Tag: Taraba

  • Gov Ishaku lauds FG on 3,050mw Mambilla Hydro-Power

    Gov Ishaku lauds FG on 3,050mw Mambilla Hydro-Power

    Gov. Darius Ishaku of Taraba has lauded President Muhammadu Buhari for ensuring the commencement of work on the 3,050 megawatts Mambilla Hydro Electric Power Plant at Gembu in Taraba.

    The governor made the commendation on Monday after a closed door meeting with Buhari in the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    The Federal Executive Council ( FEC ) had on Aug, 30 approved 5.792 billion dollars (about N1.140 trillion) for the construction of the plant 45 years after its conception.

    The Minister of Power, Works and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, who disclosed this while addressing State House correspondents, said the idea for the project was conceived since 1972.

    “Several efforts had been made to bring it to reality but I’m happy to announce that this government approved the contract today to joint ventures of Chinese Civil and Engineering company for the engineering and turn-key contract, including civil and electro-mechanical works for 5.792 billion dollar.’’

    The governor thanked the President for approving the immediate commencement of work on the plant.

    “I thank him very much indeed about the award of Mambilla hydro-power project which is one of the biggest hydro-project in Nigeria.

    “It has stayed over 30 years on the drawing board until his regime.

    “So, that is a very big feat and I thought I should come and thank him and seek his audience. When next I will come with Taraba people to thank him.

    “This is a very good project for the country as a whole, 3,050 megawatts, for those of us who know what a megawatt is, it can do a lot in developing Nigeria,’’ he added.

    On the proposed Taraba Anti-Grazing Law, the governor revealed that the law would come into effect by January 2018.

    He, however, disclosed that the state government had set up two committees to sensitize farmers and herdsmen on the benefits of the anti-grazing bill.

    Ishaku described the bill as advantageous to both the farmers and herdsmen; socially and economically.

    “Our own anti-grazing law will come into effect next year January.

    “Two panels were set up to sensitize the farmers and the herdsmen so that they both understand the benefits of the anti- grazing bill.

    “I still believe for the herdsmen, socially and economically, that is the best thing that will ever happen to them if we can consolidate on that.

    “The awareness is improving each day and people are beginning to know that these laws are done in good faith and are done to secure lives and property of the people,’’ he said.

    The governor expressed the hope that the bill would be implemented without hindrance.

    Ishaku called on the Federal Government to review its decision on the withdrawal of military officers from Taraba so as to enhance security situation in the state.

    NAN

  • Army arrest fleeing Boko Haram members in Taraba

    Army arrest fleeing Boko Haram members in Taraba

    The Army command in a statement issued by Director Army Public Relations, Brigadier General Sani Kukasheka Usman, said the arrested members where seen loitering around Gishiri village, Ibbi Local Government Area of Taraba State.
    He said, “Troops of 93 Battalion, 13 Brigade Nigerian Army, on Saturday 28th October 2017, based on a tip off by security conscious an well meaning Nigerians, arrested two suspected Boko Haram terrorists; Mallam Jamilu Adamu and Mallam Garba Adamu, seeing loitering around at Gishiri village, Ibbi Local Government Area of Taraba State”.
    Read also: Army kill three Boko Haram insurgents, recover arms in Borno
    “Preliminary investigation revealed that they hailed from Kirta village in Marte Local Government Area of Borno State. It was further confirmed that they were fishermen in Kereta before they were abducted by Boko Haram terrorists who engaged them as boat operators for two years”.
    “They further claimed that they belonged to the Albarnawi faction of the Boko Haram terrorists group. The suspects also stated that they escaped to Gishiri village from Boko Haram terrorists because of the concerted efforts of the military on the terrorists and also realising the fallacy of the Boko Haram terrorists’ ideology”.
  • ‘Oando Foundation equips 80 primary schools in 22 states’

    ‘Oando Foundation equips 80 primary schools in 22 states’

    Oando Foundation, an independent charity organisation has equipped  80 primary schools in 22 states and the FCT, in its efforts to boost access to quality education in the country.

    Mrs Adekanla Adegoke, Head of the foundation, made the disclosure at the inauguration of a block of three classrooms, ICT Centre and toilet facility at LEA Primary School Rido in Kaduna on Wednesday.

    The  facilities were donated to the school by the foundation, as part of Oando’s corporate social responsibility.

    According to her, the foundation has initiated a programme tagged Adopt-A-School Initiative (AASI), aimed at  holistic improvement of public primary schools.

