Tag: Samuel Ortom

  • Why I worked against PDP in 2023, by Ortom

    Why I worked against PDP in 2023, by Ortom

    • Momodu dumps PDP for ADC
    • Bode George: Ex-VP’s exit won’t affect our party

    Former Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom has given reasons for working against the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the 2023 general election.

    Ortom said he took the action because the party abandoned justice and fairness in choosing its presidential candidate.

    Speaking yesterday on a national television programme, Ortom said: “We had thought the PDP would uphold equity, fairness, and justice. Unfortunately, they did not,” he said.

    “I couldn’t understand how, after eight years of a northern presidency, the party would support another northern candidate.”

    Also, a publisher and former presidential aspirant, Chief Dele Momodu, has announced his resignation from the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP).

    He announced his exit from the main opposition via a personally signed statement on Wednesday.

    Momodu claimed that he could no longer remain in a party that has “derailed from its founding ideals and is now controlled by a small cabal”.

    He added: “I have come to the painful conclusion that my continued stay in the PDP is untenable. The party I joined with high hopes has become a shadow of itself.”

    The publisher said he has pitched his tent with the African Democratic Congress (ADC), a party he described as “ideologically aligned with the aspirations of Nigeria’s youth and committed to resetting the country’s democratic agenda”.

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    Also, a member of the Board of Trustees (BoT) of the PDP, Chief Bode George, has insisted that the Presidency must remain in the South till 2031.

    George spoke on a national television programme monitored by our correspondent.

    He said: “Once a presidential candidate emerged from the North, he spent eight years. After eight years, it must come down to the South. I didn’t write it. The founding fathers did.”

    George expressed confidence that Atiku’s exit would not affect the fortunes of the PDP in future elections.

  • PDP crisis: Ortom threatens to sue Ikimi’s committee

    PDP crisis: Ortom threatens to sue Ikimi’s committee

    Former governor of Benue state, Samuel Ortom, through his lawyer, Mr. C.T. Mue, has threatened to sue the PDP disciplinary committee headed by High Chief Tom Ikimi over alleged violation of the party’s constitution and the cybercrime act.

    In a letter addressed to the committee and dated February 11, 2025, Mue also demanded a written apology and withdrawal of statements made against the former governor within 48 hours.

    The letter read in part: “We act as legal representatives to His Excellency, Dr. Samuel Ortom, on whose behalf we write this formal demand. Our attention has been drawn to the Press Release issued by the National Disciplinary Committee (NDC) of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), dated 5th February 2025, which publicly announced an inquiry into alleged Petitions against Our Client. This public notice has caused reputational harm and violates fundamental principles as enshrined in Section 57 of the PDP Constitution 2017 (as amended) and Section 24 of the Cybercrimes (Prohibition, Prevention, etc.) Act 2015 thus:

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    “1. Violation of Section 57(4); Section 57(4) of the PDP Constitution mandates that where an allegation is made against a member, the Disciplinary Committee must inform the member in writing about the allegations against him and the date, time, and venue of the hearing.

    “Despite this clear provision, Our Client was not formally notified of any allegations in writing before the Press Release was issued. This constitutes a gross violation of the provisions of the PDP Constitution.

    “2. Violation of Section 57(7) Section 57(7) of the PDP Constitution clearly states that no Executive Committee at any level, except the National Executive Committee (NEC), shall entertain any question of discipline relating to members of the National Executive Committee, Deputy Governors, or Members of the National Assembly.  Our Client falls under these categories. Thus, the National Disciplinary Committee lacks the jurisdiction to entertain any disciplinary action against them, making the purported inquiry procedurally defective and unconstitutional.”

  • Ruga settlement: Forum blasts Ortom, Ishaku over rejection of FG’s cattle ranching initiative

