Tag: Taraba

  • Easy ride for Alhassan in Taraba?

    Easy ride for Alhassan in Taraba?

    The crisis within the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the North East state of Taraba gives the opposition All Progressives Congress (APC) a good chance of winning next year’s governorship election in the state. While aspirants within the ruling party are busy fighting one another, the APC has been consolidating its preparations towards the contest.

    Within the APC, there is no contest as such, as Senator Aisha Alhassan, is fast emerging as the consensus candidate of the party for the governorship position.

    Observers say there are only three genuine governorship aspirants in the state this time around; with two of them coming from the ruling PDP and the third one being the sole contender from the APC, Alhassan.

    Though the PDP has been governing the state since the return to civilian rule in 1999, the APC has the upper hand this time around, in the sense that it is facing the governorship contest as a united entity. While the APC, which has settled for Senator Alhassan as its candidate is already strategising on how to take over the state, the PDP on the other hand is still enmeshed in internal crisis over who succeeds the ailing Governor Danbaba Suntai.

    Alhassan made a foray into the political scene in 2011, when she contested for the Senate. She floored two political heavyweights in the person of former Governor Jolly Nyame and the then sitting Senator, Anthony Manzo, to clinch the seat.

    Alhasssan is an amazon of sorts and a lady of many firsts. For example, she was the first female to occupy the Office of Attorney-General and Commissioner for Justice of Taraba State. She is also the first female politician to contest and beat two men in an election for the senatorial seat, which she now occupies. Now, she is on the verge of becoming the first female to vie for the office of the governor of the state. Given what she has done in the last three and half years to uplift the living conditions of her constituents, she may be on the threshold of making history once again.

    Alhassan comes from a family with a sound political background and appear to enjoy the support of the womenfolk and the youths. Her father was elected into the Federal House of Representatives in 1959 under the defunct Northern Peoples Congress (NPC).

    There are rumours flying around in Jalingo, the state capital, that the acting Governor Alhaji Sani Danladi has entered into an agreement with the Alhassan camp to ensure that the opposition party takes over the state. But, Danladi has described the allegation as untrue. He also said he has no plans to dump the ruling PDP to run for the governorship of the state under the APC.

  • Taraba awaits  judgments on  constitutional  crisis

    Taraba awaits judgments on constitutional crisis

    Two law suits may shape the fierce succession battle in Taraba State. Fanen Ihyongo, Senior Correspondent, who has been following the proceedings, examines the issues involved.

    WHAT a witty world of paradoxes! Governor Danbaba Danfulani Suntai and his former deputy, Sani Abubakar Danladi, who together held Taraba State in their palms for over six years, are now at the mercy of the law to return to power. They are in separate legal battles against the Taraba State House of Assembly, although logically against Acting Governor Garba Umar who has effectively consolidated his hold on power since Suntai crashed with a plane on October 25, 2012. Besides the allegation that Umar had bribed the lawmakers to transmit power to him to continue to act, he is reportedly financing the lawyers defending the Speaker and the Assembly in all the suits. A win for the state Assembly means a win for the acting governor.

    In the first suit, Danladi, who was impeached by the state Assembly at the prompting of Suntai, is asking the Supreme Court to reverse his impeachment. The High Court in Jalingo the Taraba State capital and the Court of Appeal in Yola the Adamawa State capital had affirmed the impeachment. But his lawyer, Kanu Agabi, SAN, who proceeded to the Supreme Court, is arguing that the House of Assembly did not follow the due process in removing him.

    The former deputy governor has faulted the seven-man panel set up by the Chief Judge, Josephine Tuktur, to investigate the allegation of “gross misconduct” against him. Apart from these arguments, Danladi is faulting the lawmakers for sitting and impeaching him when the late Isiaku Audu, who represented Kurmi Constituency, died and was yet to be replaced via a bye-election.

    Danladi was impeached on October 4, 2012 when Istifanus Haruna Gbana was the Speaker. The impeachment brought on board Garba Umar as the deputy governor. Danladi then sued Suntai, Gbana and other members of the Assembly for “illegitimately” impeaching him. Then, Gbana and former Attorney-General and Commissioner of Justice, Gebon Kataps were asking the court to reject Danladi’s prayers, to protect Garba Umar.

