Tag: Taraba State

  • Taraba signs N104.2 billion appropriation law

    Taraba signs N104.2 billion appropriation law

     

    Taraba State Governor, Darius Ishaku, on Wednesday, gave assent to the one hundred and four billion naira budget passed by the State House of Assembly for the 2018 fiscal year.

    The governor said his top priority will be in agriculture, because the people Taraba State are largely peasant farmers.

    He noted that he has built a Greenhouse that has employed hundreds of Taraba people, who are exporting vegetables and increasing the revenue base of the State.

    He disclosed that he intends to establish small scale industries that would be processing agricultural produce in the State such as cassava, soybeans, tomatoes and fruits.

    The governor added that he would take care of crop farmers and cattle breeders, with a view to not only rehabilitating those affected in their clashes, but educating them on the symbiotic relationship between them, targeted at ending their perennial clashes.

    Ishaku had submitted a budget proposal of N96.6 billion to the House, but the lawmakers increased it to N104.2 billion.

    Ishaku promised to do his best for people to see, as such, he said: “the modest increase will solve many problems of infrastructure and would provide the desired dividends of democracy.”

    The House of Assembly Speaker, Peter Abel Diah, said, the Assembly, in the course of processing the budget, “in its wisdom,” increased the budget by N2.02 billion.

    Read Also: Taraba herdsmen, farmers agree to end hostilities

    “Furthermore, following the governor’s letter of January 26, 2018, requesting House’s approval to expend the third tranche of the Paris Club Excess Debt Service Payment refunds amounting to N5.6 billion, the House deemed it important to incorporate this amount into the current budget.

    “Accordingly, this has raised the total proposed expenditure to N104.2 billion.

    “It is my hope and desire that the budget will be accorded diligent implementation to meet the aspirations of the people of Taraba State,” the Speaker said.

    Diah assured of the House’s commitment to a good working relationship with the executive arm of the State.

    He said: “We (Assembly) shall continue to perform our constitutional responsibility of oversight to ensure that the approved budget is appropriately implemented by the various MDAs.

    “We were eager to achieve a timely passage of the bill and equally conscious of our responsibility to meticulously examine every aspect of the appropriation bill, to ensure that the bill is not expeditiously passed into law, but that it is also capable of addressing the needs of the people of our dear State.”

     

  • Why Taraba ’ll return Ishaku in 2019 – Bawa

    Why Taraba ’ll return Ishaku in 2019 – Bawa

    Abubakar Bawa, the San Turaki Gashaka, is the Special Adviser on Political Matters to Governor Darius Ishaku of Taraba State. In this interview with Correspondent Fanen Ihyongo, he advances reasons why he is optimistic the governor will be reelected at the poll next year. 

    HOW do you see Darius Ishaku’s chances of getting re-elected in next year’s governorship election?

    None of the opposition parties, including the All Progressives Congress (APC) which is the main opposition party in Taraba State, has a candidate that is better than Ishaku. In the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), nobody has indicated interest to contest against him (Ishaku).

    What about the likes of Joel Danlami Ikenya and David Sabo Kente, who may likely seek the APC ticket?

    These people cannot stand Darius Ishaku. He will beat them flat. Recall that Kente came a distant third in the last election. Former Governor Sani Danladi is from the northern zone, and the governorship is zoned to the southern zone for now. Ikenya is politically strong only when he is in the PDP. All the elections that he won were on PDP platform. When he contested the governorship in ACN he lost to late former Governor Danbaba Suntai who was fielded by the PDP.

    Has the PDP in Taraba State ceded the governorship ticket to the incumbent?

    We are not stopping anybody from contesting the ticket with him. We want to make sure internal democracy dwells in the Taraba PDP. There will be a primary election, and any Taraba person who is qualified is free to contest. We are only saying he (Ishaku) remains our best candidate. There is no party that can withstand the PDP in Taraba State. The PDP is an opposition in the country, but in Taraba it is the ruling party. And it has been the ruling party since 1999. So, we believe there is no other political party here apart from the PDP. Even if there are other parties, we don’t take them serious. Besides political parties, Taraba people want someone who naturally cares for them. And Darius Ishaku is one leader who has deep love and rare passion for Taraba people; how they eat, dwell and make progress bother him. For now, he is just the right person.

    The governor’s chief of staff, Rebo Usman, has just resigned over alleged squabbles between them. There are speculations too that Ishaku has fallen apart with members of the State House of Assembly and some key stakeholders who helped in making him governor in 2015. Don’t you think this is enough to affect his chances in next year’s election?

    I am not aware that he has frosty relationship with Assembly members or other stakeholders. What I know is that he has a good rapport with his people. The synergy between him and Assembly members in the State has also been cordial and strong. As his political adviser, I can tell you that I am in the picture of what is going on. So far, the journey for a second term has not been bad. The governor has always sought the path of peace and unity, as was exemplified when he celebrated the Yuletide with all the stakeholders of the State in his country home –Takum. The governor is really doing his best to make everyone proud, except a few politicians who want him to share funds. But he is not the type that shares money. You heard what he said in Takum on December 26 last year? Ishaku prefers to do projects and leave behind landmark achievements than share funds to politicians. Above all, his challenge is that what he is getting today is a far cry from what the previous administration was getting. And I agree with him, it is better to do people-oriented projects and put smiles on the faces of millions of people than share State’s funds to please a few. I think the good name he has earned will earn him a second term.