    The Concerned Middle Belt Citizens Forum (CMBCF) has faulted Benue State Govenror, Samuel Ortom and his Taraba State counterpart, Darius Ishaku, for kicking against the planed Ruga settlement for pastoral herders.
    Ortom and Ishaku had came out to voice their rejection of the imitative by the Buhari-led government with the aim of resoling the lingering herders/farmers crises.
     National President of the CMBCF, Comrade Augustine Awulu at a press conference of Wednesday, said the governor deliberately stalling peace efforts to end the nagging menace.
    Earlier, the National Democratic Front (NDF) had called on Governors Ortom, Ishaku and others to emulate the former governor of Ogun State, Ibikunle Amosun and turn in every weapon in their possession to the relevant authority  their own good.
    Awulu of the CMBCF said Ruga settlement for the herders remains a lasting panacea to the nagging crises between farmer and cattle rearers.
    Text of his statement below.
     The Concerned Middle Belt Citizens Forum” (CMBCF) is again constrained to speak to Nigerians for obvious reasons. In the course of the week, the Federal Government of Nigeria (FGN) led by President Muhammadu Buhari announced its intention to experiment with establishing “Ruga Settlements,” for pastoral herders in 12 pilot states of the country.
    Surprisingly, this policy has been greeted with a strong cynicism, antagonism and antipathy by some States Governors in Nigeria from the Southeast and North Central States. We consider this absurd in the truest sense of it.
    We are not principally concerned with whatever the Governors of the Southeast think about this policy which is a carefully thought-out plan  and strategy to end the regime of clashes, killings and destructions between herders and farmers in Nigeria.
    We have grieved over these skirmishes enough and President Buhari had sufficiently notified us that “Whatever it will take, I am determined to bring peace between farmers and herders.”  The President aims at adopting a middle course as an enduring solution between the herders and farmers. And “Ruga Settlements,” are ideal by our sense of fair judgement.
    Therefore, we were not disappointed when Governors of the Southeast opposed it; but drenched in sadness when the twosome of Taraba state Governor, Arch. Dairus Ishaku and his Benue State counterpart, Hon. Samuel Ortom voiced opposition to Ruga settlements.
    Northerners do not share same cultural ties or even economic proclivities with the Southeast. Easterners are basically businessmen and women or commercialists or traders. But in the Middle Belt, we are farmers notable in crops and animal husbandry. There is little essence in emphasizing that we need one another to survive in this hostile world.
    And we must necessarily see ourselves as members of the same family, bond by the same economic destiny.  Its difficult to change this narrative now, as wished by some partisan State Governors, who are exploiting the herders/farmers crises to protect their unpopular decisions  and  blur shortcomings as state leaders.
    Nigerians are aware of the history of the herders and farmers clashes in the country and its aggravation in the last few years. The States Government of Benue and Taraba have already passed anti-open grazing laws, which are in their very contents and mode of implication very defective and deficient, while they prescribed ranching as solution.
    The magnitude of the clashes and carnage between cattle rearers and farmers has exacerbated because of these faulty or grey areas in the anti-open grazing laws. And there is no way, any right-thinking leader would feel, we shall continue to exist on such fault lines. Let us state clearly that we are not necessarily faulting the laws, but the grey areas in it, which are known to the Governors who hurriedly endorsed such laws under whatever convictions.
    The unalterable truth remains that at this stage of our lives, we cannot convincingly say, only crop farmers are needed and so, herders should go to hell! It’s impossible!    Whether we like it not, we must find a way of accommodating both farmers and herders in the same geographical enclave. That’s why we find “Ruga Settlements,” idealistic, rational and acceptable.
    The “Ruga Settlements” is an initiative of the National Economic Council (NEC) presented under the National Livestock Transformation Plan (2018-2027). It is conceptualized to permanently halt the age-long herders-farmers crises and to massively develop the livestock industry.
    The FGN is experimenting it for herdsmen in 12 pilot states nationwide, which it disclosed through,  Alh. Mohammadu Umar, the Permanent Secretary in the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, during an interview with journalists in Abuja,  at the workshop on Regional Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) and associated legislations in West Africa.
    Again, we reiterate that we cannot understand the opposition of some States Governors to it, especially, those who are apostles’ of cattle ranching because Ruga settlement is the same with it in colour and operation.  They are all about restriction of cattle movements; but open to stationary operations of herders in selected camps, licensed and protected with appropriate legislations by the FGN. For Christ’s sake, nomads are also Nigerians
    The Ruga settlements would have modern facilities and amenities, and ventinary clinics for treatment of cattle to enhance greater productivity. It is what states which have passed anti-open grazing laws have advocated in such laws.
    So, where is the confusion and why the resistance to Ruga settlements? Or could it be that we hate our brother-herders so much that we think, shutting the doors against their only means of economic survival would give them the grace to sing songs of  praises of this fraternity? Everything about life, is live, lets live!
