Tag: Plateau

  • ‘Plateau working to curb diseases’

    Plateau State government has intensified its battle against diseases.

    The state is battling cholera, Lassa fever and food contamination.

    Cholera has killed no fewer than six people; Lassa fever has killed one.

    The Deputy Director, Epidemiology, Ministry of Health, Dr. Raymond Juryit, said the government was working to prevent an outbreak and had taken specimens for experiment.

    Four cases of Lassa fever are being treated at the Bingham Hospital, Jos.

    One person is being treated at a hospital in Jingri, Bassa Local Government Area.

    He also confirmed that one person died of Lassa fever at Bingham Teaching Hospital.

    Juryit said: “On Monday, we got a report of cholera outbreak in Panyam, Mangu Local Government.

    “Our medical team was deployed to the community and we discovered that it was not a case of cholera but food contamination.”

  • Plateau to export potatoes

    Plateau to export potatoes

    Plateau is not just about temperate climate and breathtaking rocks. It boats potentially money-spinning solid minerals. Its potatoes are a delicacy. But the state is seeing more in the legumes than merely something to chew; it wants to export them and make money.

    Plateau produces plenty potatoes and other crops, thanks to its rich soil and friendly weather.

    Such vegetable crops as Irish potatoes, sweet potatoes, tomatoes, lettuce, spinach, apples and strawberries, among others, are easily produced in the state. Farmers on the Plateau harvest the crop three times a year because it grows well in both dry and wet seasons.

    The Plateau Irish potato serves a dual purpose; it is mainly used as food, and it is also used for its medicinal value. As food, people cook it like yam and consume it; others fry it into chips. Those who want its medicinal value wash it and eat it raw.

    However, the state never gets the real value for this essential crop because of its perishable nature.

    Soccour has come the way of the farmers. An international organisation, GIZ will now provide the technology that will enhance cultivation of the crop. It will aslo provide the technology for preservation, processing and packaging of the product for export. This is money for all concerned.

  • Plateau leads save Lake Chad battle

    Plateau leads save Lake Chad battle

    Jos, the Plateau State capital, is not in any way contiguous to Borno State. Both states are thousands of kilometres apart. But there is a socio-economic connection between them that dates back to pre-colonial era. That is the Lake Chad Basin located at the international border between Nigeria and Chad Republic.

    The Lake Chad is a pool of water that finds its way to that location from several sources. There are about seven river tributaries that emptied into the Lake Chad through various channels. Of all these tributaries, the one that contributes the largest percentage of water to the Lake Chad is River Dilimi whose source is from Plateau State.

    Dilimi River began from the rocky Jos terrains and meanders through several other states of the North-eastern Nigeria before getting to the Lake Chad Basin.

    The river passes through Bauchi, Gombe, Jigawa, Kano, Taraba, Yobe and Borno states before emptying into the Lake.

    Dilimi River, no doubt, has been the major source of water supply to government and citizens of the states that are along its channels. Citizens of those states are mostly subsistent farmers and the river helps them immensely during their dry season farming activities.

    Governments of these states use water from the river to create dams and reservoirs; treat and distribute it to their citizens to serve their water needs. The revenue generated from delivery of potable water by various state governments, is a major source of internal revenue for these states.

    Ironically, as important as Dilimi River is to these Northeastern states, it is seemingly insignificant in value to Plateau State. Geographically, the source of a river is very narrow and shallow, but as it courses, the river expands in space, volume and speed.

    Given these facts, Plateau State can only source water for its citizens from its abandoned mining dams and there is more than enough of such mining ponds scattered all over the state.

    There is an enduring problem about Dilimi River, the states along its channels and the Lake Chad. The volume of water of the Lake Chad has been depleting for over a decade. The drying Lake Chad is a major source of concern to farmers and fishermen around the Lake. It is also a source of concern for the states and Federal Government, even as it is a source of concern to security agencies.

    Apart from the problem of global warming, it has been discovered that some of the tributaries that supply water to the Lake Chad no longer do so, especially the Dilimi River which supplies 70 per cent of the water in the Lake Chad Basin.