    Do you really see the governor winning the general election if he scales the hurdle of the primary election?

    With God on our side, I think we will triumph at the poll, because of the governor’s performance and goodwill. I have been in politics in Taraba State for long. Recently, I went round the State to do a silent opinion poll, and the goodwill is overwhelming for the governor. Nevertheless, the PDP is working hard. The party chairman, Victor Bala, and all his party executives, are leaving no stone unturned; the governor is doing his part –by providing developments; and we are working very hard and still soliciting support from the electorate to make sure we return the governor for a second term. The general consensus is that Ishaku should do a second term. Rev. Jolly Nyame did 10 years from northern zone, from 1992-1993 and 1999-2007. Late Pharm. Danbaba Suntai, from central zone, did eight years (2007-2015). So the fairest thing to do, as it has become our zoning formula, is to allow Ishaku, who is from the southern zone, to also do eight years, to complete the rotation. And to the best of my knowledge, the PDP stakeholders from his area (southern Taraba) have no other candidate. They have all agreed that Ishaku has done well.  Bringing another person, even from the same southern zone, will affect our political arrangement. The northern and central zones are also in full support of the arrangement to give Ishaku the party’s ticket and subsequently re-elect him for a second term. In terms of performance, he has scored a distinction, everyone can attest to that. That is why Taraba is returning Ishaku in 2019 poll.

    What would you say is his biggest achievement that will attract votes?

    All his achievements are big and very important to the people of the State. He has touched all the sectors tremendously. In the health sector, he has provided portable water and reconstructed major hospitals. In education, he employed over 3000 teachers, after renovating schools and colleges in the State. In agriculture, the Greenhouse is a major revolution. And in terms of infrastructure, there are many new roads constructed by his administration to show for. Truth is that Ishaku’s giant strides in the State are speaking for him. Even the few who criticise him still whisper behind him about his unprecedented achievements. The governor has gained an overwhelming good popularity across the entire State. At the grassroots, all the villagers know him. Our supporters’ team has continued to grow. The civil servants who are a significant composition of the electorate are at peace with him. This is because of the way he promptly pays their salary and, generally, handles all welfare packages of workers. But perhaps, peace is his top priority. ‘Give me peace, I will give you development,’ is his slogan. He has done incredibly well to ensure the state has peace, which is paving the way for the achievements he has provided. Of late there were clashes between farmers and cattle breeders, but we are doing our best to negotiate for peace.

    What is your take on the herdsmen/farmers crisis and the anti-open grazing law enforced in the State?

    The governor believes in doing everything through peaceful resolution, while carrying everyone along. He constituted two committees to educate cattlemen and crop farmers to cultivate a symbiotic relationship between them. We started with a workshop involving all the stakeholders such as the real cattle breeders, crop farmers, traditional rulers and security agencies, because of the determination of the state government to gradually implement the law. So, we are doing it in phases by gradually putting in place all the necessary infrastructure. And the pace we are doing it is also in proportion to the available resources. And I don’t think the farmers/herders crisis will affect the general election in Taraba. I don’t think so. All of us want peace. Both farmers and herders want peace and we are trying our best for the people to co-exist peacefully. We have weighed all their views and concerns and we are considering the best options. I believe there will be no problem.

  • Herdsmen Menace: NANS charges Buhari to step up security

    Herdsmen Menace: NANS charges Buhari to step up security

    The National Association of Nigerian Students  (NANS) has called on President Buhari to step up on security in order to stop the incessant killings by herdsmen.

    Coming after the herdsmen attack on Taraba state, the students’ body declared that the Cattle Colony proposed by the federal government is dead on arrival and would not hold as government have no right in placing priority in any group of farmers.

    The NANS President, Comrade Chinonso Obasi who stated this while speaking to newsmen in Minna frowned at the delay of government towards ensuring that security is sustained in states that are under the attack of herdsmen.

    He stated that President Buhari need to stop focusing on 2019 and deal with the security issue at hand.

    “A government that cannot proffer security to the people cannot be proud to call itself a government. NANS is charging the President to step up in security, he should stop being presidential and listen to the yearning of the people.

    “There are issues and aot of questions that are being unanswered  and instead of discussing them,  they are busy discussing about 2019 election. It is only those who are alive that will vote in 2019.”

    Speaking on the Cattle Colony proposed by the federal government, he said that government have no business doing business pointing that cattle rustling is a business which is not to be imposed on the people.

    He called on the government to create an enabling business environment and leave how to run the business to individuals saying that,  “a farmer is a farmer. Cattle rearing is farming and there should not be any priority placed on any group of farmers. Imposing cattle herdsmen on the people is not the way forward.

