Tag: Taraba

  • Taraba sets up committee to investigate violence in Ussa, Takum areas

    Taraba sets up committee to investigate violence in Ussa, Takum areas

    The Taraba Government says it has set up a committee to unravel the remote and immediate causes of the recent violence that hit parts of Ussa and Takum Local Government Areas.

    Alhaji Haruna Manu, the Deputy Governor, who announced this on Tuesday in Jalingo, said that government was determined to get to the root of the recurring crises so as to work out measures to end them.

    “Government wants to fish out the perpetrators of the incessant clashes between herdsmen and farmers in Taraba. The crises have affected our development and we cannot continue this way,” he said.

    Manu, who spoke with newsmen shortly after the weekly security meeting, said that anyone found to be linked to the clashes would face the full wrath of the law “no matter his or her status in the society”.

    He said that the security meeting, which he presided over, focused on finding a lasting solution to the perennial clashes which had claimed several lives, particularly in the central and southern parts of Taraba.

    According to him, the committee will be expected to establish the main causes of the crises and recommend ways of averting future occurrences.

    “The communities involved in the recent clashes – Kuteb, Jukun and Fulani – have coexisted peacefully over the years. We have met some of their leaders and they have agreed to expose the evil men that have infiltrated them,” he said.

    He said that security agencies had intensified patrols in all corners of Taraba, and expressed optimism that those alleged to have hired mercenaries to kill farmers would be brought to book.

    Meanwhile, the state government has rejected suggestions that the anti-open grazing bill currently before the House of Assembly, was targeted at herdsmen.

    According to Mr Emmanuel Bello, Senior Special Assistant on Public Affairs to Gov Darius Ishaku, such insinuations are “mischievous, divisive and without substance”.

    “It is wrong to say that government is habouring anti-Fulani sentiments; the bill is aimed at finding a permanent solution to the herdsmen/farmers clashes. No group is targeted.”

    He urged members of the public to fully participate in the public hearing aimed at getting everyone’s input into the bill.

  • Boko Haram men in Taraba – Governor

    Boko Haram men in Taraba – Governor

    Taraba State Governor Darius Ishaku has lamented that fleeing Boko Haram insurgents were taking refuge in the Bali forest area of the state, posing security threat to residents.

    He spoke when Commander of the 23 Brigade of the Army, Yolanda, Gen. Bello Abdullahi Mohammed, visited him.

    Ishaku said crime had increased in all local governments bordering Bali forest following the presence of the insurgents.

    He also alerted to the increasing rate of insecurity at Gashaka Gumpti National Park, which threatens tourism.

    According to him, criminals have infiltrated the park, thereby making it unsafe for tourists. He called for security intervention to flush out the criminals.

    Ishaku lauded the military for its role in helping to restore peace to communities affected by crises, saying they always responded anytime they are called, even at night and under poor weather conditions.

    “This has to be so because the scope of the crises, sometimes, is beyond the police. The situation now is such that herdsmen carry sophisticated weapons instead of sticks, which they were known for, and they often overwhelm security agents sent to confront them,” he said.

    Gen. Mohammed assured Ishaku of the Army’s preparedness to assist the state in the pursuit of its peace agenda.

    “Our men are always ready and willing to respond any time they are called to help restore peace. I will, however, consult with the governor in handling security matters always,” he added.

  • 15 killed in farmers/herdsmen clash in Taraba

    A violent clash between farmers and cattle rearers in Ussa and Takum Council areas of Taraba has left at least 15 people dead while several others sustained various degrees of injuries.
    Alhaji Sahabi Mahmoud, the state Chairman of the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria in Taraba and David Misal (ASP), the Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO) of the state Police Command confirmed the incident.
    However, the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that while Sahabi said at least 15 of his members have been killed and buried in Takum on Friday, Misal said that the police could only confirm five deaths as at the time of filing this report.
    Sahabi, who spoke with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Jalingo yesterday, also expressed fear that more corpses of his members might be in the bush as more than 150 of them were still missing.
    He claimed that hundreds of livestock belonging to the herdsmen were wandering in bush as their owners could not be traced.
    He called on the security agencies and the state government to come to the aid of hundreds of other cattle breeders, who he said were trapped in the forests of Ussa and Takum to get out alive with their animals.
    The PPRO told NAN in Jalingo the Commissioner of PoliceYakubuBabas has relocated to Takum to ensure that the crisis was brought under control.