    Please, we must be reasonable for once! The Ruga  pilot programme has already commenced on a 31,000-hectare in Kotongora, Niger state. It is within the same Middle Belt and North Central region particularly.
    We believe the FGN is working in tandem with a World Bank recommendation which stated as far back as 1954, after a review of pastoralism in Nigeria that  “stabilization” was the most important  and critical ingredient  in the expansion and modernization of cattle  production in the country.
    Therefore, among the three proposals the World Bank recommended were establishment of “grazing reserves to be protected by law; provision of land rights to the pastoralists and the development of communal villages in grazing reserves as a means of bringing livestock into peasant agriculture.”
    Let us remind that even in a post independent Nigeria and precisely in 1965, these World Bank recommendations were passed in to law. And it consented to  a minimum 10% of the country’s land area to be legally acquired and constituted into grazing reserves for lease allocation to grazers.
    Unfortunately, as we speak, only about 23 proposed grazing areas out of 299 proposed in the then Northern states, including Abuja, amounting to 2.3 million hectares have been operationalized. And it covers only slightly above 500,000 hectares of land for Nigeria’s cattle population which is estimated at over 19 million cattle?
    There is no fairness in this posturing and grandstanding by these Governors and other opposers to Ruga Settlements’. We must do the needful now, by embracing the Ruga Settlements’ as a modern -day recodification and re-modelling of grazing reserves.
    By our thinking,  this is what Ruga settlements means and it is only the FGN which has the financial muscle to implement it. And it is the most preferable to the popularized concept of ranching because, while Ruga settlements are insulated and protected from abuse by local forces; ranching exposes herders to the  near dictatorial tendencies of local communities, which would again open fresh vistas of conflicts.
    We must give peace a chance. No Nigerian alive today can think forceful Islamisation of the country is possible. So, whatever conflicts between herders and farmers have no religious undertones and its time, we call a spade a spade.
    What we are now attempting to understand is not new.  It has always existed in the Northern region and even recognized by the colonial government.  Yes, we made mistakes. But we cannot perish the idea of grazing reserves, now renamed Ruga settlements, which share every affinity with ranching.
    Nigeria has  over 40 million hectares of grazing lands,  but just  about 3 million hectares are specifically tagged as grazing reserves  established under the Northern Region Grazing Reserves Law of 1965.
    And furthermore, from Nigeria’s total of 417 grazing reserves, only about 113 have been gazetted.  So, the permanent rehabilitation of herders can neither be overlooked nor ignored by anyone.
    And before the Whitemen removed the veil from our eyes in the guise of colonization, we had traditional grazing grounds called  “Hurmi,”  and such lands were  strategically located at the vicinity of the towns and villages throughout Northern Nigeria. We need peace and harmonious existence.
    So, we have lived with this idea and these modern-day crusaders of anti- Ruga settlements should know. And rewinding history backwards further, we will understand that as far back as 1901, Nigeria recognized nomadism in the use of land, when a devastating drought occurred in some parts of Northern Nigeria.
    The understanding to persuade nomads to settle in areas of greener pastures within the North,  the move  was first made in 1942.  Riyom near Jos, in present-day Plateau State is famed for this settlement, where pastoralists were encouraged  to settle. Each herding household unit was allocated a piece of land and persuaded to engage in mixed farming and alongside development of  pasture areas.
    We have appreciated the issue of population explosion and the attendant consequences of scramble for lands. But to think that we can make these calculations, and ignore pastoralists is unwise. We are obligated to factor them into it.  And Ruga Settlements provides this succor nomads need desperately.
    To continue to sustain the argument of resistance in accommodating them is not only foolish, but chaotic and a sure path of nourishing the anarchy our people have had to bear these years.
    Let’s learn from  the wisdom of  Nobel Laureate, Professor Wole Soyinka,  who said;  “herdsmen, let us appreciate, are perhaps humanity’s earliest known tourists. They must be taught however that there is a culture of the settlement, and learn to seek accommodation with settled hosts wherever encountered.” Ruga Settlements provides the finest and nicest platform for  such co-habitation to pastoralists.
    Therefore, the Concerned Middle- Belt Citizens Forum” (CMBCF) believes that the initiative of the FGN on Ruga Settlements for pastoralists  is the ultimate antidote for peaceful co-existence and harmonious working relationship  between herders and farmers and by  implication,  all the citizens of Nigeria.
    Those opposed or antagonizing it, especially the State Governors, are doing so out of mischief. Or perhaps, to extract their pound of flesh from Mr. President for depriving them access to council funds, which they mindlessly siphoned; and strengthening the judiciary at the state level and working towards total autonomy for the 744 Local Government councils in Nigeria.
    These are two different issues, which should not be mixed under whatever guise. We want the opposers to Ruga settlements to be guided accordingly.
  • Ortom v Jime: Tribunal reserves judgment

