Tag: Plateau

  • Plateau NUT issues strike warning

    The Nigeria Union of Teachers (NUT), Plateau State wing, has warned that it may  declare a strike in some local governments if council administrators insist on imposing education secretaries on them, rather than choosing from their members at the basic level.

    To make good its warning, the union plans to stage a peaceful protest as a prelude to the strike.

    After meeting with NUT leaders from the 17 councils at the council secretariat, the chairman, Comrade Gunshin Yarlings, said: “It is our strong desire as a stakeholder in the education sector to compel government to appoint education secretaries from among the primary school teachers who are acquainted with problems at the primary education level.

    “But most Local Government Areas have continued to appoint education secretaries from secondary schools and ministry of education and impose them on primary schools.

    “We have tried to let government understand that primary school teachers possess better experience at that level to manage primary schools. Therefore, imposing appointees outside primary school teachers is unacceptable.

    “Only few local governments in the state have complied with appointing education secretaries from among the primary school teachers.

    “We have made passionate appeal to the local governments that are yet to comply, but they have refused our plea.

    “We have, therefore, planned a peaceful protest in all the local governments that have refused to work with primary school teachers as a mark of warning to those councils to comply.

    “If the situation remains unchanged after the peaceful protest, the next option is to declare full strike in those local governments.

    “We have decided to issue this warning to relevant government authorities in the education sector to intervene and avoid the impending strike.

    “We are ready to shut down any local government authority that refuses to appoint education secretaries from among primary school teachers since primary school teachers have the same qualification as their counterparts in secondary school.

    “This is why we appealed to Governor Simon Lalong to ensure he puts the round pegs in round holes.

    “We appeal to the governor to intervene now to avoid the impending strike”

  • Pillars 1–0 Plateau: Matthew secures crucial win

    Pillars 1–0 Plateau: Matthew secures crucial win

    Ifeanyi Matthew was the hero for Kano Pillars as he scored the winner against Plateau United in the week 20 of the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) game played at the  Sani Abacha Stadium.

    There were huge worries by the Masu Gida fans before the encounter as the team has failed to win their previous three games while Plateau United are regarded as draw specialists following their eight draws in the first stanza of the league.

    The home side raced out of the blocks quicker than their opponents as Matthew drew out two early saves from goalkeeper Isah.

    At the other end, Reuben Bala was free inside the penalty area of Pillars but instead of finding the back of the net he made a typical rugby clearance by booting the ball into the Kano skies.

    Centre referee Hadiza Musa had little to do during the game as the first half ended goalless.

    Kano Pillars switched things up in the second half as Nafiu Ibrahim came on for Tijjani Adamu in the second half as the home side searched for the opening goal of the game.

    The home side won a penalty as defender Kelechi John handled the ball inside the box and Ifeanyi Matthew coolly slotted home to send fans inside the Sani Abacha Stadium into wide frenzy.

    Plateau United tried to snatch a late draw but Pillars held on for a vital win.

  • AfDB Potato value chain project for Plateau

    AfDB Potato value chain project for Plateau

    The African Development Bank (ADB) potato value chain project that will boost potato farming is to take off in Plateau State soon, its Coordinator, Mr. Thaddeus Yelwa, has said.

    Speaking in Jos, the Plateau State capital on Monday, Yelwa said once the project begins, the state would produce Irish potato three to four times yearly.

    He said the project, aimed at improving the quality and quantity of potato farming, will empower farmers with improved seedlings and other farming tools.

    Yelwa added that the value chain project was an offshoot of Fadama ll programme, which ended in 2012.

    “Plateau is rated the leading state in terms of execution and utilisation of funds made available by ADB for Fadama ll projects. This is why the bank has also agreed to include us in the six states that will benefit from the additional funding,” he said.

    He said this time around the money would be channel into improving potato farming because the state produces it in high quantity.

    “This project will soon take off, and it will cover the aspect of production, storage, processing, which is value addition and also marketing of the product,” he said, assuring that with all modalities in place, Plateau will be producing potato four to five times in a year once the project begins.

    He further explained that with the project on course, potato farmers would smile home, as ordeals they usually encounter would be taken care of by the project.

    The Coordinator urged Plateau indigenes to go into potato farming, saying “it is a very lucrative and viable business”.