  • Police arrest man, with roasted human parts in Taraba

    Police arrest man, with roasted human parts in Taraba

    The Police in Taraba say they have arrested a 60-year-old man, Abubakar Abdulkadir, for allegedly being in possession of roasted human parts.

    The Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), for the Police Command in the state, Mr David Misal, who told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Jalingo on Friday said the suspect was arrested at Alin-Gora Village, Ardo-kola Council Area of the state.

    The police image maker said Abdulkadir was arrested with the body parts suspected to be that of his nephew, Ali Gimba, reportedly missing on April 27.

    “He was found in possession of body parts of the missing boy. He roasted part of the boy’s body and loaded it in a sack.

    “We also recovered a knife and a hoe which the suspect used in digging a hole to pour and cover the boy’s blood,” the police spokesman said.

    Misal further said the police were investigating the motive behind the crime, adding that the suspect would be charged to court, after the investigation.

    “We want to know the purpose of this crime. Is it for ritual; to eat the flesh, or for sale.

  • Farmers form 90 Percent 2017 intending Pilgrims from Taraba – official

    Farmers constituted more than  90 per cent of the 1,260 intending pilgrims from Taraba that have so far deposited fare for the 2017 pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia, an official of the state pilgrims Board has said.

    In interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Jalingo on Friday, Alhaji Umar Leme, the Executive Secretary of the Board, disclosed that the farmers had already deposited N912 million while awaiting the official pronouncement on the hajj fare for this year.

    Leme observed that the large turn-out of farmers for the exercise might not be unconnected with the bumper harvest recorded by most of them across the state in the last cropping season.

    Speaking on arrangements being made for a hitch-free pilgrimage, Leme said accommodation had been secured for pilgrims at a strategic location within Mecca close to areas that rites would be performed.

    He said 1, 457 seats were allocated to Taraba by the National Hajj Commission, but that the state government was making effort to secure additional seats.

    He said many pilgrims were not very conversant with hajj rites, adding that the board intended engaging more trainers for the 2017 pilgrimage.

    Leme called on the National Hajj Commission to enhance the process of securing travelling documents to reduce delays experienced in previous years.

    The Secretary also called on those who made deposits, to complete their payment.

  • Getting Taraba Farmers Ready for New Season

    Getting Taraba Farmers Ready for New Season

    Jalingo and Kaduna were the main centres of activities for Governor Darius Dickson Ishaku during the week. With the very strenuous tour of local council areas concluded just a few days earlier, it was expected among Government House staffers that the Governor will take time off to rest before taking on another stressful assignment. But that is never the way of Governor Ishaku, not when there is an urgent and important job to be done. And so he took on two other engagements, one of which even required travelling out of the state.

    The main official activity of the Governor for the week took place in Jalingo. It was the beginning of a new planting season in Taraba State and the administration of Governor Darius Dickson Ishaku on Thursday, April 20, rolled up its sleeves to mobilize farmers for maximum results. Agriculture is a priority on the Rescue Agenda of the administration. It is, therefore, a major area of investment by the government. Government’s vision is anchored on the need to produce enough food to meet the needs of its people and feed markets in other states in Nigeria. It is also hoping to create thousands of jobs through the promotion of agriculture.

    On that day, Governor Ishaku took a major step towards actualising that dream. He flagged off the sale of fertilizer and the distribution of other agricultural inputs to farmers. The materials distributed are the best in quality ever given to farmers in the history of Taraba State. It was also the first time any government in the state purchased as much as 30 metric tonnes of fertilizer at a time for farmers in the state.  Each bag is heavily subsidized and the Governor directed and has insisted that all the 16 Local Government Council Areas must be fairly treated in the allocation. The materials have also been taken into warehouses close to farmers in order to facilitate accessibility by the farmers, wherever they may be in the villages.

