lost their lives from the flood that has become a recurring decimal in those areas,” he said..

    Read Also: Three killed in flooded Jos metropolis

    The NEMA official further appealed to the State Government to ensure residents vacate flood-prone areas as a matter of urgency.

    “If the people do not want to move out permanently, they can vacate the areas during the rainy season and return during the dry season,” he added. 

    The Executive Secretary of Plateau State  Management Agency (SEMA), Sunday Abdu, who also confirmed the incident, said rescue officials had been despatched to the affected communities for an on-the-spot assessment.

  • Flood destroys over 150 houses in Plateau

    Flood destroys over 150 houses in Plateau

    No fewer than 150 houses have been destroyed after a flood  that swept through  Anguwan Rogo, Rikkos, Bauchi Road and Naraguta communities of Jos North Local Government of Plateau State, as a result of a downpour on  Saturday and  Sunday afternoon.

    Tanko  Yakubu Alhassan,  a resident of  Bauchi road, told The Nation that though no life was lost, the flood  destroyed property and washed away valuables.

    “The flood didn’t claim lives, but because it was huge, it displaced over 150 households.

    “These households have lost their belongings and are left with nothing,” he said.

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    He added that the displaced persons are staying with neighbours or friends and relatives.

    He appealed to the government to come to the rescue of the affected communities.

    Salamatu Aliyu, a victim of the downpour, said: “The flood took  us by surprise.

    “We never expected it. The heavy rain has destroyed my house and that of my neighbour as well as several other houses in Anguwan Rogo . 

    “We are calling on the government and good-spirited individuals to come to our rescue.“

  • First Lady’s N500m gift to Plateau families demonstration of Christian values —Pam

    First Lady’s N500m gift to Plateau families demonstration of Christian values —Pam

    Executive Secretary of the Nigeria Christian Pilgrim Commission (NCPC), Rev. Yakubu Pam, has said that the donation of N500 million to 500 families affected by violent conflicts in Plateau State by the first Lady, Senator Oluremi Tinubu is an exemplary demonstration of Christian values of charity and humility.

    In a two-page letter to the first Lady, titled “Appreciation For Touching More Lives in My State”, Rev. Pam said the action of the First Lady is worth learning from.

    He said, “It is not just about the amount but the empathy, sense of commitment as well as the humility of going there to make the donation to those 500 families across six local government areas of Plateau State.

    “Your commitment to humanity transcends politics, and your selflessness in reaching out to those in need is truly commendable.

    “Your very people-focused and positive disposition has not only vindicated those of us who became temporary victims of skeptical political opponents’ propaganda for standing for your progressive ideals; you have also helped win many to the side of truth and forgiveness even without preaching”.

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    Rev. Pam said the kind gesture of the First Lady is only a furtherance of the decades of the exceptional spirit of Christian charity and dedication to making our world a better place.

    “I write to join our state Governor, elders and other citizens of Plateau State to applaud yet another demonstration of your exemplary leadership and spirit of Christian giving.

    “On this blessed day, my heart is gladdened to write to you, not just as a citizen of Plateau State, a Christian leader in Northern Nigeria or in my position at NCPC, but more importantly, as a humble servant of the Most High God, to express profound appreciation for your unwavering commitment to the principles of Christian charity and your recent act of generosity that has touched the lives of many in Plateau State.

    “The news of your noble gesture of donating N500m to 500 Plateau families affected by violent conflicts in six local government areas resonated deeply with me and filled my heart with gratitude.

    “It is a continuation of your lifelong service to humanity and a shining example of Christ’s teachings on compassion, love, and selflessness in action.

  • Activists seek probe of Plateau election tribunal verdict 

    Activists seek probe of Plateau election tribunal verdict 

    Citizens United for Democracy in Nigeria (CUDIN) has called on National Judicial Council (NJC), and other anti-graft agencies to investigate the verdict of National Assembly Election Petition Tribunal sitting in Jos, Plateau State.

    Addressing reporters yesterday in Abuja, National Coordinator, Felix Ngutswen, discovered irregularities, casting serious doubts on integrity and impartiality of the judgment. 