    The situation is now different. Umar has reportedly sponsored the removal of Gbana as the Speaker and Kataps also forced out of office when Suntai’s return plunged the state into constitutional crisis. Yusuf Ali, SAN, who was the defense counsel for Gbana, is now the defense counsel to the House against Suntai.

    Danladi is said to have lost so much to the impeachment. One of his greatest damages is perhaps the national honour he was deprived of. Suntai, Senator Emmanuel Bwacha and Danladi were among the 149 Nigerians listed for the 2012 national honours. But while Suntai and Bwacha were decorated with the Commander of the Order of the Niger (CON), Danladi, who was to be given the Officer of the Order of the Federal Republic (OFR), had his name which appeared as number 51 on the list, skipped by President Goodluck Jonathan.

    In the second suit, ailing Governor Suntai has approached the court to interpret section 190(2), with regards to the letter he transmitted to the House of Assembly on August 26 last year of his readiness to resume duty, which was turned down by lawmakers who asked his deputy to run the state as acting governor.

    Suntai’s lead counsel, Alex Izinyon (SAN) and Elijah Nyaro Esq, want the court to determine whether the Speaker and the House of Assembly erred in the interpretation of section 190(2) which has not attracted any judicial interpretation before now. Suntai is therefore, praying the court to declare that the letter he transmitted to the House is “absolute, mandatory obeisant, immutable and cannot be debated or contradicted by any means whatsoever as the first and second defendants (Speaker and Assembly) lack any discretion in the circumstance and that upon transmission of the said letter, he has automatically assumed his powers and responsibilities as governor of Taraba State”.

    Adebayo Oba Adelodun (SAN) and Yusuf Ali (SAN) are defending the Assembly while Micah Musa Esq and Yusufu Akirikwen are counsels to the Speaker. The defending lawyers, working as a team, have alleged that their clients (lawmakers) had seen the plaintiff (Suntai) and he was not fit to sign and author the letter transmitted to the House of Assembly. But Suntai’s lawyers submitted that the lawmakers are not soothsayers or medical examiners that can look at someone and say he is not fit to sign his signature.

    The ailing governor had on August 25 last year returned from his medical trip abroad after treatments from Germany and the United States but was proclaimed as unfit to resume work as the helmsman. His deputy also refused to revert back to his constitutional position as a deputy. Umar has always insisted that he will only revert back to the position of deputy governor when the House of Assembly, which made him the acting governor, communicates to him the change in status.

    Suntai is now only a ceremonial head and Umar is no longer ready to play the second fiddle. 16 of the 24-member House, led by Speaker Josiah Sabo Kente, are backing him. Penultimate Wednesday, the G-16 or pro-UTC, as they are called, passed a vote of confidence on the acting governor, saying he is doing well.

    The 16 lawmakers, led by the late Speaker Haruna Tsokwa, who rejected Suntai’s letter of his intention to resume office had stated that Suntai was so sick that they would not allow him to toy with the destiny of the state. Ironically, Tsokwa later slumped and died of heart ailment.

    The governor, who has refused to make his medical records public, purportedly dissolved the cabinet and appointed a new Secretary to the State Government (SSG) and Chief of Staff. Umar cried foul, saying a cabal was attempting to hijack the state.

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) intervened through a fact-finding committee led by Senator Hope Uzodinma. The committee, with majority of the lawmakers, asked Umar to continue to steer the affairs of the state as acting governor. The Majority Leader, Joseph Albasu, and seven pro-Suntai lawmakers rejected the decision on grounds that the Uzodinma Committee lacked the constitutional power to do so. The G-8, also known as pro-Suntai, insisted that the letter transmitted by the governor was not subject to debate by the House. The eight members have been in support of the suit against the decision of their 16 colleagues.

    The two parties had explored several amicable ways of resolving the matter out of court but it was as futile as fetching water in a basket. The eight lawmakers, like most of the governor’s supporters, have continued to challenge the legitimacy of transferring power to Umar to act, despite Suntai’s presence. They have pointed out that “morally,” Suntai must not be 100 percent strong before he resumes. They have argued that the Nigerian constitution does not condone a “strange contraption” where the governor is around and his deputy is referred to as acting governor.