    Other inputs equally critical to the promotion of agriculture were presented to farmers at the ceremony. These include rice threshers, special varieties of Sesame, soya beans and cassava seedlings. They are all high yielding varieties. Government is promoting a cassava revolution to feed a cassava processing industry in the state and to also help feed other industries in and outside Nigeria that require cassava as raw materials.  Farmers committed to the production of rice were provided with rice threshers. It is the first time in the history of the state such a gesture was extended to farmers.

    In a speech at the flag-off ceremony, Governor Ishaku said he was unwavering in his determination to transform Taraba into a leading economy in the North East sub-region. He noted that agriculture employs about 80 percent of the populace and for that reason no government that means well for its people can afford to pay lip service to it. “Under my administration, agriculture remains a priority. Agriculture will become big business, farmers will become richer than contractors and will earn a lot more respect in the society than they did in the past”, he said.

    He also spoke of agricultural projects and programmes already completed or are being planned by the administration. He said farmers in the state will be encouraged with soft loans to boost production and expressed happiness over the unprecedented success of dry season rice farming in the state. “I was overwhelmed with joy when I saw recently during a visit the huge amount of progress made. My plan is to turn agriculture into big business. Already, small scale farmers’ income has grown tremendously. Some of them have bought their own tractors, each of them costing about Seven Million Naira.

    Ishaku said the change in the economic status of farmers was in line with the objectives of the Rescue Agenda. “This is what the Rescue Agenda is all about. We will recue the stomach and rescue the pocket. I will make the farmers rich, richer than contractors.” He said the Green House, a highly visionary modern farm established in Jalingo by his administration, has started yielding fruits. With it, there will be abundance of fresh and high quality vegetables for domestic consumption and export. It has already employed over 200 indigenes of the state. This number will rise to 500 when the farm is fully activated.

    The support for agriculture with inputs, according to Governor Ishaku, remains a critical programme of his administration. He said fertilizer imported by the government will be sold at the subsidized price of N4,500 instead of N6,500. “I wish I could give them out free to farmers but the finances of the state cannot permit that for now. Money realised from the sales will be a revolving capital for the regular purchase and distribution of the commodity.”

    The support farmers are currently receiving from the Ishaku administration is just the beginning of greater things to come. “They are a pointer to the fact that the Rescue Agenda is working,” Ishaku said and added that by the time all the good things he had planned for the state were implemented, Taraba State will never be same again. He urged the people of the state to keep faith and cooperate with his administration.

    In Kaduna, on Condolence Visit

     

    With the flag-off over in Jalingo, Governor Ishaku flew out to Abuja from where he travelled by road to Kaduna on a two-in-one condolence visit. The first stop was at the Tudun Wada home of Alhaji Ahmadu Chanchanji, the multi-billionaire businessman from Taraba State who died a few days earlier. Though an indigene of Taraba State, Chanchanji lived and did business for the better part of his life in Kaduna. He was well known as a highly successful airline and petroleum business magnate. Ishaku commiserated with the family of the deceased saying he had come on the visit on behalf of the Government and people of Taraba and as member of the Jukun family to which Chanchanji belonged. He said he had always seen the late businessman as an elder brother whose life was an exemplary testimony in business and honesty.

    Ishaku later visited the home of Halima Samaila, mother of Dr Musa Samaila who had also died a few days earlier. He urged the family of the deceased to take the demise of the woman whom he described as “perfect example of a mother” with fortitude.

  • Lessons from Taraba Council polls

    Lessons from Taraba Council polls

    ‘It was the people’s way of saying thank you for the marvelous job he has done on the roads, at the Jalingo Airport, in the provision of water to the state capital and other towns and communities, in repositioning educational institutions and in
    renovating hospitals and equipping them with drugs to improve the quality of healthcare delivery’

    Those who say that Nigerian politicians are poor students of history cannot be faulted. They are perfectly right. Nigerian politicians are, indeed, an excellent example of this brand. They forget the past very easily and often recourse to those things that they had condemned and consigned to the dustbins of history as inimical to the survival, growth and maturity of democracy in our country. They insist, when it is convenient for them to do so, that elections must be free and fair and that nothing should be done to impede that expressway that leads to the dreamland of electoral freeness and fairness. But when the tide of the political cyclone turns against them, the drumming will change and so will the dance steps too. The rest of their actions, thereafter, can only be better left to the imagination. They will turn hitherto cherished principles of electoral perfection on their heads and unashamedly insist that it is the right way to go.