    It was further discovered that all the states that are along the channel of the River Dilimi may have blocked its free flow or diverted its course for their economic benefits.

    The Director of Water Resources at the Plateau State Ministry of Water Resources and Energy, Mr Jonathan Mallang said: “Not less than 16 million Nigerians cutting across six states depend on the Dilimi River for survival. The river, which has its source from Jos, the Plateau State capital, flows through Bauchi, Gombe, Jigawa, and Yobe states before emptying into the Lake Chad located in Maiduguri, Borno State.

    Continuing, he said: “Numerous villages found along this river channel had continued to derive maximum use of the river through farming and fishing activities that are practised there throughout the year. Nature must have provided the river to complement limited rainfall in those parts of the North.

    “Hence, Nigerians in these areas took to farming and fishing as occupations. Governments of these states use the river as major source of water supply for domestic and industrial use. The Federal Government of Nigeria has developed millions of plots for agriculture around the Lake Chad. The Southern Irrigation Project owned by Nigerian government is the largest irrigation system in the Sub-Saharan Africa.

    “However, all these advantages of the Dilimi River as well as the Lake Chad Basin diminished within the past 10 years because the river is no longer flowing causing the Lake Chad to seize to exist. The reason for this can only be attributed to human factors.

    “Right from the source of the River Dilimi in Jos through to Maiduguri, indiscriminate and unhindered dumping of refuse which had continued for several decades has hampered the free flow of the river. This conscious or unconscious action of citizens of the five states that share the channels of this river not only reduced the flow of the river into the Lake Chad, it also eventually diverted the course of the river completely; changing the vegetation of the areas which hitherto makes the area conducive to human habitation.

    “This diversion of River Dilimi from its course was discovered to be the major cause of recent flooding of some parts of the North, especially such witnessed in parts of Gombe State and parts of Jigawa State respectively. Farmers and fishers from these states have not only lost their source of income, they‘ve also migrated to neighbouring states where they could practice their occupation.

    “Besides, uncountable number of homes has been flooded and farm lands washed away. Worst of all, the Lake Chad Basin eventually dried up. As a result, millions of hectares of land developed for irrigation faming by the Federal Government of Nigeria became a huge waste.

    “So, the depletion of the Lake Chad has to do majorly with the blockage in the free flow of the river due to activities of farmers, fishermen and rivalry among state that share the river channels and not by the effects of Climate Change as we earlier suspected.

    “When this problem was discovered a few years ago, the affected states came together as stakeholders with a resolve to tackle their common problem. Plateau, Bauchi, Yobe, Borno, Jigawa and Kano states came together to create a joint-fund called the ‘Hadeija, Jama’ are, Komadugu, Yobe Basin Trust Fund’

    “Each of these states,” he said, “has a financial commitment to the fund with Plateau State contributing N100 million while the remaining five states contributes N150 million.

    “When this trust fund was launched in 2006, former President Olusegun Obasanjo pledged N850 million on behalf of the Federal Government”

    Mr Mallang, who is the Plateau State Collation Chairman for the integrated water resources management pointed out that concerned by development and its socio-economic implications on the country, the concerned states with the support of the Federal Government moved to salvage the situation in 2006.

    “In 2006, the administration of President Obasanjo was said to have gone into partnership with the Department for International Development of the United Kingdom through the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN), Nigerian Conservation Foundation as well as the Lake Chad Basin Commission based in Njamena on how to salvage the Lake Chad.

    “When this trust fund was launched, former President Obasanjo pledged N850 million on behalf of the Federal Government. This support was a boost to the efforts of the concerned states and the clearance of the Dilimi River commenced in earnest.

    “The effort in clearing the river has resulted in the gradual return of water to the Lake Chad Basin in 2008 after lacking water for almost 10 years. Already, normal life is beginning to return to Lake Chad.

    In 2008, it was learnt, the Plateau State government which serves as the source of the river had, on behalf of the trust fund, awarded the contract for the clearance of the source to improve the flow of the river to Haco Nigeria Limited. This final phase of the revival of the Lake Chad is expected to accelerate flow of the river.