  • Plateau: Anxiety over Assembly’s report on budget

    Plateau: Anxiety over Assembly’s report on budget

    There are apprehensions in Plateau State that the latest report of the House of Assembly Appropriation Committee may stir controversy between the executive and the legislature, or among the legislatures.

     Citizens of Plateau State have been left in the dark as to the situation regarding the 2016 Budget estimates that is pending before the state lawmakers since December last year. Citizens are worried that the process of approving the budget is getting prolonged and may delay the works of the new APC government in the state.

     Plateau State Governor, Simon Lalong, had in December 31st, 2015, presented a budget estimate of N154 billion to the House for approval. It was tagged “Budget of Hope and Rescue” to bear the slogan of the APC government, which prides itself as the “Government on Rescue Mission”

     The budget was later committed to the House Committee on Appropriation and the committee sliced the budget to N146 billion.

    A lot of citizens in the state are worried that the budget is unnecessarily delayed by the lawmakers. This is perhaps because instead of hearing news of the passage of the budget by the House, they were told that the budget has been reduced drastically by the lawmakers. Instead of the passage, the House Committee only submitted its reports to the House.

     In the report, submitted by the Chairman, House Committee on Appropriation, Hon. Jacob Kassam, the committee recommended a reduction of the budget from N154billion to N146billion. Critics have alleged that the report is another round of delay in the passage of the budget as the entire House will also need to take time to study the report of the Appropriation Committee.

     This is happening when lawmakers of neighboring Nasarawa State increased the budget estimates of the state by N1billion, from what their governor presented to them for approval.

     According to Kassam,  “The committees were compelled to cut down expenditure based on the impact of the current economy resulting from the falling price of oil, with negative consequences on our earnings as a nation that is so heavily dependent on foreign earnings from oil”.

    “By virtue of the power invested in the House in section 100 sub-section (1 and 2) of the Constitution of Nigeria and also in compliance with order 11 (6a) b (i and ii) of the House Standing Rules, the budget which was committed to the Appropriation Committee on January 20th 2016, stipulates that all standing committees of the House shall, for this purpose, disintegrate to sub-committees where agencies under their jurisdictions will defend their proposals.”

     He said the goal of the budget is to reduce human sufferings by uplifting the quality of life of the people.

     “2016 budget is zero-based due to the drastic fall in revenue from the Federation Account and the state government is faced with looking inwards in order to boost revenue profile from other sources”.

     The House has resolved to look into the report of the Committee on Appropriation before passing the 2016 budget. It is not clear if the reduction of the budget size will go down well with the state governor, just as it is not clear if the House plenary will accept the reduction. But there are apprehensions that the report of the Appropriation Committee may stir controversy between the executive and the legislature, or among the legislatures. Sources say the expected controversy may however be avoided if stakeholders show understanding and tolerance.

     Meanwhile, the people are asking, when will this budget be passed?

  • Power relief in Plateau, Bauchi, Benue, Gombe

    Power relief in Plateau, Bauchi, Benue, Gombe

    Years of epileptic electricity may be nearing an end as four northern states get pre-paid meters and transformers, reports YUSUFU AMINU IDEGU

    Like everywhere else in the country, constant electricity supply has been hard to achieve for decades in Plateau, Benue, Bauchi and Gombe states, leaving residents with sighs and gasps. Now, that seems about to end. In Jos, the Plateau State capital and headquarters of the zone, no fewer than 130,000 pre-paid meters and 400 transformers were displayed for immediate distribution to the states. There were other electrical appliances there to boost power in the zone.

    It was the launch of electricity  facilities supplied by the Jos Electricity Development Company (JED), an independent power firm. It was an event which raised hopes of improved power supply across the states.

    The meters came in single and three phases.

    The Minister for Housing, Works and Power, Babatunde Fashola was represented at the event by a senior staff of the ministry, Mr. Bako Muhammed.

    It was an opportunity for the minister to prove to Nigerians that the privatisation of the power sector was the best option for the country and that the investors who took over the sector in all the zones are determined to do business by making sure electricity gets to every home in every village across the country.