    The most recent example of this contradiction was experienced in Taraba State where local council elections were held Saturday February 25, Ibi Council Area in particular. Chairmen and councillors were being elected into the 16 local government councils to succeed caretaker committees that have been running their affairs for some time now. The elections were meant to enrich the nation’s new culture of representative governance whereby only those that the people have freely chosen through the instrumentality of the ballot box will occupy elective positions. And the Government of Governor Darius Ishaku, determined to make the elections a positive contribution towards strengthening the country’s incipient culture of democracy, took all steps necessary for this goal to be achieved.

    But there were those who did not want this to happen. They were the All Progressives Congress, APC, leaders in Ibi, one of the 16 local government council areas in Taraba State, and the only council area where the recent council elections did not hold on the scheduled date. They came out on their evil mission to stop the elections in the local government and they succeeded but only because Governor Ishaku declined the option of using the machinery of law and order to disperse them from where they had laid ambush for electoral materials meant for that day’s election.

    Before the day of the elections, electoral materials were moved by the State Independent Electoral Commission, SIEC, to police stations in all council headquarters for safe keeping, Ibi inclusive. That had been the practice, even in the case of national elections. It always worked out well. Even in this case, everything looked perfectly right until what became a contest between the good and the bad took the centre state in Ibi in the early hours of the polling day. A group of politicians and their supporters belonging to the All Progressives Congress, APC, thought the best thing to do was to prevent the elections from taking place since they were sure that their candidate was unpopular and would ultimately lose if the election were allowed to hold. They devised a trick to achieve that. They arrived early at the gates leading into the police station in Ibi where electoral materials were being kept and blocked it, insisting that the materials wouldnot be moved out to polling venues. And so, the elections did not take place there.

    When they were certain that it had become too late in the day to hold the elections, they vacated the entrance to the police station. At that point, the only option feasible was the postponement of the elections and the return of the materials to Jalingo. And that was what SIEC did. The incident which was condemned by many well-meaning Nigerians in and outside Taraba State, is a sad reminder of the stiff and unaccommodating attitude of our politicians to elections. That attitude is that all elections must end in their favour, otherwise, the process is demonised and truncated. That was what played out in Ibi on February 25. In case those who were behind those unfortunate events in Ibi haven’t realised yet, they need be told that they only succeeded in drawing back the hand of the clock and this will affect their council area in a negative way for a long time to come. Today, Ibi is the only council area still being administered by a care-taker committee.

    But besides that incident, the council elections were peaceful, adjudged as very free and fair by electoral observers and other independent groups that witnessed it. Governor Ishaku was commended by the monitoring teams(and there were many of them on duty that period) for creating the atmosphere that enabled the success of polling. The National Orientation Agency, NOA, in Taraba State even wrote a commendation letter which was addressed to Governor Ishaku. In the letter, the Agency’s Taraba State director, Dr. Robert Gulkawi, said the governor demonstrated through the elections a rare “spirit of sportsmanship.” Dr Dulkawi said NOA officers who covered the elections submitted reports to the effect that the process was “incontestably transparent.” This, Gulkawi said stood out the elections as hugely credible, unstoppably convincing and widely acceptable.”

    The contest was, no doubt, fierce with about ten registered political parties in the race. At the end of it all the ruling People’s Democratic Party, PDP, won in all the 15 local government council areas where the elections were held. It was a well-deserved victory for the party. The victories were seen in many quarters as evidence of Ishaku’s ever rising popularity rating in the political firmament of the state. It was the people’s way of saying “Thank You” for the marvelous job he has done on the roads, at the Jalingo Airport, in the provision of water to the state capital and other towns and communities, in repositioning educational institutions and in renovating hospitals and equipping them with drugs to improve the quality of healthcare delivery and in stabilising electricity power supply in some areas of the state. The party’s victory was also a way of acknowledging the regular payment of workers’ salaries by the Ishaku administration and many other things that the government has achieved in less than two years in office.