    The contract involves the removal of the waste which will be dumped in a land field identified by the Plateau State Ministry of Environment. Walls will then be built at the river bank to ensure it does not flood people’s houses and farms.

    By so doing, the beauty of the area will be sustained since people no longer dump refuse there.

    The government of Bauchi State constructed a dike (fence) to prevent the river from flooding as well as preventing indiscriminate dumping of refuge in the river channels by citizens. Kano State government constructed the Tigard Dam to regulate the release of water along the channels. Currently, there is a level of understanding between Kano and Jigawa states in ensuring that the river flows freely along their own channels. Jigawa State government, on its own, came up with a programme through which they empower non-governmental organisations (NGOs) for the mobilisation of communities to assist in clearing any blockage on the river channels. Yobe State is also not left out in the battle. So, it is a collective problem that is attracting collective efforts aimed at resuscitating the Lake Chad.

    Further efforts are said to be made by the Lake Chad Basin Commission through the Global Environmental Facilities (GEF) in seeking possible way of transferring water from the Congo Basin to the Lake Chad. The inter-basin water transfer is also expected to improve restoration of water to the Lake Chad.

  • Plateau: From ethnic  crises to cattle rustling

    Plateau: From ethnic crises to cattle rustling

    Yusufu Aminu Idegu takes a look at the new crime rocking Plateau State.

    CATTLE rustling (the act of stealing herds of cattle ranging from 50 to 200, 300) is the new crime in Plateau State and security reports have linked serial attacks in the state to cattle it. The issue of cattle rustling became noticeable in 2009. In the 17 local governments of the state, only three have minimal cases. These are Jos North, Pankshin, and Kanam. The highest cases are in Jos South, Riyom, Barkin Ladi, Bokkos, Shendam, Wase and Mikang. Others are Langtang North and Langtang South.

    According to the Commander of the Special Task Force (STF) on Jos crisis, code named ‘Operation Safe Haven’, Major-General David Enetie, the challenges before the command is the issue of cow rustling which he said has become a major business among the youths of the state. He said along with cow rustling is the proliferation of prohibited arms and military uniforms.

    The General who disclosed this a few weeks after taking over the command said, “The major challenges the task force and security agencies in the state are facing in the restoration of peace remain issues of cow theft, prohibited arms in the hands of civilians as well as proliferation of army uniforms.”

    He said, “Religious and ethnic crises were over in Plateau State as far back as two years ago; what we are witnessing now are attacks and killings caused by criminals who go about stealing cows. And such criminals are heavily armed.

    “Stealing of cows has become a very lucrative business in Plateau State. The youths have found stealing of cows as a means of survival because the major business with high income in the state is cattle breeding. So, the youths have devised ways of stealing cows. The recent attacks are reprisals following theft of cows.

    Arms proliferation

    “In several cases where the task force was able to recover the cows and return them to the owners, there will be no killing or attack. But in some cases where the stolen cows are not recovered, what followed are attacks and killings as witnessed in Shendam and Barkin Ladi few days back.”

    He observed, “You are aware that AK-47 is no longer an exclusive property of the military, the weapon has become very common in our society, especially in Plateau State where issue of proliferation of prohibited weapons is on the rise.

    “Another issue is proliferation of army uniforms. Criminals have found the use of army uniform to carry out their criminal acts the safest and effective way to commit crimes. Criminals use army uniforms to steal cows and commit all sorts of robberies.”

    He said this was the reason why the members of the task force no longer wear regular army uniforms, but desert camouflage, adding that despite that, criminals have a way of acquiring the camouflage.

    He wonders: “The puzzles we are trying to solve are: why do criminals steal cows at gun point? How do they dispose the cows after stealing them and where is the market and who are the buyers?

    “If we can find answers to the questions above, we will be able to stop cow rustling business and when we stop cow rustling or minimise them, there will be no more killings or attacks. So to stop further bloodshed here, I call on citizens of the state to stop stealing cows; people should stop buying stolen cows from the state and people should cooperate with the task force to stop these attacks, then we would have restored permanent peace in the state.”