    “Every geopolitical zone have it’s own way of farming. If any farmer finds a place habitable, he should negotiate with the owners of the land and if they are satisfied, he can do his business there. Cattle colony will not work.”

    Obasi also declared that the people are tired of the strategies being talked about by the military and the police stressing on the need to move beyond strategies to action,  “we are tired of hearing the strategies the military and police are bringing to place, we want to see actions in terms of security. ”

    He then charged the President to implement the 2014 National Conference report stating that it would proffer a lasting solution to the insecurity issues bedeviling the Nation.

     

  • Herdsmen hit Taraba again 10 hours after governor’s alarm

    Herdsmen hit Taraba again 10 hours after governor’s alarm

    Killer herdsmen went on a fresh rampage in Taraba State Thursday night,10 hours after Governor Darius Ishaku raised the alarm that they were coming.

    Four persons ,including a couple ,were murdered  at Ngutwsem village in  Gassol local government area in the night attack.

    The couple were named as Mr. Shiriga Vaawombo and his wife, Ngunan.

    A relation who witnessed the invasion said that as soon as Shiriga heard the first sound of gun shots,he took his wife to a place outside their house where he thought she could be safe.

    “He was returning to pick their baby when the invaders shot him. His wife then cried out from where she was hiding. She was gunned down too,” he said.

    Shiriga’s  second wife, Iveren, 35, was all tears,yesterday.

    She was not at home during the invasion,having travelled to  Sabon Gida.

    Some journalists including The Nation’s were in the village yesterday in the company of Ishaku’s media aide Bala Dan Abu, a senior assistant to the governor on Revenue Mobilisation, Jerry Tyolanga and  three policemen.

    The village  was largely deserted ,most residents taking to the bush to hide and fleeing to Sabon Gida..

    No policeman was sighted in the area.

    On seeing the journalists and the policemen,the hiding villagers came out and hurriedly used blunt diggers and hoes to dig two graves for the purpose of burying the victim.

    The graves were shallow and there was no coffin to put the dead inside.

    A cursory look at the bodies showed that after being shot,the assailants proceeded  to cut them in the head, neck and back with machete to ensure that they had no chance of surviving.

    The women cried uncontrollably .

    Governor Ishaku had said on Thursday that he received a warning from some people that they would strike within 10 days

    He said: “We are on notice that in 10 days, we (Taraba) shall be attacked. I have alerted all security agencies. We are waiting.

    “A helicopter has dropped arms and ammunitions in the night without its mission established. It is not a time to keep quiet; we are living in fear,”

    The governor spoke at 12:47pm. The killer-herdsmen struck at 10:09pm.

    Simon Tsavwua, 45, a brother to one of the victims  said he had gone to bed leaving some members of the household  outside.

    Suddenly, he heard gun shots repeatedly.

    He knew they were under  attack.

    He quickly ran outside and hid.

    The attackers were over  20,he said.

    They  wielded automatic rifles and machetes.

    “But where I hid was close to where one of my brothers was killed. He cried before giving up. There was nothing I could do,” he said.

    He said he and some of the family members ran further into the bush. “When we returned to the scene later, we saw four people dead,” he said, displaying some of the bullets fired by the attackers.

    Sources said some of the militia men were sighted  in Sabon Gida, wearing mask, and armed.

    “We are afraid, “one of the survivors said.

  • Taraba: Ishaku and the herdsmen challenge

    Taraba: Ishaku and the herdsmen challenge

    How far can Governor Darius Ishaku go in rescuing  Taraba State from Fulani herdsmen with  the instrumentality of the Open Grazing Prohibition and Ranches Establishment Law? In this report, Fanen Ihyongo examines how the northeastern state is tackling its major headache.

    CAN Governor Darius Ishaku end the incessant clashes between herdsmen and farmers across the state through the Open Grazing Prohibition and Ranches Establishment Law introduced by his administration? This is the question being asked by many residents of the state who are living witnesses to past efforts to deal with the problem with the provision of grazing routes for pastoralists.

    With Nigeria’s population growing at a geometric progression, the need  for land keeps expanding,not least for agricultural and livestock purposes.

    Much of the land acquired in the past by government for grazing is understood to have now been claimed back by the original owners following government’s refusal to pay compensation ,or some people simply encroaching on the land for other purposes.

    In some cases,troops were deployed to  violence prone areas. But the troops could not remain there for eternity.Once they departed ,it was back to square one. The current wave of clashes between herders and farmers has now thrown up fresh ideas on how to end the problem,the most controversial being the cattle colonies. Ranching is another popular option.

    The federal government wants interested states to provide 5000 hectares  each  for the colonies.

    The word ‘colonies’ simply sounds repugnant ,abhorrent to Governors Darius Ishaku  of Taraba State and Samuel Ortom of Benue State  whose two states have been worst hit by the latest herdsmen killings.