    Those elected have already taken their seats in the various council areas. At their inauguration on Monday February 27, 2017, in Jalingo, Governor Ishaku urged the new council helmsmen to discharge their duties with humility and to ensure prudent application of resources. The event was witnessed by a cross section of PDP chieftains from all the council areas in the state. It was a happy ending to an exercise that people had feared would lead to unending crisis. Those fears failed to manifest. Rather, it further united the people behind the resolve to maintain peace. Some people, particularly, youths came out in their thousands in a solidarity rally with the Governor and the efforts he is making to put the state on the path of development.

  • Lessons from Taraba Council polls

    belonging to the All Progressives Congress, APC, thought the best thing to do was to prevent the elections from taking place since they were sure that their candidate was unpopular and would ultimately lose if the election were allowed to hold. They devised a trick to achieve that. They arrived early at the gates leading into the police station in Ibi where electoral materials were being kept and blocked it, insisting that the materials wouldnot be moved out to polling venues. And so, the elections did not take place there.

    When they were certain that it had become too late in the day to hold the elections, they vacated the entrance to the police station. At that point, the only option feasible was the postponement of the elections and the return of the materials to Jalingo. And that was what SIEC did. The incident which was condemned by many well-meaning Nigerians in and outside Taraba State, is a sad reminder of the stiff and unaccommodating attitude of our politicians to elections. That attitude is that all elections must end in their favour, otherwise, the process is demonised and truncated. That was what played out in Ibi on February 25. In case those who were behind those unfortunate events in Ibi haven’t realised yet, they need be told that they only succeeded in drawing back the hand of the clock and this will affect their council area in a negative way for a long time to come. Today, Ibi is the only council area still being administered by a care-taker committee.

    But besides that incident, the council elections were peaceful, adjudged as very free and fair by electoral observers and other independent groups that witnessed it. Governor Ishaku was commended by the monitoring teams(and there were many of them on duty that period) for creating the atmosphere that enabled the success of polling. The National Orientation Agency, NOA, in Taraba State even wrote a commendation letter which was addressed to Governor Ishaku. In the letter, the Agency’s Taraba State director, Dr. Robert Gulkawi, said the governor demonstrated through the elections a rare “spirit of sportsmanship.” Dr Dulkawi said NOA officers who covered the elections submitted reports to the effect that the process was “incontestably transparent.” This, Gulkawi said stood out the elections as hugely credible, unstoppably convincing and widely acceptable.”

    The contest was, no doubt, fierce with about ten registered political parties in the race. At the end of it all the ruling People’s Democratic Party, PDP, won in all the 15 local government council areas where the elections were held. It was a well-deserved victory for the party. The victories were seen in many quarters as evidence of Ishaku’s ever rising popularity rating in the political firmament of the state. It was the people’s way of saying “Thank You” for the marvelous job he has done on the roads, at the Jalingo Airport, in the provision of water to the state capital and other towns and communities, in repositioning educational institutions and in renovating hospitals and equipping them with drugs to improve the quality of healthcare delivery and in stabilising electricity power supply in some areas of the state. The party’s victory was also a way of acknowledging the regular payment of workers’ salaries by the Ishaku administration and many other things that the government has achieved in less than two years in office.

    Those elected have already taken their seats in the various council areas. At their inauguration on Monday February 27, 2017, in Jalingo, Governor Ishaku urged the new council helmsmen to discharge their duties with humility and to ensure prudent application of resources. The event was witnessed by a cross section of PDP chieftains from all the council areas in the state. It was a happy ending to an exercise that people had feared would lead to unending crisis. Those fears failed to manifest. Rather, it further united the people behind the resolve to maintain peace. Some people, particularly, youths came out in their thousands in a solidarity rally with the Governor and the efforts he is making to put the state on the path of development.