    The STF commander assured that if residents are ready to expose the rustlers, his men would battle them.

    A European Union (EU) sponsored organisation known as Search for Common Ground (SFCG) which has been undertaking a peace building project in the state within the last two years also confirmed the challenge of cow rustling.

    During a peace meeting held in Jos recently, the issue of cattle rustling was the only thing presented for discussion and the Director General Research and Planning, Mr. Chris Kwaja, in a paper, said, “The problems of cattle rustling is the current issue of research before the United Nations (UN) Security Council because it has become a global concern.”

    According to him, “The current security challenges posed by cattle rustlers were predicted over 20 years ago. A study was carried out on the Sahel Savannah of West Africa in 1983 and it was discovered then that there would be huge conflicts in the savannah region due to the effects of climate change. The report specifically mentioned that the conflicts would be between cattle breeders and farmers. The report also proffered solutions to the predicted conflict in the region. But Nigerian government never took the report seriously, thinking such predictions would not come to pass, but today we are facing the reality.”

    He said the conflicts have been fuelled by easy availability of arms and asked, “How come the warring factions are fully armed to the extent that government security agencies are afraid of them? As a matter of fact, cow breeding and cow rustling is not restricted to one tribe in the state. The major native tribes in the state; Berom, Taroh, Angas, Mwaghavul, Goemai and other minor tribes like Ganawuri, Rukuba, Irigwe, Amo, Chip, Mupun, etc all breed cows. The arrest of suspects made so far by security agencies on the Plateau shows that all these tribes including Fulani are involved in cow rustling. But the puzzle is who are the buyers of the stolen cows? The line between war and crime is becoming narrower, it’s like cattle rustling is likely to degenerate into war between farmers and grazers.”

    Observers believe cattle rustling is aided by large scale unemployment in the country. The crime goes with huge economic loss and death considering the sophisticated arms used and the level of coordinated attacks.

    The new dimension that has been added is that it has become inter-state whereby cattle rustled in one state are disposed in markets across other states. Similarly, there is now cross-borders cattle-raiding, especially between Uganda and Ethiopia.

     

    Way forward

    Cooperation among security agencies and adequate funding of operations as well as equipping them and inter-state cooperation among neighbouring states are some of the best ways out. For instance, Plateau State has already established a security outfit called ‘Operation Rainbow’. The outfit has a unit known as ‘neighbourhood watch’ given the fact that almost every ethnic group in the state breeds cows.

     

    The STF has had to expand its operations to take care of cow rustling; this was not part of its initial mandate and mission in the state. This is because more lives are being lost in the clash between cattle breeders and farmers, and cattle owners and criminals.

    The STF on its part will prefer that cow rustling be referred to as armed robbery as it has became obvious that both crimes are committed with sophisticated weapons.

  • 20 killed in Plateau midnight attack

    20 killed in Plateau midnight attack

    The Police in Plateau State said 20 persons were killed on Tuesday in an attack on four villages in Angwan-Waran, Riyom Local Government Area.

    The villages are Gwon, Gwarama, Gwarim and Torok in Rim District.

    The gunmen also attacked Gida Bua in Langtang South Local Government Area.

    It was gathered that 16 persons were burnt to death and 200 homes razed in Riyom Local Government.

    Four people were said to have been killed in the Langtang South Local Government attack.

    A 65-year-old man, Habila Dachung, who lost his wife in Riyom, alleged that Fulani herdsmen and soldiers of the Special Task Force (STF) on Jos crisis were the prime suspects.

    “I saw them in military uniform. These armed Fulani, accompanied by soldiers, stormed our village to kill our people; their guns woke us up at 2:30 a.m.”

    House of Assembly Majority leader, representing Riyom, Daniel Dem, said the victims were mostly women and children.

    Dem said: “I also believe the Special Task Force deployed to restore order is involved in the killings.

    “In most of the villages, there are STF officers, why are they not going after the attackers, if they are not involved?”