    “AASI was initiated in 2007 in partnership with the Ministry of Education and State Universal Basic Education Boards in line with Oando Foundation’s mission of transforming lives through education.

    “AASI is focused on improving the overall quality of basic education in public primary schools and to create a sustainable model for effective teaching and learning in all adopted schools.”

    She said that the 80 schools adopted by Oando Foundation were located in Adamawa, Akwa-Ibom, Bauchi, Bayelsa, Cross River, Ebonyi, Edo, Ekiti, Enugu, Kaduna, Katsina, Kwara and Lagos states.

    Others are in Niger, Ogun, Ondo, Osun, Oyo, Plateau, Rivers, Sokoto, Taraba, and the FCT.

    She disclosed that the foundation had adopted two schools in Kaduna state, namely LEA Primary School, Rido, and LEA Primary School Rigasa.

    “The foundation has so far spent about N50 million in LEA Rido since its adoption in 2011.

    “We constructed two blocks of five classrooms and sanitation facilities to improve hygiene.

    “We equally offered scholarship to 22 students to support their secondary education, provided over 1,000 units of teaching and learning materials to strengthen the quality of teaching and learning in the school.

    “We have also built the capacity of teachers and head teachers in modern teaching techniques,” the official said.

    She added that the foundation also partnered Sumitomo Chemical, a Japanese company, to establish the solar powered ICT centres in public primary schools in Kaduna, Lagos and Taraba states.

    “While most children in rural areas do not have access to a computer, three out of every five children in the urban areas lack basic ICT skills.

    “To reverse this negative trend, the foundation has established 15 ICT/Creative Centres in its adopted schools, serving the learning needs of over 16,000 pupils.

    “Together with Sumitomo Chemical and other well-meaning organisations like the Educate-A-Child Qatar, we are creating an enabling environment to provide pupils from marginalised backgrounds invaluable 21st century technology skills, “Adegoke said.

    Also speaking, the Executive Chairman of SUBEB, Malam Nasir Umar thanked the foundation for the gesture, saying that “education is a collective responsibility”.

    Represented by a Permanent Member of the board, Mrs Mary Ambi, the chairman called on other corporate organizations to emulate the gesture.

    Similarly, the Village Head of the community, Alhaji Hamisu Haruna also commended the effort, adding that it would reduce current congestion of over 300 pupils per class.

    He said that the school, built in the 1960s and with a population of about 2,000 pupils, has only seven classrooms, stressing that much would be required to bridge the gap.

    NAN

  • Ishaku: Why I am called Baba Cucumber

    Ishaku: Why I am called Baba Cucumber

    Taraba State Governor, Darius Dickson Ishaku, is happy to be mockingly referred to as the “cucumber governor, or Baba Cucumber.”

    He said he earned the name “Baba Cucumber” as a result of his huge developmental efforts in the agricultural sector, through the Green House project which was commissioned alongside other projects by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on August 24.

    The governor spoke on Channels television in a programme called Hard Copy, anchored by Maupe Ogun at the weekend.

    Ishaku said, in his efforts to develop the agricultural sector in Taraba State, his administration established the Green House, the first ever in Nigeria’s north-eastern region worth over N2 billion.

    The Green House, according to the governor, produces high quality vegetables such as tomato, lettuce, pepper, cabbage and cucumber that have met the international standard.

    Narrating why his administration ventured into the project, he said: “Prior to the establishment of the Green House, vegetables, with low quality, were imported into the country from South Africa. As a result of this development, the idea of the Green House was actualised.”

    On whether the Green House is worth the colossal amount and whether it has direct impact on the people, Ishaku said the project has been a huge success in Taraba State, because, apart from offering an all-year round high quality vegetables in commercial quantity, it has employed 500 persons and improved the Internal Revenue Generation (IRG) of the State.

    He explained further that the previous regime shared about N2 billion to farmers as agric loan, but the beneficiaries refused to redeem their pledge, which is why instead of sharing money in the form of loan to farmers and making the same mistake, he used the money to establish the Green House.

    “I met a very bad example. The past regime took almost N2billion and shared to farmers as agricultural loan. Now, not up to one-quarter redeemed the pledge. They saw the money as a free gift from the government.

    “Even from the one-quarter we recovered, I had to set up a committee to go after them. And now, with that experience, if you receive another N2 billion, will you repeat the same mistake that was done by the past government? No.