    The minister appealed to Nigerians to exercise a little patience over the recent shortfall in power supply as the current administration intensify efforts to proffer genuine and permanent solution to the challenges.

    The minister said, “Government appreciates the challenges Nigerians are facing as a result of the shortfall in electricity supply in the country, government also shares the pains associated with insufficient electricity in the country. However, government is appealing to all Nigerians to remain patient and give government a little time because government is coming up with genuine and permanent solutions to the energy crisis.

    “The ongoing reforms in the energy sector is a genuine one that will bring about constant electricity supply to every homes in this country, but a little more patience from all Nigerians is all government needed to concentrate on plans to bring about the lasting solution.”

    The minister called on all the investors in the power sector to be committed and transparent in implementing their own part of agreements for the benefit of electricity consumers in the country. The call has become necessary because Nigerians expect nothing less than quality service from the electricity distributing companies all over the country.

    In a welcome address, Managing Director and Cheif Executive of the Jos Electricity Distribution Company (JED) Muhammed Gidado Modibo said, “the company is injecting N50 billion into the power sector to ensure consumers in the Jos zone enjoy excellent services of the company.

    Gidado said, “The official flagging off of the distribution of 130,000 pre-paid meter and 400 transformers to consumers is a demonstration of our commitment to provide efficient electricity distribution service to people of the zone. This is also a guarantee to our consumers in the zone that in the next few months power supply will change for the better, there will be improvement in electricity supply to every homes within the zone” said Gidado

    He said, “We took over electricity distribution in the zone with a commitment to revamp the company and improve the quality of service within its franchise area of Plateau, Bauchi, Benue and Gombe states.

    “We planned to install 180,000 meters by the end of 2016, already we have taken delivery of 13,000 of those meters and we have commence distributions and installations for our co stompers.

    “JED will also make it easy for our customers to pay their bills by implementing the online vending systems for all pre-paid meter to ease the hassle of going to our cash office to pay their bills.

    In a remark, Plateau State governor, Simon Lalong expressed appreciation to the company and called on private investors to take advantage of the improve power supply in the zone to invest in the state. He said, “It is power supply that drive economic fortunes of any society and now that JED has taken giant step to guarantee steady power supply, I’m expecting investors to start trooping to Plateau state for investment.

    Lalong who urge communities to take responsibility of protecting electricity facilities in their environment against vandalism by criminals applauded the federal government for providing the regulatory framework to stabilize business of the energy sector.

    Former Head of Civil Service of the Federation, Alhaji Yayali Ahmed who chairs the company’s board of directors was also at the event to ensure it works according to plan.

  • Joy for the needy in Plateau

    Joy for the needy in Plateau

    It was a day of joy for needy children, some of whom lost their parents during conflicts, a familiar phenomenon in Plateau State. They got toys to play with. They also got food, thanks to a non-governmental organisation (NGO) Julz Changing Fazes.

    They were not the only beneficiaries. Widows also relished the JCF moment, taking home foodstuff, clothing, jewelry and shoes, among other things.

    But perhaps the best thing they got was much-needed love.

    It was all happening in Shendam, Shendam Local Government Area of the state. The NGO assembled hundreds of the needy at the Roman Catholic Missionary (RCM) Primary School, Shendam where it distributed the items.

    The NGO started five years ago in Shendam with training of young girls in cosmetics and fashion design, among other trades.

    This time JCF reached out to orphans and widows as part of events marking its fifth anniversary.

    Director of the NGO, Juliana Aliyu said,  “Julz Changing Fazes (JCF) is all about helping the less privileged especially widows by showing them love and care which they have been lacking after losing their breadwinners. The NGO is also into encouraging and supporting girl-child education in rural areas.

    Aliyu said, “The NGO has been sustained with personal income and financial and moral support from family and friends. My focus is to concentrate on poor people who hardly get government attention; we try to give them a sense of belonging, hope and care.”

    She distributed toys and packaged food to children at the event which attracted hundreds of children and widows. Women with physical disability were also presented with wheelchairs.

    A former deputy governor of the state, Dame Pauline Tallen attended the event, as did Chairman, Management Committee of Shendam Local Government Area Hon Miskoom Alex Naantuam and his wife Mrs Regina Alex Naantuam. Hon. Johnbull Shekarau, member representing Shendam/Mikang/Quaanpan at the National Assembly was also there, as were several state functionaries.