    Villagers have renewed calls on the Federal Government to withdraw troops from the state.

    The state police command confirmed the attack, but not the casualty figures.

    Commissioner of Police Chris Olakpe said in Jos the attackers fled the scene before the arrival of security agents.

    He said the police and STF officials stepped in and restored normalcy.

    “To prevent a recurrence, the police and the STF deployed a team of security personnel to the villages, while efforts are on to apprehend the attackers,” he added.

    The commissioner advised the public to help security agencies with information leading to the arrest of the attackers.

    STF Media Officer Capt. Salisu Mustapha said the invaders burnt unspecified number of houses before escaping.

    Mustapha said the STF arrested three persons found with arms suspected to have been used in the attack.

    “We are interrogating the suspects,” he said.

  • 29 killed in fresh attack in Plateau

    Unknown gunmen struck again on Saturday morning in Barkin Ladi local government of Plateau state killing at least 29 people mostly Berom.

    The attack came four days after another attack in Fan district of Barkin Ladi LGA where 13 Beroms women and children were killed in similar attack.

    Death toll in attacks carried out by unknown gunmen in Plateau state has risen to 163 in less than two months.

    The youth vigilante group in the affected village, Julius Bala said, “The dead bodies we counted after the attack is 29, apart those 17 people injured”

    The security agencies led by the special task force code named ‘operation safe haven’ has never arrested the attackers in all the deadly attacks by gunmen which has become rampant in the new year 2014.

    “Commander of the STF, Major General David Enetie and his troop only rush to the scene of attack when the gunmen have disappeared.

    “The plateau command of the Nigerian police claimed they had established a joint security committee comprising of community leaders, police, SSS, STF, civil defense etc for the purpose of intelligence gathering aimed at nipping plan attacks in the bud.”

    Members of the affected communities said the last Friday night attack were carried out in two villages of Barkin Ladi LGA and Riyom LGA took them by storm.

    The gunmen were said to have stormed the villages in large numbers and attacked both villages simultaneously by 2:30 am Saturday morning

    Interim chairman of Barkin Ladi local government Hon. Habila Dung confirmed the attack but said he was not sure of the numbers of people killed.

    The Plateau State command of the Nigerian Police confirmed the attack but declined comment on the number of casualties.

    But a non- governmental organisation known as Stephanos foundation working on peace building in the state said 29 people were killed during the attack in the two villages.

    The special task force in charge of Jos crisis is yet to issue statement on the attack, they promised to do that after investigation.

  • Ministry, others to support Plateau poultry farmers

    The Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Natural Resources, the Industrial Training Fund (ITF) and the Nigerian Export Promotion Council (NEPC) over the weekend pledged to support Poultry Association of Nigeria (PAN), Plateau chapter.

    The organisations pledged support in Jos, at the inauguration of the association’s new office complex at Dadin-Kowa, in Jos South Local Government Area.

    Mr Daniel Kakwi, the Director, Plateau Green House of the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Natural Resources, said that the ministry had empowered 100 poultry farmers under its Growth Enhancement Scheme (GES) in the state.

    Kakwi, represented by Dr Steven Dowoh, Assistant Director (Vet), said that the farmers were given birds, feeds and drugs at subsidised rates.

    He assured the PAN that they would continue to get more of such support from the ministry.

    “The Federal Government is interested in doing business with associations because individuals have failed government.

    “Most times when they (individuals) collect loans, to pay back so that it keeps revolving becomes a problem.

    “But for an association, if one person is not there, the other will and that has encouraged government to do business with them,” he said.

    The director said that forms for the Growth Enhancement Scheme in poultry were available and urged farmers to make use of the opportunity.

    “If you are interested, you can pick an expression of interest form from our office for participation in the Growth Enhancement Scheme,” he said.

    Prof. Longmas Wapmuk, ITF Director General, in his remarks, also said that the ITF would never be tired of supporting the farmers in their quest to improve on their performance and productivity.

     

  • 22 killed in Plateau attack

    22 killed in Plateau attack

    There is no let-up in the Plateau State killing spree.