    “I decided that simple vegetables like tomato, pepper and cucumber among others, which were hitherto imported, be produced here. I decided to venture into the Green House project, and it has been a huge success.

    “Most of our Green House produce have found their ways into various markets and I have earned the name Baba Cucumber.”

    He added that, besides the Green House, his administration is aiding farmers through the provision of fertilizer, agricultural inputs and in terms of guarding them.

    “14,700 farmers were aided to venture into dry season rice cultivation and they harvested very good yields; they are now happy and they want to do it this year again,” said the governor.

  • Alleged fraud: Ex-governor Nyame justifies extra-budgetary expenditure

    Alleged fraud: Ex-governor Nyame justifies extra-budgetary expenditure

    Former governor of Taraba State, Jolly Nyame said extra-budgetary expenditure is normal when executing government projects as there is always room for supplementary budget.

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission ( EFCC ), slammed a 21-count charge on Nyame, bordering on misappropriation of Taraba funds to the tune of N1.64billion during his tenure as governor.

    Nyame, who was cross examined by EFCC’s prosecutor, Mr Rotimi Jacobs ( SAN ), was responding to a question on whether he regarded spending state funds outside budgetary provision as prudent.

    The prosecution served the former governor with exhibit 001, which was money budgeted for the Governor’s Office during his tenure in 2005.

    The Governor’s Office made an excess expenditure of N982million.
    In his response, Nyame said, “budgets are only estimates,’’ adding that he considered himself being prudent with state funds though he exceeded budgetary provisions “because I performed.’’

    Jacobs also made available exhibit 002, being overhead cost for 2006 for the Governor’s Office.

    The House of Assembly approved N40 million, while N713million was spent, with an excess expenditure of N673million.

    When asked by Jacobs if he regarded that as being prudent too, Nyame replied, “My Lord, I was prudent and it could have been the House of Assembly that could have proved otherwise.’’

    In 2007, N100million was budgeted for the Governor’s Office as overhead, while N2.1billion was spent, with N2billion as excess expenditure.

    When asked by the prosecution if he knew that it was an offence to exceed the budget estimate, the former governor replied that he knew, but only if there was no supplementary budget.

    Nyame said that exceeding budget estimates was normal when executing government projects and that “there is room for supplementary budget.’’

    Justice Adebukola Banjoko adjourned the case until Oct. 12 for continuation of cross examination.

    NAN

  • Price of local rice drops in Jalingo markets

    Price of local rice drops in Jalingo markets

    The price of local rice has significantly dropped in some major markets in Jalingo, Taraba.

  • Taraba: INEC’s ill-motivated staff re-deployment

    Evil political seeds are being sown by enemies of Taraba State ahead of the 2019 elections in the state. The youth wing of the Christians Association of Nigeria, CAN, in Taraba State recently uncovered the plot and raised the alarm. The group has established, to the surprise and consternation of all peace-loving people of Taraba, cases of ill-motivated re-deployment of many officials of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC, who are Christians in many Local Government Areas of the state. All the re-deployed staff were replaced by Muslims, according to the group’s findings.

    At a well attended news conference addressed in Jalingo, September 22, 2017, Pastor Ephraim Kwanchi, chairman of the CAN youth wing, said the re-deployments were part of a grand plan being masterminded by some religious bigots in and outside Taraba State to manipulate “the on-going processes of producing the updated voters register nationwide by the national electoral body.” The plot, the group said, “is aimed at disenfranchising Christians in Taraba State and possibly inflating the number of prospective Muslim voters through the registration of under-aged persons. The entire plot is aimed at influencing the outcome of future elections in the state in favour of Muslim candidates.

    The group quoted statistics on past and recent deployments of INEC electoral officials in the state to support its allegation of bias and injustice against Christians. It said that during the 2015 general elections, “only three out of the 16 electoral officers were Christians. The remaining were Muslims. But following the post election review carried out which saw to the reshuffling of electoral officers nationwide, 12 out of the 16 officers posted to or retained in Taraba State were Christians while the remaining four were Muslims.”

    The group observed that the most recent re-deployments of six out of the 12 Christians who have now been replaced with Muslims now brings the number of Muslim electoral officers to 10 leaving six Christian officers. It then asked a pertinent question: “Why is INEC removing six Christian electoral officers now and replacing them with Muslim electoral officers when it did not deem it necessary to do same during the 2015 general election when there were 13 Muslim electoral officers and only three Christian electoral officers?” The group said it found it curious that the six affected electoral officers were deployed only two months after they were posted to the Local Government Areas affected by the recent postings.