    Ngutswen said the tribunal’s responsibility is to ensure fair and impartial adjudication in electoral disputes. 

    He noted that Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) conducted its primary in line with the Electoral Act 2022. 

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    He said the issue of qualification that Justice M.B Tukur is leveraging has been settled up to the Supreme Court. 

    Ngutswen said despite evidence tendered  by INEC and PDP on the repeat congresses of September 25, 2021 as a result of the court rulings, the tribunal declared that Senator Napoleon Bali, Beni Lar, Musa Bagos, and Peter Gyendeng were disqualified on the ground of the so-called ‘structural issues’.

    He said if democracy is truly government of the people, by the people, and for the people, the mandates of the lawmakers and senator should be restored. 

  • First Lady donates N500m to 500 families in Plateau state

    First Lady donates N500m to 500 families in Plateau state

    The national chairperson of Renewed Hope Initiative Foundation (RHIF) and First Lady of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Oluremi Tinubu has donated the sum of N500 million to 500 families affected by the communal crisis in Plateau state.

    The First Lady, through her “RENEWED HOPE INITIATIVE” (RHI), distributed Relief/Resettlement packages to 500 victims displaced by communal clashes in Plateau state.

    The First Lady conveyed the packages through the Plateau state governor, emphasizing that this initiative aims to assist the beneficiaries in their recovery from the adverse effects of the conflicts that have afflicted their communities.

    She said: “I am aware of the unfortunate crisis that bedevilled the state, particularly Mangu people. The report got me worried and concerned about the destruction of peace of the affected families. I can imagine the destruction of lives and properties.

    “A time like this is not to come and express our sympathies, but to take concrete actions to alleviate the sufferings of those affected. That is why we are here today, not just to sympathize with you but to offer our meagre support”

    Read Also: Gunmen kill  11 in Plateau

    The first lady assured that the administration of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is committed to pursuing dialogue and reconciliation among Nigerians that will foster lasting peace not only in Plateau state but in the entire nation.

    She added: “This 500, million naira is our modest support to enable affected families to renew their lives. Provided them with the means to renew their shelter and other essential needs.

    “To the affected families, I want you to know that they are not alone in the journey of recovery, we stand with you in solidarity and prayers. I urge you not to lose hope but have faith in God”

    The first lady called on well-meaning Nigerians to offer a hand of assistance to these affected families.

    In his remarks of appreciation, Plateau state governor Caleb Mutfwang the first lady is a very compassionate leader who has passion for humanity and was not ready to play politics with her love for humanity.

    The governor admonished the beneficiaries of the resettlement packages to use the monies given to them judiciously and also be their brother’s keepers by also sharing with other families who were not selected.

    Earlier in her remarks, the director on social intervention of the renewed Hope initiative Mrs Chioma Hope Uzodinma said the initiative is driven by solidarity, compassion, and commitment to improving the lives of fellow citizens towards a better life for Nigerian families.

    “These 500 families were carefully selected through the office of the state governor for 6 local governments – Mangu, Riyom, Barkin Ladi, Bassa, Bokkos, and Jos South LGA respectively, to ensure that those who are affected are the direct beneficiaries.

    Mrs Uzodinma expressed her gratitude to all those who have supported the program and made it a reality, including the office of the governor of Plateau State and the deputy governor. “Together we can make a difference and together we can renew hope in the minds of those who need it most.”

  • Plateau NMA labels suspect arrested for harvesting organ as quack

    Plateau NMA labels suspect arrested for harvesting organ as quack

    The Nigerian Medical Association (NMA) in Plateau State yesterday distanced itself from a doctor, Noah Kekere, was arrested for allegedly harvesting a woman’s kidney as quack.

    Chairman, Plateau State chapter of the NMA,  Dr Bapigaan William Audu, and the Public Relations Officer,  Dr. Istifanus Bintum Bako  in  a statement in Jos said, upon their  investigation Kekere was found to be a fake.