    Ishaku  prefers ranching. Indeed,he had come out with an “Open Grazing Prohibition and Ranches Establishment Law” which came into effect on January 24.

    The law encourages ranches and  criminalises open grazing.

    He has the backing of farmers while herdsmen up in arms against it. They label it  ‘a recipe for anarchy.’

    Their representatives have gone to court  to stop the enforcement of the law.

    They are poised to reject the law by any means possible.

    There is anxiety in the state already ahead of the hearing of the case.

    Residents readily recall how previous clashes between farmers and herders  ended: scores of people maimed and killed; houses, farmlands and farm produce set ablaze.

    As it is in Taraba,so it is in Plateau, Benue, Nasarawa and Adamawa States.

    The fear of Fulani herdsmen is the beginning of wisdom.

    The people of Taraba cacnot help wondering  whether the security agencies will be able to handle the situation once the law takes off.

    Only penultimate Friday, 55 people were gruesomely killed  in parts of the state by herdsmen using sophisticated guns, machetes and poisoned knives.

    Sources said the killer-herdsmen, mostly hired mercenaries without homes, invaded at night  setting  homes ablaze, before  disappearing  into darkness like guerrilla fighters.  The 68 bodies recovered by the police and soldiers were given hurried mass burial by aggrieved youths amid fear of fresh raids by the herdsmen.

    Unlike in Benue where the dead were buried in brown caskets, the Taraba victims- mostly children, women and elderly persons -were laid to rest without coffin and in shallow graves.

    The graves were dug  with  blunt hoes and shovels to dig the graves.

    The bodies, swollen, were recovered from burnt houses, bush paths and farmlands.

    A week after the mass burials, no fewer than 28 persons, including a traditional ruler, were killed by Fulani herdsmen in the  State.

    Farmers accuse the herdsmen of provocation by allowing their cattle to feast freely on their crops.They claim the herdsmen go about with AK-47 rifles and double edged machetes with which they unleash terror.

    The  herdsmen, in turn, accuse farmers of rustling their cows.

    Both sides want protection and  compensation from the federal government.

    The Taraba State government says it cannot allow the present situation to continue.

    On May 17, 2017 Ishaku  sent the Open Grazing Prohibition and Ranches Establishment bill to the State House of Assembly.

    Opposition came from the  Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria which staged a protest. But several farmers’ associations demonstrated their support for the bill.

    Speaker Abel Peter Diah took  the bill to the public in the three senatorial districts for their input.

    Jalingo, Wukari and Bali were venues of the sittings.

    Because of the interest the bill generated, 91 memoranda were received prior to the public hearing which attracted massive turnout.

    The majority of the people were  in favour of passing the bill into law with necessary amendments.

    After the public hearing, the committee on  the bill, headed by Mark Useni, submitted its report and  recommendations to the House.

    The lawmakers subsequently adopted the report and passed the bill. Ishaku signed the anti-open grazing bill into law on July 24, 2017.

    “The responsibility lies squarely on me to do all I can to find a lasting solution to the situation that has consumed hundreds of lives, farm produce, cattle and complete destruction of several communities,” he said on that occasion.

    “The fact that the activities of these strange herdsmen have seemingly defied all solutions by the Nigerian security system is no excuse for the State government.

    “With this burden in my heart, I feel the best thing this government needs to do is to enact a law that would regulate the movement of herdsmen and their cattle within Taraba State. This led to my decision to submit the anti-open grazing bill to the House of Assembly for consideration.”

    As suggested by the House committee on the law, Ishaku gave six months as transition period from open grazing to ranching, with effect from July 24,2017. During the six-month period, all stakeholders were to carry out massive enlightenment and sensitisation of the people on the objectives and advantages of the law.

    Thus, Ishaku inaugurated two committees to sensitise ranchers and farmers. The Ranchers Sensitisation Committee had the Galadima of Muri Lamido Tukur Abba Tukur as chairman and Hashimu Hammaawa as secretary. Members included Jalo Adamu Buba, Amos John, Nicholas Bala, Muhammad Danburam and a representative of the Miyetti Allah Breeders Association. The Farmers Sensitisation Committee had Abdulrahahman Biyams as chairman and Emmanuel Ukwen as secretary. Members were Salihu Kumba, Henry Jonah, Ibrahim Bitrus, Goodman Dahida and a representative of the All Farmers Association.

    Both committees have been working with representatives of the Commissioner of Police, DSS, NSCDC Commandant and the Controller of Immigration.

    The committees are to educate cattlemen and farmers to nurture a symbiotic relationship between them.

    Pilot ranches were established in the three senatorial zones of the State before the law will finally come into force.

    The governor said  the land for ranching is enough.

    Section 21(1) of the law makes it an offence for   any person to  openly graze livestock or move livestock other than in a motor vehicle without permit.

    Offenders are liable to  a fine of N50,000 or one-year imprisonment for a first offender.

    Subsequent violations will attract a fine of N1 million or imprisonment  of  two years.