    The development, according to the group, is worrisome because of the potential threat it poses to peace and security in the state. “It is very clear to us that the motive behind this unacceptable action of INEC is for these Muslim electoral officers to ensure that non-Muslims are denied the opportunity of registration and the permanent voters card. We suspect that this is part of the grand design to manipulate the outcome of major future elections. This is unacceptable to the Christian community in Taraba State.” It condemned these deployments as an attempt by religious bigots to manipulate the voters registration exercise and the entire electoral process and warned those behind it to retrace their steps.

    In case INEC leaders in Jalingo and Abuja do not know, the CAN youth wing that addressed the press on this sensitive issue spoke the minds of millions of Christians in the state. They demonstrated a huge amount of courage and patriotism by taking the bold, mature and legitimate steps they have taken to draw the attention of INEC authorities to this highly explosive issue. They deserve commendation for their choice of this very mature approach of channelling their complaints. Some other groups would take to the streets in protest and in the process cause mayhem. It is now left for INEC to heed the advice the group has voluntarily offered on this issue. It must act fast in nullifying the suspicious re-deployments and halt further similar actions that are suggestive of religious bias.

    There are two lessons to be learnt from the patriotic action of the CAN youth wing in Taraba on this issue. One is that, Nigeria is a religiously sensitive country. Taraba State is no exception. Any important institutional arrangement such as elections must not exhibit any form of bias against any of the two main religious persuasions – Christianity and Islam. What INEC has done with the clearly ill-motivated re-deployment of INEC officials in Wukari, Kurmi, Karim Lamido, Ussa, Ibi and Jalingo amounts to sowing the seeds of political discord that is destined to lead to bitter and regrettable consequences in future. We all must thank God that these youths chose the mature path of drawing attention to this political landmine in good time.

    Election, as members of the group observed in the press statement they read at the press conference, is the major ingredient for the sustenance of democracy. It is also the best means of political recruitment for service to the people. If election is flawed, democracy will be gravely hampered. Therefore, nothing must be done to put the electoral process in jeopardy. The deliberate advantage that the replacement of re-deployed Christian INEC officers by their Muslim counterparts seeks to  guarantee Muslim candidates in future elections is a clear attempt to bastardise the electoral process in the state. It amounts to rigging the elections right from the voters registration stages. Tarabans are not as politically naive as those behind this unfortunate rigging plot probably think.

    The second lesson is the need to avoid anything that will threaten peace and security which the Governor Ishaku administration has achieved for the state through hard work. There cannot be peace if there is no justice. This obviously biased re-deployment of INEC electoral officers is one clear case of injustice done against the Christian community in the state. It has evoked impassioned sentiments which, if not promptly and properly redressed, could threaten peace and stability in the state.

    The issue is now at the door-steps of INEC. What it does with the points raised by these patriotic young Christians will go a long way in determining the peaceful conduct and the legitimacy or otherwise of the election of 2019. It will also determine whether the people will go into the elections in peace or in crisis fuelled by injustice and mutual suspicion. The choice is INEC’s to make. And it must do so quickly by nullifying the controversial re-deployments and resist further attempts to be cajoled into making unfair decisions capable to inducing tension and crisis in the polity.

     