    The Governorship Election Petition Tribunal sitting in Makurdi, the Benue State capital, has reserved ruling on the Preliminary Objection Raised by counsel to Governor Samuel Ortom   of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP’)   Samuel Ortom, praying the tribunal to strike out the petition of the All Progressives Congress’ (APC’s) governorship candidate, Emmanuel Jime.

    Jime is challenging the return of Ortom as governor of Benue State at the tribunal.

    PDP and INEC are joined as second and third respondents in the petition.

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    At the resumption of pre-hearing trial over the weekend,  Ortom, who was represented by Edward Ashiekaa SAN, urged the tribunal to strike out certain paragraphs of Jime’s application on the ground that they are offensive.

    Ashiekaa stressed that entertaining the petition would amount to waste of time.

    He urged the tribunal to strike out same.

    INEC and PDP did not oppose the application. INEC, PDP were represented at the tribunal by E.O.B Offiong SAN and Chris Uche SAN.

    However, Jime’s lead counsel, Sunday Ibrahim Ameh, who opposed the preliminary objection, also filed   a 19-paragraph counter affidavit.

  • Ortom to BMO: stop using my name to seek for jobs

    The Benue state governor, Samuel Ortom on Monday accused the Buhari Media Organisation (BMO) of using his name to seek political jobs from the president.

    The governor who said this is the season for political jobbers to jostle for appointments from the Presidency, added that and one of the ways to curry favour is to launch attacks on him so they will be seen as ‘hardworking and deserving’ of appointments.

    A statement by Tahav Agerzua, Special Adviser, Media and ICT to the governor faulted the BMO for accusing governor Ortom of fueling crisis in Benue State and blaming it on armed Fulani herdsmen.

    The statement read further, “the group also alleged that Governor Ortom celebrated the murder of 73 Benue indigenes in January 2018 with what it called ‘a parade of coffins and a jamboree burial’ to blame Fulani pastoralists. BMO also accused Governor Ortom of arming, shielding and using the wanted Terwase Akwaza, alias Gana, as well as Alhaji Aliyu Tershaku to massacre Benue people.

    “Contrary to the claims of BMO, Fulani pastoralists under different names such as Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association, MACBAN, Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore, Miyetti Allah Cattle Herders Association, as well as Fulani Nationality Movement, FUNAM have all confirmed that indeed the Benue attacks were carried out by their members who claimed that their livestock were rustled.”

    It added, “For instance, National President of Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore, Abdullahi Bodejo and Secretary General, Saleh Alhassan addressed a press conference in Abuja on Tuesday 30th May, 2017 and stated that the crisis in Benue State was a struggle for the natural resources of the Benue Valley.

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    “These groups came out boldly to declare fierce resistance to the Benue State Open Grazing Prohibition and Ranches Establishment Law 2017 and threatened to mobilize other pastoralists from all parts of West Africa to invade Benue and stop implementation of the Ranching Law.

    “They followed their threats with attacks beginning on 1st January 2018 and the larger part of that year until the Federal Government, acting on repeated calls from the Government and people of Benue State, deployed the military to commence Operation Whirl Stroke to chase the armed herders out of the state.

    “The Fulani National Movement, FUNAM, in one of its statements, also declared that the people of Benue State deserved to be killed by the herdsmen.

    “In their bending over backwards to impress their sponsors, the BMO erroneously stated that Terwase Akwaza was Governor Ortom’s aide. Mr. Akwaza, also known as Gana had at no time been appointed as an aide to the Governor. He was a key beneficiary of the amnesty programme initiated by the Ortom administration. However, the very moment he reneged and was accused of having a hand in the killing of the Governor’s former security aide, Denen Igbana, the police declared him wanted and the State Government immediately placed a reward of N20 million for anyone with information that could lead to his arrest. The reward still stands.

    “The group equally needs to be reminded that Governor Ortom had discussed the state’s amnesty programme with President Muhammadu Buhari before it was granted. When Gana went back to his old ways, Governor Ortom did not shield him; rather the State Security Council of which he is chairman authorized several expeditions to his hideout in order to arrest him.

    “On the allegation that Alhaji Aliyu Tershaku was used in the murder of two Catholic priests and 17 parishioners in Mbalom, again, the Buhari Media group has only displayed gross ignorance of the facts on ground. It should be recalled that Alhaji Tershaku was arrested after the Mbalom incident and released without any trial in court. No charge was preferred against him and till this day, no reason has been made public by security agencies regarding his arrest and subsequent release.”