    The statement further reads in parts:  “This  is to inform the general public and all concerned that Mr Noah Kekere, who is being investigated over allegations of organ harvesting is not a medical doctor. “

    Diligent investigations by the association have revealed that he is a quack pretending to be a doctor.

    Further information will be made available following the conclusion of the investigative processes initiated by the NMA as well as the Nigerian Police, the statement further reads .

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    The association also   called on all members and citizens to remain calm as the association is on top of the issue, and is assisting the police to get to the root of the matter.

    Thank you.

    The Nation reports that  Noah Kekere, was arrested in Jos, Plateau State, after a businessman, Alhaji Kamal, accused him of removing his wife’s kidney during surgery in 2018.

    Kamal said his wife, Kehinde, had been suffering from chronic stomach pains for the past five years and was rushed to Kekere’s clinic located in the Nasarawa Gwom area of Jos North Local Government Area, where he diagnosed and concluded that she had ruptured appendicitis and needed urgent surgery.

    Kamal  further said ” The day the doctor conducted the operation, he started the operation from 12 noon till 8 pm, and for the past five years, my wife kept complaining of severe stomach pains. I continued to take her to the same hospital because I did not want to change the doctor that started her treatment,” he  said.

  • Plateau: Now, a courageous leader in the saddle

    Plateau: Now, a courageous leader in the saddle

    • By Chris Gyang

    In a piece titled, ‘Plateau: In Search of Courageous Leadership’, I had written, “In times of crises, citizens look up to their leader for protection, respite and direction. A leader who takes charge from the front, securing the values, identity and posterity of his/her people. And the people trust and support him with the assurance that he would neither lead them astray nor abandon or betray them.

     “From antiquity to the present day, these are some of the most fundamental grounds on which the legitimacy of leaders and their relationship with their followers are founded.” (See Daily Post, August 28, 2021.)

    I added that the leadership of the state at the time had not lived up to that billing. As a result, not only had the people lost hope in it, they had literally become sitting targets for extraneous forces bent on dislodging them from their ancestral lands.

     I was writing in the wake of the August 25, 2021, brutal attack on Yelwan Zangam in which not less than 36 innocent people were murdered in their sleep, most of them women and children.

    Sadly, it appears the state is not yet free from such horrors. The attacks appear to have been ramped up, perpetrated by the same elements that are bent on conquering and making parts of the state their colonies in this 21st Century!

    In the last three months or so, Mangu, Barkin Ladi and Riyom local government areas have come under well-coordinated, massive attacks that have left hundreds of people dead, homes razed to the ground and lush farmlands viciously mowed down or maliciously grazed upon by cows belonging to Fulani herdsmen.

    Many who were forced from their homes are now living in official and unofficial Internally Displaced People’s camps or with relatives and loved ones all over the state.

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    However, there appears to be a refreshing paradigm shift in the comprehension of these attacks and the approach towards tackling them. Unlike the tradition in the last eight years, the current leadership is neither prevaricating nor whitewashing the crisis for the sake of political correctness or to save its skin.

    To be sure, in the less than three months that Governor Caleb Mutfwang has been in the saddle, he has earned the positive reputation of hitting the nail on the head as far as these horrendous acts of violence are concerned. He had set the tone during his May 29, inauguration speech.

    He punctured and demystified a previously held, state- sponsored, subsidised and widely circulated misconception about the attacks on the Plateau. That patent and self-serving sophistry was that it was a conflict between two actively contending groups.

    Mutfwang had publicly declared, to the acclaim of patriotic Plateau people: “We must break this vicious circle of hate and attacks and refuse to allow people brand us negatively…. All we ask for is that those who live within the borders of Plateau must agree to live with us in peace and with utmost respect for our values and traditions….

    “We know that there are persons who do not seek the welfare of people…. They stood by unconcerned when our people were murdered in cold blood. They even callously labelled such genocide as ‘farmers/herders clash’ to the chagrin of the whole world.”

    That was the strongest rebuke of those killers and their shadowy sponsors yet to come from government in recent years. But, most significantly, it was the first time Government House, Rayfield, would debunk the widely peddled misconception that what has been happening here is a conflict between farmers and herdsmen.