    • Agada writes from Jalingo, Taraba State.
  • Taraba, Benue mend fences

    Taraba, Benue mend fences

    I was nature’s design that the Tiv and Jukun settled in the trough of Taraba and Benue states. Their ancestors, who were hunter-gatherers and farmers, migrated from different places and quartered there. In Benue, you will find indigenous Jukuns in Abinse, near the state capital, Makurdi. In southern Taraba, there are indigenous Tiv people in appreciable numbers in Takum, Donga, Wukari and Ibi local government areas living with the Jukun. In Takum, there are also indigenous Kuteb people. These tribes have intermarried. For instance, Governor Darius Ishaku, a Jukun, is married to a Tiv woman from Benue State. Jukun and Tiv ethnic groups are peace lovers known for their sincerity and hospitality, but at the slightest provocation, they prove they are no weaklings.
    Taraba, known as ‘Nature’s Gift,’ and Benue, with its enviable epithet ‘Food Basket,’ have agricultural potentials to feed the nation. But protracted communal skirmishes have hampered development among these tribes and the two states. The fattest yams in Nigeria are produced in southern Taraba and eastern part of Benue. But the fertile land, with its lush vegetation, rather than be a blessing, has become something of a curse, always tearing the people apart. For instance, in 2001, the Tiv and Jukun at the border clashed in a fierce war that snowballed into Taraba versus Benue crisis. Many Tivs and Jukuns were killed while homes and pricey properties were destroyed. There have been many clashes, but the ghost of the 2001 crisis has always come around.
    Since the return of calm in late 2002, although pockets of violence among Jukun, Kuteb and Tiv still exist, governors of Taraba and Benue have always tried to sustain the relative peace for harmonious co-existence at the border. This is because peace is the fundamental ingredient for sustainable development.
    Penultimate week, the peace initiative by Governors Ishaku (Taraba) and Samuel Ortom (Benue) culminated in a boundary adjustment conference in Ugba, Logo Local Government Area, Benue State. The meeting, in the form of a town hall meeting, came after a tour of all the border towns of Taraba and Benue, from Jootar to Jandeikyura, Kente, Arufu and Akwana.
    Governor Ishaku and his team, including his deputy, Haruna Manu, the Jukun king, Aku Uka, His Royal Highness Dr. Shakarau Angyu Masaibi, welcomed his counterpart at Jootar, a Tiv village translated to mean ‘border territory.’ There, the governors demonstrated love for one another by shaking hands and hugging themselves. Governor Ortom’s team also included his deputy, Benson Abounu and Tiv’s paramount ruler, His Royal Highness, Prof. James Ortese Ayatse. From Jootar, the leaders drove through Wukari with stopovers at the border settlements. The peace and security and boundary adjustment meeting finally took place at the Youth Centre in Logo.
    The opinion leaders, who addressed a massive gathering, agreed to demarcate their boundary as a panacea to the lingering skirmishes between the people of the two states. They urged the people to embrace peace and cohabit as brothers, irrespective of tribal and religious differences.
    Ortom said the technical committee, headed by the deputy governors of Taraba and Benue, will work with the state and national boundary commission as well as traditional rulers to come up with a transparent and acceptable demarcation. He said he and Ishaku, who were ministers in the last administration, have many things in common such that they would avoid whatever is capable of compromising peace, unity and progress in their states. “He and I came to power by sheer divinity,” he noted.
    He added that, just as Ishaku appointed some Tiv people in Taraba in his cabinet, he also has appointed Jukuns in Benue. He expressed optimism that the appointments were a sure way of cementing their relationship. “What the Tiv in Taraba need to do is to respect constituted authorities,” he advised.
    Governor Ishaku said, “The demarcation of the boundary is for administrative convenience, which if completed, the exercise will help to end the clashes between Tiv and Jukun brothers. He pointed out that based on an agreement earlier reached, all the Tiv People in Taraba were automatically indigenous to the state with the same condition applying to all Jukuns in Benue. “God designed that Ortom and I should be governors at this time, for the good of our people,” he said.
    “Let us not take tribe or religion to be the aim of life, but let love lead us. After this resolution, if you are a Tiv and you find yourself in Taraba, I will be in total care of what concerns you. And if you are a Jukun who ends up on the side of Benue, my brother Governor (Ortom) will henceforth take care of all that concerns you,” Ishaku said.
    The Tor Tiv, Prof. Ayatse, called on Tiv people in Taraba and elsewhere to be law abiding citizens. He pledged that the Tiv Area Traditional Council will support the two governors to succeed in their determination to achieve peace in their states.
    The Aku Uka, Shakarau Angyu, alluded briefly that Tiv and Jukun share one ancestral origin and are therefore, of one lineage. “There is no need whatsoever for us to be at war with one another,” he said. Aku Uka commended Ortom and Ishaku for the peace initiative.
    The joint meeting between the two states, coming after another one earlier this year at Anyiase and Kashimbilla, ended successfully with a communique signed by Ortom and Ishaku. It was agreed that the deputy governors of Taraba and Benue should immediately hold a meeting of the technical committee with the National Boundaries Commission and work out modalities of carrying out a demarcation exercise that every affected person will accept in good faith.
    The communique urged communities of the two states to respect constituted authorities where they find themselves as a result of the demarcation. The governors are to ensure the safety and protection of all the citizens who fall within their respective jurisdictions. The federal government, like the states, was urged to provide critical infrastructure, especially to rehabilitate the Kwatan Sule-Wukari Road to ease movement of people, goods and services.