    Mrs. Naantuam promised to partner with the NGO to be able to reach out to vulnerable widows and orphans in the locality.

  • Plateau, Delta communities in the throes of gang wars

    Plateau, Delta communities in the throes of gang wars

    An ugly and dangerous trend is gradually firming up in major cities across the country. Young men have formed themselves into vicious cult gangs leaving blood, tears and sorrow in their trail. From Lagos to Port Harcourt, Asaba to Jos and Yenagoa to Umuahia, the story is the same.  Stories of violent clashes between rival cult groups have taken a turn for the worse.

    Two weeks ago, wicked cult gangs beheaded a chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Rivers State and  killed his wife and two children.

    The sons of the devil took their devilish acts to unprecedented height earlier in the week when   two students of Abia State University were reportedly beheaded. The heads were then used as goal posts by the daredevil boys.

    Last week, we began a series on the dangerous trend with the activities of cult gangs in Rivers State. Plateau and Delta states are in focus this week.

    Plateau: Yan-Daba and Yan Sara-Suka hold court

    In the tin city of Jos, Plateau State, the two most prominent groups are the Yan-Daba and Yan Sara-Suka. Among the people, these groups are not called cult gangs, but the mode of operation and the pains they leave in their trail are the same as those of cult gangs in the other parts of the country.

    Investigations by The Nation revealed that the activities of both Yan-Daba and Yan Sara-Suka are restricted to Jos North Local Government Area of the state, with their main base located along  Bauchi road and the Hausa-Muslim dominated areas.

    According to sources, the groups’ members are believed to be former mercenaries hired from outside the state to support their kinsmen at the height of the violence that threatened to tear Jos apart, particularly between 2001 and 2011.

    They allegedly chose to make Jos their home at the end of their assignment. Said to be between the ages of 10 and 30, the young men were said to have become more powerful than their former masters, a situation which has made it almost impossible for them to be chased out of the area.

    A resident of Jos South LGA, Bitrus Mang, said: “These boys that formed these gangs are not natives of Jos. They were brought in at a point by a particular people to fight the indigenes of the state. Now that the fighting is over, the boys have become a burden on their sponsors who have used and dumped them. Now, these boys have refused to return to where they were brought from. They have become uncontrollable and lawless. I expect security agencies to fish out these boys and flush them out of this state because they don’t belong here.”

    The gang members, who have no meaningful source of livelihood, have made living in the area tough for the residents, as they engage in all forms of crime to survive.

    Their activities, according to a source in the neighbourhood, include raping of teenage girls and petty thefts.  Dispossessing hapless residents of their property and kidnapping of young children have become the two common crimes in the area since the groups began their operations.

    “To get high, these boys smoke anything, ranging from hemp to every other thing they can lay their hands on,” a source, who wished not to be named, said.

    Recently, the State Police Command paraded a suspect, who allegedly kidnapped a three-year-old boy. The State Commissioner of Police, Adekunle Oladunjoye,  said the suspect, Umar Isa, lured the toddler at Naraguta village in Jos Metropolis, and took him to Bauchi, from where in demanded for the payment of ransom.

    According to the police, Isa was apprehended as he was about to collect the sum of N250, 000 he demanded.   The suspect was paraded along with 20 other youths, who were arrested for various offences.

    Apart from their criminal activities, the fight for supremacy between the two gangs has led to many battles that often leave innocent victims to suffer untold hardships.

    A resident of Yantipa Jos, Sanusi Yahaya, told The Nation that the activities of the two warring gangs brought home to the people of the area the reality of the existence of cult groups. He said: “There was a deadly clash between the Yan-Daba gangsters around the Yan-Tipper Junction on Bauchi road early this year. It was a terrible fight and it surprised many people. The fight started suddenly and we were later told that it was a fight between two rival cult groups. It was at that point that we knew that these boys were really here among us.”

    By the time the smoke from gangs’ guns cleared, one person lay dead. His death was said to have led to more fights and reprisal attacks, with more deaths recorded on both sides.