    The  State Chairman of the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association, Sahabi Tukur, is of the view that the measures put in place by the State government are not enough to ensure herders have a smooth switch from their traditional open grazing to ranching.

    He said ranching  is a more challenging system of rearing cattle. According to him, ranching requires commitment of huge sums of money to acquire land and develop infrastructure for the benefit of the animals.

    Tukur said they are exploring diplomatic and legal means of ensuring that the grey areas of the law are resolved amicably rather than taking to arms.

    But Governor Darius Ishaku has reiterated that no amount of threats and or blackmail will stop the implementation of the Open Grazing Prohibition Law. He is insisting that the law was enacted to foster peaceful coexistence between farmers and herdsmen and therefore, it is unnecessary for anyone to try to stop it or inflame violence.

    He said  ranching is already being practiced in Gembu, Sardauna local government area,  and does not understand  why it will be  difficult to replicate the practice across the State?

    In his reaction, Ishaku explained that the open grazing prohibition law remains the only solution to the problem at hand, if all the parties must benefit, without clashes. He told The Nation that the idea of establishing colonies, as advocated by Sanusi and Fulani cattle breeders, was a scheme to colonise the territories belonging to farmers.

    Governor Darius Ishaku’s media aide, Bala Dan Abu called on Miyyeti Allah to stop aggravating security situation in the country by his “inflammatory comments.”

    He said: “The truth of the matter is that there has never been any genocide against Fulani in Taraba State. Rather, Fulani herdsmen are the ones killing innocent people.

    Abu said Fulani elites might be giving wrong information about the crisis in Mambilla. He called on all to support the governor’s peace initiative, which he said, is aimed at promoting peace in the State.

    He said  that  after the crisis on the Mambilla, the Fulani  accused the chairman of the local government, John Yep, of taking sides with his Mambilla kinsmen and asked the governor to remove him.

    “As a peace loving governor, Ishaku asked Yep to step aside to give way for investigation and he stepped down, and has not been  given any appointment anywhere. Just recently, the investigative panel submitted its report which did not indict the suspended chairman, yet the governor has not recalled him.

    “Sanusi wields a lot of influence, he should be careful about the things he says so as not to send wrong signals out there. There is no truth in his allegations,” he said.

    Sanusi also said the anti-open grazing law will deepen the indigene/settler dichotomy and make herdsmen feel isolated. The monarch added that he had appealed to the Taraba State governor to delay the implementation of the law in the State but all his pleas had fallen on deaf ears.

    But Governor Ishaku said  the law means well. “It is imperative to once again assure all citizens that the anti-open grazing  law is not directed at any tribe or religion. Cow ownership in Taraba State is not the  exclusive preserve of any religion, tribe or group.

    “Basically, the law wants to, among other things, change the mode of production of cattle for better yield. This is a step towards modernising cattle rearing, to keep with the world’s best tradition of cow production. Agriculture is undergoing a revolution, both in crop cultivation and animal production.

    “This law was not enacted arbitrarily. We had public hearings and collated views, concerns and inputs of stakeholders across the State. We did that to enhance synergy between government and herders/farmers for a better people-centered law.”

  • Why herdsmen are killing our people, by governor

    Why herdsmen are killing our people, by governor

    Killer-herdsmen have extended their bloody campaign to Taraba State, killing 55 people in Lau Local Government Area.

    About 200 homes and huge piles of foodstuff were destroyed. Many people are missing in the attacks, which  began last weekend.

    Twenty-five bodies were recovered and given a mass burial on Tuesday when reporters and Bala Dan Abu, a media assistant to Taraba State Governor Darius Ishaku, visited the area.

    Policemen and soldiers cordoned off the area as the burial was hurriedly done by angry youths amid fear of the attackers coming for them.

    “You know, I don’t like witnessing a funeral; what more, a mass burial like this,” Bala said, fighting back tears.

    The affected area was deserted like a ghost town. Policemen and soldiers were on patrol.

    Those buried were mostly children, women and elderly persons. Most of the bodies were recovered from burnt houses, bush paths and farmlands. The bodies had swollen.

    Sources said some of the victims tried to escape from the marauders, but were hacked down by another set of herdsmen who ambushed them in large numbers.

    The invaders used mostly “sophisticated guns and poisoned knives” to carry out the massacre, described by many as “genocide”.

    Those who survived the herdsmen’s bullets are taking refuge in Abari, a settlement.

    The bereaved spoke of their harrowing experiences when reporters visited the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs).

    “Herdsmen are killing people in Lau,” Governor Darius Ishaku told The Nation on telephone on Tuesday night.

    Ishaku attributed killings by Fulani herdsmen in some parts of the country, to a “drive for territorial control”.

    He blamed the elite for masterminding the violence for their political and economic interests. He urged Nigerians to pray for the country.

    Taraba State Police Command confirmed the killings. Spokesman David Misal said the situation was calm yesterday.

    Misal, who had earlier reported the casualty figures as 12 when the attack began, said “enough security personnel have been deployed in the area”. What we are doing now is to build confidence in the people.”