    Gunmen early yesterday invaded Maro community in Wase Local Government Area of the beleaguered state, killing no fewer than 22 persons.

    The families of the victims are pointing accusing fingers at Fulani herdsmen.

    But the police and the Special Task Force (STF) have kept mum on the killings.

    Yesterday’s killings bought to 90 the number of those killed in the Plateau communal clashes in the last one month.

    Earlier in the week, there were also killings in Yobe and Kaduna states.

    The attackers, who stormed the village at about 2am, reportedly burnt about 10 houses.

    The attack has created tension in the local government, especially in Wase, the local government headquarters. Some detachment of security operatives have been deployed in the troubled zone.

    Wase Local Government has witnessed many ethnic conflicts, particularly between the Fulani and the Tarokh.

    The Interim administrator of the local government, Zakari Haruna, confirmed the attack in a telephone interview but said peace had been restored to the community. He declined to comment on the number of persons killed but confirmed that houses were razed.

  • WE SAW HELL

    WE SAW HELL

    The peak of harmattan is the worst period for anyone to be displaced in Plateau State. But that is the fate that has befallen about 3,000 residents drawn from 77 families in a Plateau community. They are currently sleeping in the cold following an attack on their village by unknown gunmen. YUSUFU AMINU IDEGU writes on the humanitarian challenges created by the attack in which no fewer than 40 residents were murdered.

    THE attack on Shonong village in Bachit District, Riyom Local Government Area, Plateau State, on January 9, 2014, which led to the death of about 40 Berom people, shares some similarities with the attack on Dogo Nahawa in July 2010. In both cases, the casualties were mostly defenceless women, children and the aged who could not run fast enough to escape the assassins’ bullets. And like in the Dogo Nahawa attack, Special Task Force (STF) soldiers are being accused of aiding the people who attacked Shonong.

    No fewer than 23 people were reckoned to have been roasted to death in a single room during the attack. Even the survivors of the attack have told whoever cared to listen that they “saw hell”. What made the Shonong attack peculiar was the fact that it took place during the day, lasting from about 7 am till about noon in a village where the STF is based.

    There were claims that in spite of the presence of STF troops, no fewer than 34 people were killed, 77 residential houses razed, two vehicles burnt and about 3,000 people were rendered homeless to face the cold weather in the state.

    It was an attack whose success could not be comprehended by many, considering the presence of soldiers deployed in the state to maintain the peace and save lives. The incident left in its trail a very serious humanitarian crisis in the state, even as many mourn their loved ones who were killed in the attack. Their houses were razed and they are now left to shiver and gnash their teeth in the cold weather of Jos, which has been at its peak since the beginning of the New Year.

    There are fears that the displaced persons could suffer pneumonia and other weather-related ailments or die if nothing urgent is done to provide shelter for them in the next few days. Some children below the age of five but whose parents are rendered homeless were seen shivering due to the effect of the cold weather since they were forced to sleep in the church after the attack two weeks ago.

    Nursing mothers among the displaced persons heaved a sigh of relief when officials of the Plateau State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) and Riyom Local Government Authority appeared with blankets and mattresses to be shared to them.

    But with or without relief materials, most of the survivors have already resolved to quit the village, as they expressed lack of confidence in the soldiers. They believe that many of the soldiers deployed in the area may have teamed up with their tormentors.

    One of the victims, Mathew Dadu, said: “These STF men have lived with us for about three years now. They know the terrain and we are already friends with them. We had so much confidence that they were here to protect us until the attack.

    “Our frustration and fear in this village are that if these soldiers can fail to defend us and we are being killed like frogs, then the fear is justified. People have no confidence in them any longer, hence they (people) are moving out of the village.”

    Gunmen suspected to be Fulani heardsmen allegedly attacked Shonong on January 9, this year, barely a week into the New Year. The villagers must have danced and sung glorious songs in their various churches during the pass-over night in anticipation of the New Year as it is the tradition among the Christian population.