  • Taraba, Benue mend fences

    Taraba, Benue mend fences

    Taraba State Governor Darius Ishaku and his Benue counterpart Samuel Ortom have initiated border delineation moves to end bloody clashes between the closely tied states, FANEN IHYONGO writes

    It was nature’s design that the Tiv and Jukun settled in the trough of Taraba and Benue states. Their ancestors, who were hunter-gatherers and farmers, migrated from different places and quartered there. In Benue, you will find indigenous Jukuns in Abinse, near the state capital Makurdi. In southern Taraba, there are indigenous Tiv people in appreciable numbers in Takum, Donga, Wukari and Ibi local government areas living with the Jukun. In Takum, there are also indigenous Kuteb people. These tribes have intermarried. Governor Darius Ishaku, a Jukun, is married to a Tiv woman from Benue State. Jukun and Tiv ethnic groups are peace lovers known for their sincerity and hospitality, but at the slightest provocation, they prove they are no weaklings.

    Taraba, known as ‘Nature’s Gift,’ and Benue, with its enviable epithet ‘Food Basket,’ have agricultural potentials to feed the nation. But protracted communal skirmishes have hampered development among these tribes and the two states. The fattest yams in Nigeria are produced in southern Taraba and eastern part of Benue. But the fertile land, with its lush vegetation, rather than a blessing, has become something of a curse, always tearing the people apart. For instance, in 2001, the Tiv and Jukun at the border clashed in a fierce war that snowballed into Taraba versus Benue crisis. Many Tivs and Jukuns were killed while homes and pricey properties were destroyed. There have been many clashes, but the ghost of the 2001 crisis has always come around.

    Since the return of calm in late 2002, although pockets of violence among Jukun, Kuteb and Tiv still exist, governors of Taraba and Benue have always tried to sustain the relative peace for harmonious co-existence at the border. This is because peace is the fundamental ingredient for sustainable development.

    Last week, the peace initiative by Governors Ishaku (Taraba) and Samuel Ortom (Benue) culminated in a boundary adjustment conference in Ugba, Logo Local Government Area, Benue State. The meeting, in the form of a town hall meeting, came after a tour of all the border towns of Taraba and Benue, from Jootar to Jandeikyura, Kente, Arufu and Akwana.

    Governor Ishaku and his team, including his deputy Haruna Manu, the Jukun king and Aku Uka His Royal Highness Dr. Shakarau Angyu Masaibi welcomed his counterpart at Jootar, a Tiv village translated to mean ‘border territory.’ There, the governors demonstrated love for one another by shaking hands and hugging themselves. Governor Ortom’s team also included his deputy Benson Abounu and Tiv’s paramount ruler His Royal Highness Prof. James Ortese Ayatse. From Jootar, the leaders drove through Wukari with stopovers at the border settlements. The peace and security and boundary adjustment meeting finally took place at the Youth Centre in Logo.

    The opinion leaders, who addressed a massive gathering, agreed to demarcate their boundary as a panacea to the lingering skirmishes between the people of the two states. They urged the people to embrace peace and cohabit as brothers, irrespective of tribal and religious differences.

    Ortom said the technical committee headed by the deputy governors of Taraba and Benue will work with the state and national boundary commission as well as traditional rulers to come up with a transparent and acceptable demarcation. He said he and Ishaku, who were ministers in the last administration, have many things in common such that they would avoid whatever that is capable of compromising peace, unity and progress in their states.

    “He and I came to power by sheer divinity,” he noted.

    He added, saying that just as Ishaku appointed some Tiv people in Taraba in his cabinet, Ortom also appointed Jukuns in Benue. He expressed optimism that the appointments were a sure way of cementing their relationship.

    “What the Tiv in Taraba need to do is to respect constituted authorities,” he advised.

    Governor Ishaku said, “The demarcation of the boundary is for administrative convenience, which if completed, the exercise will help to end the clashes between Tiv and Jukun brothers. He pointed out that base on an agreement earlier reached, all the Tiv People in Taraba were automatically indigenous to the State with same applying to all Jukuns in Benue. “God designed that Ortom and I should be governors at this time, for the good of our people,” he said.

    “Let us not take tribe or religion to be the aim of life, but let love lead us. After this resolution, if you are a Tiv and you find yourself in Taraba, I will be in total care of what concerns you. And if you are a Jukun who ends up on the side of Benue, my brother Governor (Ortom) will henceforth take care of all that concerns you,” Ishaku said.