    The Lau incident is the latest act of unprovoked aggression against communities in Taraba State by Fulani herdsmen.

    On his facebook page yesterday, Dan Abu posted a lamentation:

    He said: “Tears flowed freely on Tuesday in several communities in Lau, Taraba State, as youths in the area buried 25 corpses of their parents and children murdered last weekend by Fulani herdsmen who invaded their villages.

    “Most of those killed were women, children and the aged who could not escape the gun and knife wielding herdsmen who invaded their communities at about 3pm on Friday, January 5.

    “At least 25 corpses recovered from burnt houses, bush paths and nearby farms where the victims tried to hide from the killer Fulani herdsmen were buried on Tuesday.

    “A combined team of armed soldiers and police men provided them security cover to enable them complete the funeral rites.

    “Many of the youths spoke of their missing relations, burnt houses, farms, food items and other valuables as they sobbed profusely while talking to a group of jourlaists that visited them in Abari where most of those who survived the attacks escaped to.

    “The Lau attack is the latest act of unprovoked aggression against communities in Taraba State by Fulani herdsmen. No fewer than 55 lives were lost, according to the accounts of the villagers while over 200 houses were burnt.”

    Taraba State Commissioner of Police, David Akinremi, on Tuesday visited the affected area to see things for himself. Although no arrest were made. The police chief said “the attackers came from neighbouring Adamawa State, where they are already at war with the Bachama ethnic group.”

    Some victims lamented their ordeals to this medium. David Jonathan, a cleric from Katebu tribe, in an emotion-laden voice, said “we don’t deserve this, because we didn’t provoke anyone.”

  • Ishaku proposes N96.6 billion for 2018 budget

    Ishaku proposes N96.6 billion for 2018 budget

    Taraba State Governor, Darius Dickson Ishaku, Thursday presented to the State House of Assembly an appropriation bill of approximately ninety six billion and six hundred million naira (N96.6bn) for the fiscal year 2018.

    The governor also proposed the creation of two ministries -Mining and Power, which he said, will take off in January next year.

    The budget, which he referred to as “The Budget of Sustainable Growth,” represents a decrease of 12.32 percent when compared with last year’s budget of N110.2 billion.

    Ishaku explained that the decrease is because of “lower expected receipts from statutory allocation, value added tax, internally generated revenues (IGR) and revenues.”

    Of the total budget, recurrent expenditure is estimated at N51.2 billion, representing 53.03 percent of the budget, while capital expenditure has N45.4 billion, representing 46.97 percent.

    A further breakdown of the budget shows that works, housing and transport has the lion share of N9.2 billion, about 9.55 percent of the budget.

    Agriculture and natural resources has N5.1 billion; commerce, industry and tourism N490.4 million; rural and community development N2.5 billion; finance and poverty alleviation N4.2 billion; information N1.2 billion and education N5.6 billion.

    Another N5.6 billion is proposed for health; social development N1.1 billion; environment N659.7 million; water resources N2.3 billion and lands and urban development N1.6 billion.

    N3.8 billion is to be expended on the executive arm; N342.9 million on the legislature; law and justice N702.3 million, while general governance has N935.6 million.

    Governor Ishaku said he intends to source the budget funds from IGR estimate of N5.3 billion; federal statutory revenue of N31.5 billion; State share of value added tax (VAT) of N9.2 billion; aids and grants N4.8 billion; refund from the federal government of N30 billion, domestic loan of N11.4 billion and external loan draw-down of N4.2 billion.

    The governor stated that with more resources his administration can perform more, adding that the cardinal objective of the 2018 budget was to set expenditure at a sustainable level as to have the optimum for the majority of the people, thereby channeling 40 percent of the budget to capital development.

    He commended the “robust understanding and cooperation” between the Taraba executive and the legislature, which he said, “has given impetus to carry out the business of governance without any hitch.”

    Taraba State House of Assembly Speaker, Peter Abel Diah, said the governor did a good job this year as “the spending in 2017 budget paid attention to critical infrastructure and specific areas of challenges in the State in line with the budget.”

    The Speaker promised that the Assembly will give the appropriation bill the required attention and speedy passage.

  • Taraba: 1,500 teachers deployed in 300 primary schools

    Taraba: 1,500 teachers deployed in 300 primary schools

    The Taraba State Education Programme Investment Project Additional Financing ( SEPIP ) on Wednesday said it had deployed 1,500 teachers in 300 primary schools in various villages across the state.

    The Programme Coordinator, Mr Mohammed Suleiman, disclosed this at a news conference in Jalingo.

    He said the move was aimed at reaching out to the Internally Displaced Persons ( IDPs ) and other inaccessible children in the state.

    “Taraba currently has over 285,000 children out of school that included the children of the IDPs.

    “Our target is to train more teachers and motivate them to go into the villages to teach these children.

    “We have teachers; but most of them prefer to stay in towns. With motivation, more and more teachers are now willing to be trained and deployed in villages,” he said.