    Therefore, the people did not envisage that anything untoward would befall them soon after they successfully crossed into the New Year. But nine days into the New Year; they went to bed and woke up, praising the Almighty for making it possible for them to witness yet another new day. As the daily routine in the village, the men left for their farms, leaving their women and children at home. But while the women were thinking of what to prepare for their children as breakfast, all hell was let loose by gunmen.

    Shoma Toma, a survivor of the incident who sustained gunshot injuries and was receiving treatment at the Vom Christian Hospital, said the attackers stormed the village in their hundreds at about 7 am when most of the villagers had gone to farm, killing mostly children, women and the aged.

    Toma said: “I escaped narrowly from the attackers because I was at home moulding blocks when they invaded the village. They came from four different directions to invade us. They started shooting at anything they saw. While trying to run, a bullet hit me in the back and I fell down. They rushed after me and I pretended that I was dead. They left me and went after some other residents.

    “The gunmen operated for more than five hours, killing our people as I lay down there. As God would have it, they never came back to me to confirm if I was really dead. That was my saving grace. I only got up when my relations came to me and started crying, thinking that I was dead. I got up to show them that I was alive. When I got up they told me that the attackers had left. But I fainted shortly after. I don’t know how I was brought to this hospital.”

    One of the community members who went to farm before the attack, Gyang Bala, said: “Maybe we made a mistake by accepting an official of the unit to lead the soldiers here. He was driven from Barkin Ladi LGA. He was also rejected in Jol and Fan. Our mistake was that we allowed him to stay.”

    The Majority Leader of the Plateau State House of Assembly and the member representing Riyom Constituency, Hon. Daniel Dem, said in this particular attack, the STF soldiers have questions to answer because they are based in the particular village and the attack ought not to have happened under their noses.

    “If the military men were there in the village and the attack took place at about 8 am and lasted till after noon, then the military have so many questions to answer,” he said.

    Hon. Dem, who condemned the attack during his visit to survivors who were receiving treatment at Vom Christian Hospital, lamented: “We have security men there. If the attack started around 8 am and lasted till afternoon, I think something must be wrong. What are the military men there for? If we suffered an attack from morning till afternoon and people were killed and houses were burnt, I think the military should be asked why they were sent there to protect the lives and property of the people.”

    He added: “We have tried to get in touch with them and they said they were on ground. What then happened from morning till afternoon that more than 30 people were killed and many others are lying in the hospital?”

    The Plateau State Chapter of the Nigerian Union of Journalists (NUJ) expressed disappointment with the performance of the militrary in the face of the killings that are going on in the state. The union noted that in spite of the establishment of a Special Task Force to stop killings in the state since 2010, thousands of people had been killed and more were still being killed under the watchful eyes of the task force, code named ‘Operation Safe Haven’

    Rising from a congress meeting held at the state secretariat in Jos penultimate Wednesday, its communique reads: “Members of the Plateau State Council have noted with regret that for the past four years, the state has been engulfed in sectarian violence and has through the years reported the events according to the dictates of our profession.

    The communique added: “We have noted that through these years, one commander or the other has been deployed to the state as head of the Special Task Force on internal security.

    The task force is made up of the three arms of the military, including the police, Department of State Security and the National Security and Civil Defence Corps. Yet, through the years, ceaseless attacks have been going on in some parts of the state without efforts to curb the trend.

    “These attacks take the same pattern in style and sophistry, where members of the same family are wiped out in one fell swoop. These communities have more often than not accused members of the task force of culpability in some of these attacks, which they alleged were sometimes carried out by men in security uniforms.

    “Yet, not even one person has been caught and brought to book. We are left with STF’s often rehearsed and quoted sobriquet ‘our own troops repelled the attackers.’ How can these attackers be repelled without any of them being arrested?

    “And we have noted the disparity in the number of casualty figures often given by the security agencies in the state with a view to downplaying the severity of the attacks.”

    The union resolved thus: “We may be forced to withdraw from reporting the activities of the task force if urgent steps are not taken by the STF to stop the senseless killings and bloodshed in the state. We ask the commander of the task force to investigate all allegations of possible culpability and connivance against his men in some of these killings.