    One month after the deadly clash, the residents of Sabon Layi woke up one morning to the gory sight of a lifeless body of another youth, another victim of cult gangs. Just as the people were trying to come to terms with the latest death, another gang member was hacked to death in the Angwan Rogo in Jos North.

    Residents have accused local vigilance groups of not doing enough to stem the tide of the ugly trend. According to them, the vigilance groups looked the other way while the gangs continue to terrorise the people.

    A resident of the Hausa settlement area in Angwan Rogo, said: “These boys have taken the laws into their own hands. They are involved in various kinds of criminal activities. You could just wake up in the morning to find out that all the windscreen of the vehicles parked along the streets have been broken. They say they are carrying out their ritual, tagged shara (sweeping in Hausa language). For the people, every day is a nightmare.”

    The resident said it is worrisome that despite the overt display of lawlessness by the gang members, nobody has taken any action to stop them. Findings also revealed that the gangs have made areas like Nasarawa, Anguwan Rogo, Yan Tipper, Sabon Layi and Rikkos, all in Jos North LGA, their operational base.

    It was also revealed that the activities of local politicians, who provide covers for members of the gangs, have made the job of the security agencies difficult. “These politicians make it hard for security agencies to track these boys down. It is because they work for them,” a source claimed.

    The source also accused the Plateau State government of inaction on the activities of cult gangs in the state. A resident, Jacob Attang, said: “Governor Lalong is not doing enough to tame these boys. That is the main reason why they are growing in powers and are boasting that they are powerful. At the beginning, I thought the governor was too busy because of other state matters. But we need to draw his attention to this because these gangs have already constituted themselves into terror groups and they should be declared enemies of the state.”

    Another resident of Jos North, Alhaji Zekeri Baba, said: “The youth engage in this kind of attitude because they are jobless. I want to plead with the government to create jobs for these youths. They steal to survive because they don’t have any means of livelihood.”

    Delta: The fear of gangs…

    For many communities in Delta State, peace has taken flight, leaving hapless residents at the mercy of merciless cult groups. In most communities, bands of marauding youths act as lords, holding the residents by the jugular.

    The activities of the cult groups have reached unprecedented and dangerous heights in the state, with the gangs collecting ransoms, raping innocent girls, killing, maiming and imposing illegal levies and tolls on the hapless residents.

    But more worrisome for the people is the fact that security agencies in the state seem helpless in the face of the daring exploits of the vicious gangs. And expectedly, the deadly activities of the cult gangs have taken a huge toll on the socio-economic activities in Asaba and other major towns in the state.

    For most of the residents of these towns, the approach of dark is greeted with trepidations. Workers now rush back into the safety of their homes at the close of each day’s work, and fear to venture out until day break.

    According to findings by The Nation, being a member of a cult group has become more attractive to most youths in the state than seeking a legal way to earn a living. Also, one important feature of the groups is that they are populated by artisans, commercial motorcyclists and secondary school students.

    Though most of the groups have names that are similar to those cult groups in tertiary institutions, but they have no semblance to the goals espoused by them, except in their deadly activities. Some of the  major cult groups in Delta State include White Ladder, Aiye, Viking , Black Axe, Pyrates and a host of others.

    Unfortunately, with their easy access to sophisticated weapons with which they carry out dastardly acts, many of the cult groups have morphed into kidnap and armed robbery gangs, terrorising and making life difficult for the people. As a self-help measure, many communities have taken matters into their hands, organising themselves into vigilance groups and organising peaceful protests to call attention to their plight.

    Recently, scores of youths from Okirighwre community, Sapele L.G.A took their protest to the state Ministry of Justice in  Asaba, where they lodged their complaints on the activities of  the White Ladder cult group, and alleged a collusion between the group and officials of the state Ministry of Justice.

    The protesting youths blamed  the White Ladder cult group for the numerous cases of murders, arson and kidnapping in the area since 2009.

    The protesting youths urged the office of the Department of Public Prosecution to release the case-file of one Sunday Okoro, a.k.a GI. The youth asked that Okoro, with charge number MS193C,  stand trial for his crime.

    They feared that the delay in processing the case file by the DPP may lead to the case being struck out  at the Federal High Court for lack of diligent prosecution.

    It will be recalled that the group also led a similar protest to the state Ministry of Justice in August 2015.