     It was also the first time the killings had been rightly described as ‘genocide’ by constituted authorities in the past eight years. Taken together, the implication is that a genocide is being perpetrated against Plateau citizens by people whose identities are quite verifiable.

    No more shall the intelligence of citizens and victims be assailed by the false narrative that the gruesome killings are being carried out by faceless ‘unknown gunmen’, ‘miscreants’, ‘bandits’ and ‘criminals’.

    And close to three months down the line (coupled with the benefit of more briefings and insights from the various security chiefs conversant with the situation on the ground), the governor has doubled down. Which is a clear indication that he has been able to further confirm his earlier position of May 29.

    During a meeting with Plateau elders on Monday, August 21, Governor Muftwang reiterated that stand thus: “What we did upon coming on board… was to put out the true narrative for the world to know that there was no Plateau community fighting another community. It was an insurgency and a reign of terrorism…. I stand here as governor of the state to tell you … that what has confronted us is a terrorism that has come from outside.”

    Driving this ‘true narrative’ is the fact that, first, at last the state government is on the same page with the victims. Second, there are extraneous, powerful forces outside the state funding and inspiring these terrorists whose agenda is anchored on territorial expansion.

    And, above all, tackling the ailment can start in earnest now that it has been clearly and unambiguously diagnosed. But it must be said that arriving here has taken uncommon courage and determination.

     Mutfwang has not come with a magic wand that will make this terrorism disappear in the twinkling of an eye. No. In fact, these merchants of evil will put on a very strong resistance now that the man in the saddle has exposed their true nature and is determined to face them head-on.

    It’s a grim, precarious and dangerous task that requires grit, perseverance and sheer political will to accomplish.

     Therefore, Plateau people must brace up for more vicious onslaughts. The situation will escalate before it starts to gradually simmer down. It is the ability of his leadership to sacrificially and valiantly take the lead in gingering its people and inspiring them with hope to withstand and ultimately prevail that will mark the acme of the governor’s courage.

    Victory will certainly come at a very huge cost. On their part, citizens must be bold, patient, resilient and give the governor and his administration all the support he needs to stand against the terrorists trying to overturn the state’s social structures.

    Security analysts say that the governor has further bolstered his security agenda by appointing an experienced and renowned expert on Security and Homeland Safety to advise him in that area, working assiduously to reinvigorate the state-owned Operation Rainbow security outfit and making the Plateau Peace Agency more proactive in its modus operandi. 

    Citizens are anxiously waiting to see how these novel steps will bring respite and give them peace and tranquillity. A peace that will take them back to their ancestral homes and give them the economic, social and political stability for which they once prided themselves as free Plateau citizens.

    A peace that will give them equity and justice in a Nigeria where no one is discriminated against or abandoned to the brutal whims of other state and non-state players on the bases of their tribe and religion.

    •Gyang is Chairman, Journalists Coalition for Citizens’ Rights Initiative – JCCRI. Email: info@jccri-online.org)

  • Plateau govt, CP on collision course

    Plateau govt, CP on collision course

    • Mutfwang faults CP’s directive to unseal secretariats chairmen to resume

    Plateau State Government and Police Commissioner Julius Alawari are heading towards a collision course.

    This is  over who has authority to open the 17 local government secretariats that were shut following the suspension of the chairmen.

    The state government has faulted the directive by Mr. Alawari to unseal the secretariats and allow the suspended chairmen to return to work.

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     Attorney-General, Mr Philimon Daffi, kicked against the move while briefing reporters shortly after an emergency Security Council Meeting at the Government House, Jos.

    The meeting was presided over by the Deputy Governor, Mrs Josephine Piyo.

    Mutfwang on June 1, suspended democratic structures in the 17 local government areas and appointed Transition Committee Chairmen to run them.

    The suspension followed the recommendation of the House of Assembly over allegations of financial mismanagement by the chairmen.

    The  Police Commissioner some weeks unsealed the secretariats  and directed workers to resume work.

    The directive, however, exempted all political office holders pending the outcome of their litigation.