    “We implore the Federal Government to, as a matter of urgency, release and implement the reports on Jos crises, especially the Solomon Lar Presidential Committee set up by the present administration.”

    The state chapter of the union had in 2012 threatened to boycott the state government’s activities over the unending bloodshed, but Governor Jonah Jang defended himself by stating that the security of lives and property in the state had been taken over by the Federal Ministry of Defence with the establishment of the Special Task Force in 2010.

    Narrating how the soldiers allegedly aided the mass killing in the Shonong attack, the community leader of Shonong, Da Yohanna Ciroma Dangyang, said: “While the gunmen began to shoot sporadically to scare our people, the soldiers came and asked them to hide in one room so that they would protect us there. The people obeyed and many people ran into the room for cover, not knowing that it was a ploy to gather residents for the attackers to kill.

    “As soon as the attackers approached, the soldiers disappeared and the attackers set the house ablaze and all its occupants of about 23 women and children were burnt to ashes. Even some people who ran to take cover at the primary school hosting the STF were shot dead. The closest compound to the STF base was attacked and five people were killed there while the soldiers were just watching the action.”

    He said the soldiers were not there to defend the village but to aid the attackers to achieve their mission. “Our cry to government now is that they should withdraw these soldiers and send us policemen. These soldiers will wipe us out very soon,” he said.

    Da Dangyang leveled the allegations earlier in the week when the Plateau State Emergency Relief Agency (SEMA), led by the Sole Administrator of Riyom Local Government, Mr Samdah Ishaya Matawal, came to deliver some relief materials to survivors of the attack.

    Presenting the relief materials to the displaced people who sought shelter at COCIN Church, Shonong, Matawal appealed to the people to remain calm as the state government was taking stock of burnt houses with a view to bringing in building materials for their reconstruction.

    He said their mission to the place was to present relief materials to the people whose houses and foodstuff were burnt to ashes in the area. He encouraged the people to remain steadfast and not abandon their houses for another place, as the main purpose of the attackers was to take over their land for grazing.

    Matawal urged the STF Commander to as a matter of fact deploy more security personnel in Shonong, adding that the few ones on ground were grossly inadequate to curtail the activities of Fulani militias. He added that there should be a synergy among the various security operatives in the area to nip in the bud the incessant Fulani attacks.

    The Plateau State Emergency Management Agency presented relief materials worth N2 million to the displaced people, according to Binta Wuyep, the Director, Relief and Rehabilitation unit of the agency.

    However, the special task force (STF) preferred to remain silent over all the allegation against it’s men. The only reaction so far since the attack was on the figure of casualties. The STF has not commented on the alleged culpability of it’s men. All efforts to get the spokesman of the STF Captain Salisu Mustapha to comment on these allegation failed as he declined comment.

    But families of victims believed as the police step in to find the remote cause of the attack, the level of involvement of the STF troops will be unveil as the end of the police investigation. One thing that is clear is that, the STF will not hesitate to court marshal any of it’s members found to have aided the attackers in the killings in Shonong as they have done in the past.

    The spokesman of the STF, Captain Salisu Mustapha, however, declined comments when contacted over the alleged culpability of soldiers in the attack.

    However, a source, who pleaded not to be quoted, said the STF would not hesitate to court-marshal any of the soldiers found to have aided the attackers as had been done in the past.

  • Peace forum in Plateau

    Peace forum in Plateau

    The Plateau State government has said it will constitute a forum to bring together all tribes in the state to foster peace and unity.

    The government said the forum is aimed at fostering love, unity and cooperation of citizens so as to consolidate on the peace process.

    Special Adviser to Governor Jonah Jang on Peace building Timothy Parlong said this in an address at the third Plateau peace architecture dialogue held yesterday at the conference hall, Government House, Jos.

    Parlong said: “The Plateau peace architecture dialogue was designed to highlight key concepts of unity and love among citizens, and with the objective to celebrate diversity of ethnic nationalities in the state.

    “The next step is to form a Jos community leaders’ forum, which is necessary for the consolidation of the prevailing peace.”