    The leader of the protesters, Gabriel Omofeye, accused a top PDP chieftain and lawmaker of shielding   the ring leader of the cult group in Sapele LGA.

    He said: The three boys that committed the same crime with Sunday Okoro are presently in Sapele Prisons, with charge number MS 193C. The magistrate struck out Sunday Okoro’s case  and remanded his  three accomplices in Sapele Prisons. It is with the same charge sheet that they were arraigned before the court. The magistrate struck out the case for failure of the state prosecutor to be present in court on three occasions, after which the case against Sunday Okoro was struck out.

    “We are appealing to the DPP because there is rumour that N5 million has been given to the officials of  the Ministry of Justice by the accused person .We want the officials to exonerate themselves by bringing the case-file.  The Federal High Court wants the case-file, but the DPP is wasting time. Our lives would be in grave danger if these boys are granted bail.”

    However, the Director of Public Prosecution, (DPP), who spoke through an unnamed official, denied the allegation that the office of the DPP received a bribe of N5 million, promising that the allegation will be investigated.

    Omofeye said the community has not known peace since 2009 as a result of the activities of the White Ladder cult group, and accused some politicians in the state of being behind the cult groups, who he said worked for them during the elections.

    Agboroki Agboroh William had a nasty experience in the  hands of the cult group after he returned home from a long trip to Ghana. On his return, William was approached with an offer to join the group. But his refusal to join earned him an ultimatum from the cult group to leave  town.

    “I have been away in Ghana. I returned home on 4th of February to renew my passport and return to my base. But I was approached by the cultists who asked me to join their gang or leave town. But I exceeded the ultimatum, and the cultists, numbering over 10, attacked me with bottles and knives, shooting sporadically to scare away people.

    “I was left for dead, but a Good Samaritan saved my life. I only regained consciousness in the hospital. They also stole a lot of my properties. The two fingers on my left hand are now paralysed. This led to the arrest of three cultists who are now remanded at Sapele Prisons. But they are threatening to come after me, boasting that a no case submission would be entered by the office of DPP.”

    An alleged ringleader of Aiye cult group, Mamus Udouphori, who was paraded by the police recently, admitted to being a cultist. Mamus Udouphori and his gang members were arrested on their way to Oghara community to attend the matriculation of Otefe Polytechnic.

    Speaking on the mode of operation of the group, Oduophori said  his group often engages in robbery operations in their bid to raise finances to buy weapons and to also source money to spend on social engagements and celebrate festive occasions.

    According to him, “We rob to raise money to purchase guns for robberies and fund our social engagements, like Valentine’s Day celebrations and other big festive occasions. Our trip to Oghara Polytechnic, during which we were arrested, was to recruit new members into our cult group.

    “Before we go on any operation, we first rob to get an operational vehicle. We would replace the number plate with new ones and then place our operational weapons inside the car. It is either we are on a mission to dislodge a rival cult group that is encroaching into our territory or going on a robbery raid.”

    Despite this unsavoury situation, the Delta State Police Commissioner, Mr. Alkali Baba Usman, in an interview with The Nation, said the police have not relented in the fight against cultism.

    “We have taken the war against cultism to their camps. The command has had a diligent clamp down on cult groups in different locations in the state.”

    He also listed some of the successes recorded by the command’s special anti-robbery squad (SARS) to include raids on cult hideouts in Oghara, Ethiope West, where 48 cult members were arrested and are already in court.

    At Agbor, Ika South, another cult hotbed in the state, Usman said nine cult members have been arraigned in court, noting also that at Jesse community, about 13 members of Sparrow Junior Eye were arrested and are facing the wrath of the law.

    Relating the story of the dare-devil attack on police officers at Ibusa,Oshimili North, Usman said: “At Ibusa, cult members engaged a SARS team, threw stones at their Hilux van and in the process damaged the vehicles’ windscreens.”

    Usman noted that a follow up on the attack on 1st of November, 2015, by the command led to the arrest of 33 male and two female members of the Supreme Viking Confraternity.

    He said 252 cult members have been arrested since the beginning of 2016, with the majority having been prosecuted and convicted.