    Suleiman also said that the World Bank supported Better Education Service Delivery for All ( BESDA ) would soon take off in the state.

    Read also: Buhari to commission special school in Nasarawa

    The coordinator said BESDA would grant equitable access to education for out-of-school children and improve their literacy level, especially, in their early grades.

    He said that when fully operational, the programme would reposition enrolment at the elementary level in the state.

    Suleiman commended Gov. Darius Ishaku and the World Bank for their prompt payment of counterpart funds for the project.

    SEPIP is a World Bank assisted programme for schools in some Northeastern states ravaged by the Boko Haram insurgency.

    NAN

  • A fitting honour for “The Grassroots Champion”

    The venue was the popular Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Centre, in the city centre of Abuja and the date was Friday, November 10, 2017. Governor Darius Dickson Ishaku stood tall as Comrade Ibrahim Khaleel, National Chairman of the National Union of Local Government Employees, NULGE, spoke of his attributes before a huge crowd of people made up of representatives of local government workers from all the 774 Local Government Council Areas in the country, members of the National Assembly from Taraba State, legislators from the Taraba State House of Assembly, chairmen and councillors from the 16 Local Government Areas of Taraba State and thousands of his supporters from in and outside Taraba State.

    Then came the highpoint of the event of that day.   Hon Gambo Tanko Kagara, National President of the Association of Local Governments of Nigeria, ALGON, emerged with the insignia of the prestigious ]award of Excellence and Best Performing Governor in Grassroots Development in Nigeria and handed over to Governor Ishaku to the admiration of the First Lady of Taraba State and Wife of the Governor, Barrister Anna Darius Ishaku and their son Gibuiya. The crowd exploded into a thunderous applause that almost sent the roof caving in. It was indeed a day that hard work, diligence and patriotism, all of them attributes that have defined the character of the administration of Governor Ishaku in the past two and a half years in Taraba State were acknowledged and rewarded from the least expected but highly respected workers’ umbrella constituency – the Nigeria Union of Local Government Employees, NULGE and the Association  of Local Government Chairmen in Nigeria, ALGON.

    The coming of the award was no surprise to people who have followed the giant strides in the development of the state by the administration. The surprise, really, was the source from which the award came – ALGON, and NULGE, both of them acting jointly and in one accord on this occasion. The two unions are the ultimate umbrellas organisations for all workers and administrators at the grassroots level. The grassroots of the country is for them a familiar terrain and they have good and up to date knowledge of developments at that level of administration in the country. NULGE, as a pressure group whose mission always is to fight for workers’ welfare, is hardly ever impressed by the efforts of political leaders to make life better for the populace. In the case of Governor Ishaku, it was different. They were impressed and they came out not only to say so publicly but to reward him publicly for it. The decision was a product of painstaking independent assessment of the 36 states governors in service delivery at the grassroots level through the promotion of projects and services with direct bearing on the welfare of people at the grassroots level. Governor Ishaku came out as the most outstanding performer.

    Comrade Khaleel told the audience that Governor Ishaku had excelled in his determination to take the local government system in Taraba State out of an unfortunate system that was characterised by monumental corruption, a system that was rotting and dying. “We have subjected Governor Ishaku to a process of long and painstaking investigation and I wish to say with all sense of honesty that he has passed our test. He has distinguished himself as the best friend of workers through regular payment of salaries and pensions and in promoting the welfare of workers generally.” Khaleel also said Governor Ishaku has done more than any other Governor in the country in promoting grassroots development and described him as a “Grassroots Champion”, the most committed promoter of quality education, a dedicated and an incorruptible friend of the people at the grassroots level.

    It was also from this perspective that Governor Ishaku saw the significance of the award. He said in his acceptance speech that it was significant that the award was coming from those who were, by their calling as trade unionists, not very easy to impress by the people in government. The award came from the source he least expected and he said so. “If a labour union is giving you an award, it means that award is indeed a worthy reward because it is coming from those who keep you on your toes every day through their agitations and demands for improved services.”

    The event was for Ishaku an opportunity to recount his long and victorious battle with ghost workers in the state. He told his audience that his administration adopted several strategies which outwitted the perpetrators of salary scams in the state. That victory is the reason that salaries are being paid regularly to workers at all level of governance in the state today. It is also the reason government is able to implement projects that have tremendously changed social and economic lives in the state.

    One remarkable way the administration has positively touched lives at the grassroots level is the 100 boreholes in 100 communities in the state. The successful implementation of that project has changed the water supply situation in the state dramatically, particularly in the rural communities. Those rural communities where people hitherto shared water from ponds with their domestic animals now have regular source of good water. They now have boreholes drilled for them by the government. Additional 150 similar boreholes in 150 more communities are now being drilled to further extend these facilities to more people. It is not unlikely that this rare gesture of the administration is one of the factors that have influenced the award in favour of Governor Ishaku.