     

  • ‘Nasarawa to partner Benue, Plateau to tackle farmer/herdsmen clashes’

    Nasarawa State governor-elect , Engr Abdullahi Sule , has stated that his administration will partner Benue and Plateau States to end the persistent clashes between Fulani herdsmen and farmers in the two states.

    Sule in an interview with newsmen in Lafia at the weekend said kidnapping and banditry will also be tacked with as much determination.

    He said: “In Abuja , I had an opportunity to discuss the issue of insecurity in the two states with Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom on how to prevent and address the persistent crisis between farmers and Fulani herdsmen crisis in both states”.

    The governor-elect, who lamented the persistent security breaches in Udege Development Area, Nasarawa Local Government Area of the state, said his administration would work to prevent banditry, kidnapping and other criminal activities in the state.

    He said the recent crises in Akwanga , Obi, Keana, Doma and Awe local government areas would not be tolerated by his administration .

    Sule said, “One of the issues that we have continued to preach is the fact that without security there will be what is happening in the area of development and area of industrialization .

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    “No investor is interested in going to any environment that lacks security. Security is actually our number one priority.

    “We are working more towards preventing insecurity rather than addressing the issue when it comes in . So, one of the biggest challenges of security is unemployment.

    “We want to approach the issue of security from the area of providing employment to the teeming youths across the state.”

    While declaring that both Fulani herdsmen and farmers had the right to stay in the state and go about their various activities, he affirmed that anybody who did not want to embrace peace had the right to leave the state.

    Sule promised to focus on agriculture and provide incentives for both local and foreign investors across the 13 local government and 18 development areas of the state.

  • Tribunal to begin pre-trial of Benue governorship dispute May 28

    The Governorship, National and State Assembly Election Petitions Tribunal in Benue State has fixed May 28 to commence pre-trial on the only governorship petition before it.

    Tribunal secretary Deborah Musa, who disclosed this to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), on Friday in Makurdi,  said that all court processes had been completed and that the pre-trial was set to begin.

    NAN reports that Mr Emmanuel Jime of the All Progressive Congress (APC), is challenging the re-election of Gov Samuel Ortom of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP), in the March 2, 2019 polls.

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    In the petition filed by Mr Sunday Ameh (SAN), Jime is asking the tribunal to upturn Ortom’s victory and declare him winner having scored the highest number of lawful votes cast.

    Mr Michael Gusa, Commissioner for Justice and Attorney General of Benue, has however said that the governor was sure of victory at the tribunal.

    “We are very hopeful of victory. The governor’s team of lawyers has raised a preliminary objection asking the court to dismiss the petition for lack of merit,” Gusa had told NAN while filing Ortom’s defense.

    NAN reports that Ortom had polled 434,473 votes to defeat Jime, who garnered 345,155 votes .

    NAN

  • Senate exit: Saraki, Ekweremadu, Ortom, extol Mark

    Senate President, Senator Bukola Saraki, his deputy, Ike Ekweremadu, Governor Samuel Ortom, on Sunday paid glowing tribute to the former Senate President, Senator David Mark for his meritorious service to his constituents and the country, as the latter exits from the Senate after 20 years.

    In their separate goodwill messages to Senator Mark at a thanksgiving mass at St. Augustine Catholic Church, Otukpo, Benue State, Saraki, Ekweremadu, Ortom and others described Mark as an icon and patriotic leader in the contemporary Nigeria.

    A statement by the media assistant to David Mark, Paul Mumeh, said that the thanksgiving was to mark former Senate President’s exit from the Senate after 20 years.

    It said that specifically, Saraki noted that his predecessor has set a record as the longest serving Senator since 1999, the longest serving President of the Senate and referred to him as an officer and a gentleman.

    He said: “Senator Mark was our own equivalent of the US Senators Robert C. Byrd (51 years, five months, 26 days), Daniel K. Inouye (49 years, 11 months and 15 days) Strom Thurmond (47 years, five months, eight days), Ted Kennedy (46years, nine months, 19 days and Patrick J. Leahy (44years) in terms of institutional memory that he embodies”.

    Saraki acknowledged that Senator Mark remains a stabilizing force in or out of the chamber pointing out that he remains relevant even when he left the position of the primus inter pares in the Senate.