    “The command appreciates the cooperation of well- meaning individuals and stakeholders in the state for quality information, which has helped in stemming the activities of cultists in the state. The command wishes to appreciate the security agencies and the local vigilance groups for their various efforts at curtailing cultism and other violent crimes in the state.”

    As a direct response to the menace of cultism in the state, many neighbourhoods in Asaba, the state capital, have formed vigilance groups.

    The Vice-Chairman of Asaba Community Policing (ACP) a.k.a Anti-Cult, Azuka Okonji, who spoke to The Nation, said the cult groups have become dangerous.

    Azuka Okonji has an ugly scar on his face as a testimony to the viciousness of the cult groups; a hideous visage with the scar runs down the length of his face terminating where a nostril used to be.

    He is pint-sized with thick muscular shoulders and a rough exterior. No one messes with this local crime-buster.

    With a gravelly voice, he explains the reason behind the formation of  Asaba Vigilance group.  According to him, the group was formed 11 years ago following incessant killings within the metropolis, blaming land speculation business which has exacerbated the problem.

    He said the attraction into cult groups by youths was mainly for protection or because it was fashionable to do so.

    “The problem started about 11 years ago when young men, including vulcanisers, mechanics, skin divers, land speculators and even commercial bus drivers and their conductors began to find it attractive to join cult groups. At that time, a lot of killings took place because of inter-cult rivalries. It got so bad that people dared not step out of their homes after 5pm or 6pm. The cultists looted shops in Asaba metropolis, collecting illegal levies and harassing street traders. All these killed several businesses, so we had to step in to stop the killings.”

    Speaking further, Okonji said business owners no longer felt safe, as the cultists engaged in collection of illegal levies and tolls, threatening to maim or kill those who refused to pay up.

    He said the elders of the community met and decided to form the anti-cult group, which has metamorphosed into a full- fledged vigilance group.

    He noted that the elders selected five non-cultists, including five cultists from the major groups, and made them swear to various oaths before very powerful shrines to renounce cultism and work for the communal good, noting that death awaits anyone that contravenes the oath,  adding that truth and wholesomeness were cardinal pillars of the oath taking by members of the vigilance group.

    “We got five members each from the various cult groups to renounce cultism and balanced them up with five non-cultists. They all swore to an oath before a powerful shrine in Asaba to lead a morally-wholesome life and pursue justice, no matter whose ox is gored.”

    Okonji admitted that though cultism still exists, many of the diehards have either fled to Ghana, Lagos and other far-flung places.

    “We have largely succeeded in this task. Many cultists have been arrested, while some fled to Ghana, Lagos and other places. Even though the problem still persists, it is not like it used to be. We work with the police. Many commissioners of police posted to the state quite appreciate our work.”

    Like the vigilance groups, ordinary citizens of the state have not been left out of the crusade to rid the state of cultism. Chikelu Arinze is the councillor representing ward 13 Oshimili South L.G.A. Chikelu Arinze had a close shave with death after cult groups attacked him.

    According to him, he was lounging with a friend when cult boys, brandishing guns, swooped on them. Recounting his experience, Arinze said: “I was sitting with a friend outside my home in the evening when scores of youths attacked us. They quickly dispersed after dispossessing us of some of our valuables. We were lucky to survive the attack with only minor losses.”

    He lamented that cult-related activities were scaring business owners from settling down in the neighbourhood.

    “Before now, our people lived at the mercy of cult members who terrorised us every day. In the morning, you see them roaming the streets in their numbers. It was a common sight to see people running helter-skelter. The cultists committed all sorts of crimes, stealing handsets and robbing shop owners. This has hindered the growth of business activities in this area. Do you know that if you tell a commercial tricycle operator to take you to this area at 7.00p m, you would probably be told, no.”

    He noted that part of his campaign promise is to drive cultists from his community, adding that there has been some success in the last four months following the installation of CCTV at strategic locations in some parts of the community.

    H e said: “Although the police post in the community is understaffed, but we have a good relation between the police and vigilance groups. We have empowered the vigilance groups by providing them with a patrol vehicle, communication equipment and other tools to secure the area.”

    Hon Arinze said cult groups were made attractive to young men because of unemployment, urging government to provide jobs for the youth to make crime less attractive. He also appealed to religious bodies to assist in creating skill acquisition centres for the youth.