    Umar has often pledged his loyalty to his ailing boss, saying he would not undermine his authority. But the governor’s associates have accused him of disloyalty and backstabbing, having fired Suntai’s loyalists from office, embraced Suntai’s foes and made unsuccessful moves to remove the governor. Thus, the governor’s allies have continued to block Umar from seeing his ailing boss when he returned recently from another medical treatment from the United Kingdom.

    Speaker Josiah Sabo Kente, who has pitched tent with Umar, has carried out several legislative and over-sight functions that allegedly favoured  Umar. He screened a list of commissioner-nominees submitted by the acting governor, despite a court’s injunction. The bailiff, who brought the notice, was beaten by the police. In recent times, the acting governor was accused of plotting to remove Suntai by instigating the setting up of a medical panel to investigate his medical condition, but the court presided by Justice Silas Haruna restrained him and the Speaker to desist from taking any action with respect to the office of the governor.

    The suits by Suntai and his former deputy are generating hot debate and tension. The storm is all about power shift and the succession battle. The acting governor, who is from the north, is scheming to succeed Suntai in the coming polls. He has picked the PDP nomination form. The southern zone, where power is expected to rotate to, has vowed to stop him. They prefer Suntai to take over so that he could assist them realise their ambition. Suntai had said the north and central zones have ruled the 23-year old state for 18 years, so the fairest thing to do is to zone the slot to the south.

    Danladi’s case came out on October 16 but was adjourned to November 21 by Justice Walter Onnoghene. If the verdict of the Supreme Court favours Danladi, Umar will cease to be the acting governor and deputy governor. Danladi will return as the deputy governor. Majority of those who instigated his impeachment, including Suntai and former Speaker Istifanus Gbana, are now supporting him.

    But no one can tell what the former deputy would do should he return to office. Will his return foster reconciliation or provide an opportunity to take his pound of flesh from his former foes turned friends? Umar is not his friend either. If Suntai gets Judgment, Umar will no longer be in charge as he would reverse to his position of deputy. If the judgments favour the House of Assembly, Umar would assume more powers to his political advantage.

    So, as it stands, informed observers agree that the much-awaited court judgments now hold the key that would ultimately resolve the Taraba constitutional crisis and help shape the governorship race in 2015.

  • 25 killed by ‘Fulani’ in Taraba

    •’Security operatives ignored us’
    •Police: we’re on ground

    Twenty five people were yesterday killed by suspected Fulani men in Sondi, Wukari Local Government Area of Taraba State.

    But the police said they recovered seven bodies.

    It was learnt that the hoodlums attacked Sondi in the morning as residents were preparing for church, setting homes on fire.

    National President of the Nigeria Association of Wapan Students (NAWAS) Tsokwa Addanti Ajidiku said the attackers, dressed in military camouflage, invaded the village around 8am

    Ajidiku blamed the attack on the “lukewarm attitude of security operatives”, who he alleged had prior knowledge of the invasion but failed to act.

    He said: “We are not happy with the security operatives because they were aware that these attackers would invade the village today. The attackers wrote us and we informed them, but they didn’t prevent the attack.”

    Ajidiku said House of Assembly Speaker Josiah Kente, who is one of the members representing the area, had not done enough to end the crisis.

    Police Commissioner Ademola Omole said: “The attackers are Fulani men. About seven people are feared dead and some persons sustained various degrees of injuries. We are fully on ground now. I have sent troops to the area and peace has returned.”

    A resident, who did not want to be named, said: “Why is it that the attacks are targeted at Southern Taraba? Why are the attacks targeted at Christians? Why are the attacks directed at Jukun and Tiv residents?”

    Yesterday’s attack came a few days after the Speaker and majority of the lawmakers passed a vote of confidence in Acting Governor Garba Umar for, among other things, restoring peace to the state.

  • Fulani arsonists kill 25 in Taraba

    Fulani arsonists have allegedly attacked Sondi village in Wukari local government area of Taraba state killing twenty five people. 