    According to Saraki, “while Senator Mark’s record in the Senate remains unbeaten, it is necessary to mention that he is a bridge builder and consummate politician. My colleagues and I in the Eight Senate, appreciate his humility, brilliance and patriotism”.

    In his tribute, Deputy President of the Senate, Senator Ekweremadu underscored the leadership qualities of Senator Mark and added “your place of honour as a fine, perceptive, detribalized, patriotic, astute leader and a true democrat is unarguable and unshakable.

    Besides leading the National Assembly to break the jinx of constitutional amendments and the successful electoral reforms, Ekweremadu added “your capacity as a wise, experienced, patriotic and true statesman manifested at a very trying time in the Nation’s history when you guided the National Assembly to invoke the Doctrine of Necessity to steer the country away from palpable constitutional crisis“.

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    Governor Samuel Ortom, in his remarks, noted: “your quality representation and indefatigable leadership in the Senate brought stability to the system and added enormous value to democracy.

    “I am proud to identify with you for your selfless services to the State and the nation as well as providing mentorship to upcoming leaders”.

    An elated Senator Mark expressed appreciation to his people for the opportunity to serve, promising to continue to work for peace and unity of Nigeria.

    It said that in his homily, the Vicar General of the Catholic Diocese of Otukpo, Most Reverend Kenneth Odeh described Senator Mark as an icon of inestimable value saying that his contributions to the development of Nigeria cannot be wished away.

    Reverend Odeh urged Nigerian politicians to emulate Senator Mark’s selfless service to the country.

     

  • Insecurity: Ortom, stakeholders strike deal to end hostilities in Sankera axis

    Benue governor Samuel Ortom on Thursday met with stakeholders in Tiv land to brainstorm on the lingering hostilities in the Sankera axis.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), reports that the meeting with stakeholders from Ukum, Logo, Katsina-ala and Gboko Local Government, was initiated by Ortom as part of efforts to seek lasting peace to that region of the state.

    Speaking with newsmen after the five-hours meeting held in Makurdi, Ortom declared that the participants “agreed that let there be peace not just in Sankera, but in the entire state”.

    NAN reports that the communal crisis, mostly between Ukum and Shitile communities, recorded massive casualties, forcing the state government to impose a 24-hours curfew on Kastina-ala town on Monday April 22.

    “The stakeholders deliberated extensively on all issues that have been facing the people and came to a conclusion that all forms of hostilities should seize forthwith.

    “We all agreed that there should be peace not just in Sankera, but in the entire state.

    “This decision has been conveyed to the entire Zone A Senatorial District. We are going to do a follow-up to ensure that we don’t have these issues again.”

    On why he was yet to visit the warring communities, Ortom explained that it was the general opinion that the stakeholders should first meet to find out the problem that had culminated into that level of killings and destruction.

    “We are definitely going to visit all the affected places,” he declared.

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    He disclosed that the Joint Committee between Taraba and Benue States, on the recent Jukun/Tiv crisis, would commence work next week following its inauguration on Wednesday.

    The governor also ordered security personnel to intensify efforts to ensure that all those behind the atrocities were apprehended.

    Also speaking to newsmen after the meeting, the Tor Tiv, Prof. James Ayatse, admitted that there were issues among his subjects that bordered on hostilities and criminality.

    Ayatse said that the traditional council had already issued a statement condemning the hostilities and also ordered the warring groups to sheathe their swords.

    “We have issued a directive that there should be a seizure of hostilities. We are working together with the government to ensure that all these hostilities and criminality come to an end,” he said.  (NAN)

  • Suspended Majority Leader of Benue Assembly resigns

    The suspended former Majority Leader of Benue House of Assembly, Mr Benjamin Adanyi (Makurdi South-APC) has resigned.

    Adanyi tendered his resignation on Tuesday via a letter dated April 10, and addressed to the clerk of the house.

    In the letter, Adanyi stated that by the provision of Section 108 (2) of the Constitution, he could no longer continue as a member of the house after his confirmation by the Senate as representative of the North-Central in the North-East Development Commission.

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    Adanyi regretted that he would have been excited to announce his resignation during plenary but the political intrigues had robbed the 8th assembly of that legislative comradeship.

    He, however, appreciated the members for the support given to him while he served as the majority leader.

    Adanyi alongside seven other members of the house including former Speaker, Mr Terkimbi Ikyange, were suspended in 2018 for attempting to impeach Gov. Samuel Ortom.

    Adanyi is the first member of the house to resign since the creation of the Benue state in 1976.