  • Plateau natives warned Lalong against new district for Hausa settlers 

    The Berom and Anaguta ethnic groups have warned Plateau State Governor, Simon Lalong, not to accept any proposal for creation of separate districts for Hausa/Fulani settlers of Jos North local government area.

    The indigenous tribes said creating another district for the Hausa community of Jos North will reignite another ethnic conflict in Jos.

    They gave the warning in a statement jointly signed by Da Ericson Fom on behalf of the Berom Educational and Cultural Organisation (BECO) and Yakubu Kankani on behalf of Anaguta Development Association.

    They claimed that certain forces within and outside the state had been mounting pressure on the state government to create a new district for the Hausa community of Jos North.

    Lalong last year set up a committee for the review of Chiefdoms, districts and villages created by previous administrations in the state.

    The committee is chaired by Mr. D. G Fompun.

    The demand for district and chiefdom has been one of the factors that triggered off the prolonged Jos crisis in 1994 and 2001.

    It led eventually to imposition of a state of emergency in Plateau in 2004 Parts of the statement read: “It is in the candid opinion and advice of the Anaguta and Berom stakeholders that the relative peace currently being enjoying in Jos should not be ruptured by reckless statements of individuals or groups, no matter how highly placed.

    “Permanent peace has been achieved in Jos North. We should all work together to sustain it.

    “And the governor should be cautious of any action that is capable of igniting conflict in the volatile city of Jos.”

  • Plateau to fund budget with IGR

    Plateau State’s 2016 budget now before the House of Assembly will be financed with internally generated revenue (IGR), Commissioner for Finance, Mrs Tamwakat Weli sa said.

    She said: “The dependence on oil revenue and monthly statutory allocations to states in the past is no longer enough to sustain states’ expenditures, and each state will have to look for alternative revenues to fund local budgets.

    The commissioner made the remark while leading a tax sensitisation road-walk round Jos, the state capital.

    The tax sensitisation road-walk which was organised by the Plateau State Board of Internal Revenue took all revenue staff and management to major commercial streets of Jos to create awareness on the importance of paying tax.

    “The awareness campaign became necessary following the downfall in oil prices and federal allocation to the state…The walk is also in commemoration of the takeoff of presumption tax system in the state. I, therefore, call on both the artisans and traders to consider paying their tax as an obligation to constituted authority in other that government can deliver on its mandate.

    The acting chairman of the Revenue Board, Mr. Ar’lat Dashe added, “The campaign is to enable both the formal and informal sectors in the state to pay their tax in meeting up with the 2016 budget estimates of the state.”

    He pointed that the revenue agency is targeting over 700,000 individual taxpayers in the state as they partner with relevant stakeholder and the 17 local government areas of the state to ensure that the revenue target is realised.

    The state has a target tax figure of N2 billion each month.

     

  • Lassa fever: Plateau records eight deaths

    Plateau State Commissioner for Health Dr. Kunden Deyin has said the state recorded eight deaths, 13 confirmed cases and 50 suspected cases of Lassa fever from December.

    He told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Jos yesterday that the state began sensitisation and awareness campaigns in the Jos-Bukuru metropolis and in 17 local governments.

    Dr. Deyin said the campaigns were aimed at enlightening the people on how to prevent the disease and ensure it was eradicated.

    Said he: “Lassa fever is transmitted through the urine and faeces of a rat that serves as a reservoir for the Lassa virus.

    “The ministry, through its sensitisation campaign, is making an effort to educate the populace on the importance of keeping a clean environment and on the need to ensure that foods are stored in rodent-proof containers.

    “We also encourage them to desist from drying foodstuffs on the roadside, since rats can urinate and defecate on them.

    “We embark on this social mobilisation because we believe prevention is better than cure.”

    The commissioner said the ministry liaised with traditional and religious leaders to sensitise their people on the importance of promoting good community and personal hygiene.

    He said this was the surest means of discouraging rodents from entering their homes.

    Deyin said the ministry trained 54 laboratory scientists from the 17 local governments to ensure that basic precaution methods were practised. Twenty morticians were also trained on how to decontaminate bodies.

    He said the ministry procured drugs, personal protective equipment and other materials to make sure that standard precaution methods were observed.