    The Tor Tiv Prof. Ayatse called on Tiv people in Taraba and elsewhere to be law abiding citizens. He pledged that the Tiv Area Traditional Council will support the two governors to succeed in their determination to achieve peace in their States.

    The Aku Uka Shakarau Angyu alluded briefly that Tiv and Jukun share one ancestral origin and are therefore, of one lineage. “There is no need whatsoever for us to be at war with one another,” he said. Aku Uka commended Ortom and Ishaku for the peace initiative.

    The joint meeting between the two States, coming after another one earlier this year at Anyiase and Kashimbilla, ended successfully with a communique signed by Ortom and Ishaku. It was agreed that the deputy governors of Taraba and Benue should immediately hold a meeting of the technical committee with the National Boundaries Commission and work out modalities of carrying out a demarcation exercise that every affected person will accept in good faith.

    The communique urged communities of the two States to respect constituted authorities where they find themselves as a result of the demarcation. The Governors are to ensure the safety and protection of all the citizens who fall within their respective jurisdiction. The federal government, like the States, was urged to provide critical infrastructure, especially to rehabilitate the Kwatan Sule-Wukari Road to ease movement of people, goods and services.

     

  • Suntai’s brother dies, as ex-governor is buried

    Former Taraba State Governor Danbaba Danfulani Suntai was on Saturday evening buried in his village Suntai, Bali local government area.

    There were tears and eulogies.

    Hours later, his younger brother, Babangida Suntai died.

    Former Taraba Information Commissioner Emmanuel Bello confirmed news of the death to The Nation.

    “The Suntai family has been severely devastated,” a member of the family told The Nation in an emotion-laden voice yesterday.

    Babangida Suntai died in Abuja, in an undisclosed hospital.

    A family source said he was rushed to Abuja last week for treatment. “He was sick,” our source said.

    Danbaba Suntai who was governor from 2007 to 2015, died on June 28, two days to his 56th birthday in Orlando, Florida, USA exactly four years and seven months after surviving an air crash in which he was the pilot.

    He is survived by his wife Hauwa and five children (four daughters and a boy).

    The last two are twins who were born in US where Suntai was being treated of the plane crash injuries.

    The widow’s eyes had been swollen by ‘rivers’ of tears. It has been a harrowing experience for her in the last more than four years.

    Danbaba Suntai’s funeral service was held in Jolly Nyame Stadium, Jalingo –the Taraba State capital.

    Among the dignitaries were Governors Ayo Fayose (Ekiti), Ibrahim Dankwambo (Gombe) and Simon Lalong (Plateau) who offered their deepest condolences.

    The governors said they were touched by the late governor’s kind gesture and leadership qualities. They asked Taraba people to learn from the good legacies Suntai left for the state.

    Taraba State Governor Darius Dickson Ishaku said Taraba, as a State, had entirely crashed with Danbaba Suntai on October 25, 2015 when the ill-fated Cessna 208 aircraft piloted by Suntai had a mishap.

    “When Suntai had that plane crash, Taraba State literally crashed with him.

    “The future and wellbeing of his family, the sanctity of his administration, and indeed, the wellbeing of the people of Taraba State also crashed with him.

    “This is because the very fabric of the socio-economic being of the people of Taraba State was intricately interwoven within the stature of this great man and leader of our time.

    “The news of Danbaba Suntai’s demise came to me as a rude shock, because from my human perspective, I looked forward with very high expectation to the day that he would be fully restored and returned home to us.

    “But sadly, that was not to be. Words cannot describe the intensity and depth of my grief and the trauma that the immediate and extended family members of Suntai are going through, as well as the gloom that has settled on the government and good people of Taraba State,” Ishaku said.

    Ishaku described his late predecessor as an “amiable leader and an icon par excellence who was very well known for his frankness, boldness and large heart given to sincere forgiveness.”

    The governor remembered the three security aides of the late governor who survived the plane crash.

    They were: Aide de Camp (ADC), Iliya Dasat, Chief Detail Joel Danladi and the Chief Security Officer (CSO) Tino Dangana who has been reappointed by Ishaku as his CSO.

    They were asked to stand beside their late boss’ casket for the cameras and recognition.

    Ishaku thanked all Nigerians, especially those who stood by the late governor during his trying moment and in death.

    He said that the love they showed him was a great source of strength to the family and the people of Taraba State.