     
    Police said they have recovered seven bodies.The attack took place Sunday morning when residents were preparing for church service. Property worth millions of naira were destroyed.

    National President of the Nigeria Association of Wapan Students (NAWAS), Tsokwa Addanti Ajidiku said that the attackers stormed the village at about 8a.m.

     
    “The attackers were dressed in military camouflage,” he said.Ajidiku blamed the attack and killings on the “lukewarm attitude of security operatives”

    whom he said, had knowledge of the invasion but failed to take a proactive measure.

     
    “We are not happy with the security operatives because they were aware that these attackers would invade the village today.
     
    “The attackers wrote us and we informed them, but they couldn’t prevent the attack.”
     
    State Commissioner of Police, Ademola Omole, said “the attackers are Fulani men.”
     
    He said: “About seven people were feared dead and some numbers of persons sustained various degrees of injuries. 

    “We are fully on ground now. I have sent troops to the area and peace has returned.”

    A resident said “the state government has been behind the attacks and killings. Why is it that the attacks are targeted in southern Taraba? Why are the attacks targeted at Christians? Why are the attacks directed at Jukun and Tiv residents?”
    Ajidiku said the Speaker of the State House of Assembly Josiah Sabo Kente who is one of the members representing the area has not done enough to end the crisis.


    Sunday’s attack came few days after the Speaker and majority of the lawmakers passed a vote of confidence on Acting Governor Garba Umar for, among other things, restoring peace in the state.
  • 18 hours in Taraba’s   diamond fields

    18 hours in Taraba’s diamond fields

    All roads now lead to the newly found diamond village on the Mambilla Plateau of Taraba State, where Nigerians across the country and other foreigners are flocking in search of hard currency. FANEN IHYONGO, Senior Correspondent tells the sweet and bitter story of how people make ‘quick money’ in the area now popularly referred to as the ‘Blue Village.’

    The story sounds unconvincing. A jungle turned into a town overnight. A wilderness springing up in barely nine months to become a densely populated settlement with an average population of over 200,000 persons. That is the true story of Mayo-Sina, a mineral rich area on the Mambilla Plateau in Nguroje, Sardauna local government area of Taraba State.

    Mayo-Sina is now popularly referred to as ‘The Blue Village.’ Just ask anyone within its environs that you want to locate Blue and he will show you the route.

    Over 2000 years ago, the area had been a quiet vast land where the mountain people graze their livestock. No one had ever thought of the area as a dwelling place, what more, becoming the fastest growing settlement in the country and perhaps the world. Today, the rich mineral deposits of the area have changed its story. “Blue diamond” and other precious stones in Mayo-Sina have brought all the people that are now ‘industrialising’ the area.

    Booming economy, expanding growth

    The people – miners and buyers, have come from across Nigeria and the neighbouring West African countries. In the Blue, you will find, for instance, a Yoruba who has come from Ibadan or Lagos, an Igbo from Anambra or Enugu and a Hausa from Kaduna or Sokoto. You will also find many who are indigenes of Taraba: Kaka, Mambilla, Jukun, Ichen, Chamba, Tiv, Kona, Fulani, Kuteb, Mumuye, Panso and Jenjo to mention only a few. There are also miners and dealers who have come from Niger, Cameroun, Ghana, Chad, Ivory Coast Togo, Benin Republic and Senegal.

    What attracts the most attention in the Blue Village is not even the mining sites but the settlement. You will marvel at how the place was swiftly built up, and how the dwelling structures have continued to expand at a geometric pace. One observer said the area has grown faster than Nigeria’s federal capital territory Abuja and may perhaps go down in history as the fastest growing settlement in the world.

    Within the few months of its formation in January this year, Mayo-Sina is already exhibiting the features of a typical urban settlement, in terms of pattern, population, social and political characteristics. Several associations and trade unions have been formed. The features of societal social stratification -the distinction between the upper and lower class of the inhabitants are starkly visible in the types of buildings they erect. You can see the difference between the patriarch and the commoner, the rich and the poor etc. The settlement agglomeration -slums and sewage disposing systems have been formed. Many churches and mosques have been built. For example, the Roman Catholic Church and Deeper Life have opened their branches there after the Christian Association of Nigerian (CAN) Secretariat had been opened. Many families who are said to have permanently relocated to the area are thinking of establishing a school in the area for their children to attend. The people are also yearning for a bank to open a branch there for safe keeping of cash.