    There is also the administration’s skills acquisition programme that has taken thousands of women and youths off the poverty bracket. They were those who benefitted from training organised for them in various areas of vocation that have turned them not only into self-employed entrepreneurs but employers of labour. They were all given financial assistants and start-up equipment that helped them in setting up their own business outfits. Every electoral award in the state is a beneficiary from the scheme. The beneficiaries are rigorously monitored by government’s rescue watch officers to ensure that the beneficiaries do not derail from the objectives of the project. This scheme has greatly and positively touched lives at the grassroots.

    The Ishaku administration’s employment policy has changed lives way down into the rural communities too. The government had lifted the embargo on employment placed by previous administrations in the state. This has led to the employment of nearly 10,000 hitherto unemployed youths in two years, among them the 3000 teachers who were recently presented letters of appointment. The impact of these employments in the socio-economic lives of these employees and their dependants has been tremendous.

    The re-activation of six previously dead government-owned companies has also had tremendous impact on lives. It has opened more job opportunities and stimulated economic activities. The Highland Tea factory in Mambilla is one outstanding example of how the rural populace in the state have benefitted from the revival of the companies. The return of the company to business has also revived tea farming which is the main preoccupation of the people on the Mambilla Plateau. They now make good money from their tea farms by supplying the factory. Governor Ishaku has not only revived the tea company but has also helped tremendously in promoting the product in local and international markets. Today the product is in high demand, far more than the company can cope with. The overall impact of these efforts in positively transforming lives at the grassroots is certainly part of what swung the award in favour of Governor Ishaku.

    The award is an appreciation of the impact of projects and programmes under the government’s rescue mission which is being felt down to the grassroots level. The roads that the administration has built, hospital, clinics, schools and colleges that have been renovated or completely rebuilt, the provision of stable electricity through the supply of transformers, all have achieved one vital objective which is the stimulation of business activities that have also directly improved the economic lives of people in the benefitting grassroots communities.

    The Excellence Award on Grassroots Development is a fitting honour for Ishaku, a man who has fought the battle against payroll scammers and won, rescued education from the abyss of decay and reduced poverty in the state through his multi-faceted skills acquisition programmes that have touched lives positively down to the grassroots. True, “the Grassroots Champion” has joined several of Governor Ishaku’s other middle names.

     

    • Dan Abu is the Senior Special Assistant to the Governor of Taraba State on Media and Publicity
  • Taraba to fix abandoned road

    Hope has come to the people of Kurmi Local Government Area of Taraba State. Governor Darius Dickson Ishaku has promised to fix the deplorable road from Mararaba to Baissa in Kurmi before the expiration of his tenure.

    Kurmi, sharing boundary with Cameroon Republic, is very rich in the production of cocoa, palm oil, timber and other food and commercial crops, but the disrepair of the road, abandoned, in the area has grossly hindered productivity and development of the area.

    The poor condition of the road, culminating in deathtraps, causes food wastage and productivity depletion as there are no storage facilities. One farmer told The Nation that the situation is killing their morale and grossly hampering crop cultivation targeted at diversifying the economy from oil to agriculture, especially crop cultivation.

    Ishaku promised to repair the road when the Chief of Kurmi, Samaila Maiwuya, and the Chairman of Kurmi Local Government Area, Stephen Ibrahim Agya, and other Kurmi stakeholders paid him a visit in Government House, Jalingo.

    The visitors had come to thank the governor for appointing their sons and daughters of Kurmi, under the Rescue Teachers Scheme (RTS), in his administration.

    Welcoming the guests, Ishaku said he will reconstruct the road from Mararaba to Baissa in their local council which had been abandoned for decades. He added he was also working to establish a cocoa grading centre in the state so that other states will no longer take the credit of what is being produced in Taraba.

    “This will also end the tedious journey that cocoa farmers from Taraba often embark on to have their cocoa graded in Ibadan, Oyo State,” he said.

    The governor disclosed that the first road he wanted to construct in the state when he took the saddle of office was the Mararaba/Baissa road.

    “But the road was laced with lots of encumbrances, especially on the part of the contractor,” he said. “It took me time to be able to terminate the contract and subsequently embark on a fresh feasibility study as well as a new design, beginning from Mararaba to Baissa and to Abong,” he revealed.

    Ishaku noted that the design of the road has been completed and a competent contractor contacted. The cost of the contract submitted by the contractor is now the major hitch, said the governor.

    He explained: “Due to the harsh economic reality on ground, other options are being explored considering the commercial posture of Kurmi to the State and the entire country. I intend to construct a standard carriage road that will stand the test of time so that the commercial potentialities of the area would be fully exploited for the benefit of Taraba. Nevertheless, the road to Kurmi will be constructed before the end of my tenure.”

    Former Information Commissioner and senior aide to Ishaku on Public Affairs, Emmanuel Bello, said, when constructed, the Mararaba/Baissa road would link lost communities in Kurmi with the rest of civilisation and usher in prosperity to farmers. “Kurmi, with all its potentials would jerk to life radically; a people abandoned would see light. The road to economic growth and development of Kurmi and Taraba State is that road.”