  • Taraba can meet Nigeria’s annual rice demand— Gov. Ishaku

    Taraba can meet Nigeria’s annual rice demand— Gov. Ishaku

    Gov. Darius Ishaku of Taraba on Monday said that the state had the potential to produce 10million tonnes of rice, the annual demand of the country, with adequate financing and availability of modern equipment.

    Ishaku said this in Ardo-kola at a stakeholders’ meeting of the PDP’s delegates representing Jalingo and Ardo-kola.

    He said areas like: Karim-lamido, Gassol, Ardo-kola, Lau, Ibi, Wukari, Takum, among others, had fertile lands suitable for growing large quantities of rice.

    The governor noted that lack of sufficient funds had undermined the capacity of the state’s rice farmers to produce at an optimum level.

    Ishaku, however, said the state government was determined to support farmers in the state with farm inputs and improved seeds to increase their productivity.

    He said that Dominion Farms, owned by a Kenyan investor in Gassol, had been given six months to commence buying of paddy rice from out-growers for processing.

    The governor announced that the state government had bought hybrid seeds of Bennie seeds, soya beans and cassava and it would soon distribute them to its farmers.

    “Recently, there is a high demand of bennie seeds in our markets; though, I do not know what they are doing with it. We have acquired its improved seed.

    “We have also acquired hybrid seeds of soya beans and of course, cassava, because I will soon revive our cassava processing plant.

    “When that is done, it will bring the total companies I revived to five out of the 25 companies that were in comatose when I took over,’’ Ishaku said.

    The governor said he was in Ardo-kola to thank the people for massively voting for him in 2015.

    “The best time to appreciate that support is now; since I have won all the post-election suits instituted by my opponents,’’ he said.

    Also speaking, the state PDP Chairman, Mr Victor Bala, noted that loyalty to party decisions was critical to the growth of party politics.

    Bala urged council area chapters of the party that could not garner adequate support for the party in 2015 election, to “sit up’’ as the 2019 general elections were approaching.

    “Politics is like an investment. If you invest a little, do not expect high dividends at the end of the day, ‘’ he said.

  • Minister warns against neglect of APC members by FG

    Minister warns against neglect of APC members by FG

    Minister of Women Affairs, Senator Aisha Alhassan has warned against the alleged neglect of  members of the All Progressive Congress (APC) who contributed to the success of the party in the 2015 poll in Taraba State.

    She stated that unless the party members are compensated by the federal government, their support may not be guaranteed in the next election.

    The Minister who spoke when she led a delegation of APC members in Taraba state complaining of being marginalized in the scheme of things by the APC led federal government, said apart from constitutionally mandated appointment, no APC member in the state has been given appointment by the government since coming into power in 2015.

    She stressed that even in the execution of federal projects in the state, the leadership of the APC in Taraba state are not being carried along, pointing out that the state chapter of the party has practically been abandoned.

    She said : “I have come as a party member and a leader, together with my brothers from Taraba state to voice out our problems.  The APC people in Taraba state are very worried. The government in the state is controlled by the PDP and we expect that as our parents and as a government, you should have helped us especially since you knew that we were muscled out, even though we did our best. 

    “No opposition party in the state has performed as good as we did since 1999. Unfortunately, apart from my appointment which is statutory and constitutional and that of the ambassador, we still don’t have any meaningful appointment from this government.

    “Many of those who participated in APC campaign  in Taraba state are still there without appointment. That is why I took the pains to introduce some of the people that accompanied me here so that you will know the caliber of people that we have in the state APC. We have capable hands in Taraba APC. So, please remind the people that make these appointments.

    “We have to take care of our people. Otherwise, we will not know our faith when the next election comes. Even in the federal government projects, they do not involve us. it was only yesterday that I met the state party leader and was told that there is a federal government project going on and they are not involved. It is not that they don’t have qualified persons to handle those projects.

    “Even the struggle to live right, according to the dictates of religion is because of the expectation of Heaven which is the reward. Taraba state APC should be remembered. This is our plea. If projects are sent to the state which is controlled by the PDP, our people should not be left hanging.

    “They are saying that this is a federal government thing which we worked for, but are not gaining anything from it,” she said.