    There are three commercial viewing centres where people watch movies and the local and European premier league matches such as La Liga, Seria A, Bundesliga and the English Premier League (EPL) etc. Clubbing joints have been opened and commercial sex workers are not left out. They have reportedly secured a place with a plan to build a brothel where they can ply their trade freely. Food restaurants, bars, boutiques, provisions, drugs (both native and orthodox) cosmetics and electronic shops have been opened. Small machines like motorbikes and generators are also sold.

    GSM centres where people buy and repair mobile phones, charge their phone batteries and make commercial calls have been opened. A nearby knoll provides ‘natural’ network and the people are also planning of inviting the GSM network service providers (MTN, Glo and Airtel) to come and launch their masts in the area.

    At night, the Blue village glows like a mega metropolis on a hill or a galaxy of celestial bodies viewed from a telescope. Its gleaming and illumination are in the fact that it is a town built in the jungle. The place bubbles till midnight but everyone except their security operatives must close by 9:00p.m. You can club till dawn but the law is that you stay indoors. The Blue has a tight security, made up of a joint army, police and vigilante group. Residents said there has not been any case of armed robbery since the place was found. “Some houses are made of grasses or polythene, but there has not been any case of burglary,” one miner told The Nation.

    The multiplier effect of the factors of industrialisation is at play. Different traders have flocked to the area with their services and commodities. You will find zinc, wood planks, cement and other building materials to erect your shelter. There are even car dealers for anyone who hits the jackpot and wants to buy a car on the spot.

    A huge army of persons -men, women and children have flocked the Blue village, and many more are immigrating there on a daily basis. The demographic pull factor there is diamond, which is easily turned into hard currency. Before the Blue Village was discovered, a lot of mineral deposits had been left untapped on the Mambilla Plateau for centuries.

    “We are all here to find diamond. The diamond is money. It has brought every person you see here. The town you are seeing grew because of the search for Blue,” said Mrs. Helen Joseph, a Kaka indigene from Baruwa, Gashaka local government area of Taraba State. Mrs. Joseph, 36, has spent only two weeks in Mayo-Sina, but she said she is making it. “I realised N10,000 the first day I arrived here,” she told The Nation. She said she heard the news from neighbours and decided to come and witness what was happening in the area. But since coming, she said she is no longer thinking of leaving.

    Michael Akura, 47, is Tiv from Benue State. He said he also heard the interesting gist about the place and decided to go there. Akura who has completed a month in the Blue Village described the local mining business as lucrative.

    Hamidu Umar, 42, is a local miner from Sokoto. He was seen at the Blue Vllage with his son and three of his brothers searching for precious stones. He said he has been in the business for 18 years, from which he takes care of his wife and other family members. He said he has got more than N5 million since he arrived the Blue village in March.

    Money spinners

    The Nation also spoke to the buyers who are referred to as “dealers.” There are two types of dealers. There are middlemen or agents who buy directly from the miners -referred to as labourers. The middlemen sell to the main dealers who have come from different parts of the continent.

    Hamasumo Salihu, 45, is another veteran dealer in local mining. He said for the past 15 years he has not done any other business than mining. “This is what I have been doing as a source of living for the past 15 years,” he said.  He said he had ventured into local mining just to keep body and soul together. But along the line his luck shone and he achieved a lot from the business. Sitting next to Salihu were two other dealers: Mustapha Aliyu, 28, and Ismaila Gidado, 25. Aliyu and Gidado came into the diamond field one day in July and since then have become partners in the business of buying and reselling precious stones.

    The cost of diamond depends on its quality. Quality here is determined by its purity, size and colour. The blue diamond, for instance, is more expensive than the white or green diamond. One gram of pure blue can cost from N200, 000 to N1million, depending on its quality and the bargaining forces and type of dealer involved. Abdulkadri Ibrahim, 33, who has 14 year experience in the business said a single stone costs more than tiny diamonds assembled together, even if they weigh the same grams. The market theory of demand and supply also works here. So the cost of diamond in Mayo-Sina also depends on bargaining and purchasing powers as well as the eagerness of the labourer to sell his commodity. One labourer had sold a diamond weighing 59 grams to an agent for N8 million who later resold it for N20 million. The highest sale has been N32 million by a young man of less than 20 years. Eye-witnesses said the buyer had even enticed him with a Kia Jeep gift before buying the commodity for N32 million. Many others have also made between N500,000 and N2 million.  Another woman sold tiny diamonds weighing 89.3 grams for N200,000.

    Looking at the site, you will think at least 20 bulldozers are at work. No, the miners are using blunt implements such as hoe, digger and bare hands to dig the earth in search of the precious stones. The cold weather provides a clement atmosphere for miners to work throughout the day.

    Many of the miners and dealers had gone for Sallah break when The Nation Correspondent visited the site last week. Those who have become residents of Mayo-Sina said the place is usually so crowded that people walk sideways. “If you had come here before Sallah, and you miss a partner two steps behind you, he would not be able to locate you,” one resident said.

    Part of the population, sources said, come from other neighbouring areas like Gembu and Nguroje to work and go home every day, while others have become permanent residents in Mayo-Sina. The place has become a tourist destination where other people go to find out what is going on there.

    Speaking to The Nation, the people of Mayo-Sina have called on the attention of the state and federal government to come to their aid, by providing them with mineral deposits exploration and mining devices. They want clinics, schools and other basic social amenities.

     

     

  • Mambilla honour for Taraba Acting Governor

    The Acting Governor of Taraba State, Alhaji Garba Umar, has been described as not just a political leader but also one of the greatest sons of the Mambilla ethnic group. And what is greatness if it is not recognised by the anonymous many. The aftermath of recognising him as one of their greatest sons was the conferment on him of the most prestigious chieftaincy title in Mambilla Plateau. He is now the “Sardauna Mambilla.”

    For him, the day will ever remain memorable, as the people of Mambilla honoured him at a colourful and carnival-like ceremony. In Umar, the people saw hard work, loyalty and humility.

    Preparations for the conferment of the title on him took a week. But when the day finally came, the crowd that attended the event was more than what the organisers had bargained for.

    There were various cultural displays to thrill the guests who came from different states across the country. There were also guests from the neighbouring Cameroun Republic.  The people said the title was their traditional way of appreciating the immense contributions of Umar  to the development of the Mambilla ethnic group in particular and the state in general.

    Some of the personalities that graced the occasion included Gombe State Governor Ibrahim Dankwambo; his Bauchi counterpart, Isa Yuguda; Minister of State for Niger Delta Mr. Darius Ishaku and the Deputy Governor of Katsina State.

    Others were the Premier of Adamawa, Dr. Barkindo Aliyu Mustapha; Emir of Gombe Alhaji Abubakar Usman Abubakar; the Chief of Kaltungo, Mr. Saleh Mohammed. as well as other Emirs and chiefs in the state.

    “This is a platform for uniting the people of Taraba State and Nigeria,” one observer said.

    The revered Chief of Mambilla, Dr.  Shehu Audu Baju II performed the conferment at the Muhammadu Mansur Stadium in Gembu in Sardauna Local Government Area.

    The chief said the event was in appreciation of the Acting Governor’s “immense contributions to the development of the Mambilla Plateau and Taraba State.”

    The monarch noted that the Acting Governor played a pivotal role in settling the chieftaincy crisis which had rocked the people of Mambilla for 12 years.

    “He (Umar) used his wisdom to reconcile the hitherto warring ruling houses within the few months of his assumption of office,” he said.

    Baju added that the Acting Governor should see the title -which is highest in the land, as a challenge to do more for the development of not only Mambilla Plateau, but also the entire state.

    The Sardaunan Mambilla said he has been honoured in the past with several traditional titles and awards, but the recognition by the Mambilla people was “very special and dear” to him.

    Umar said the honour was special because of its historic attachment to the shining star of Northern Nigeria, the late Sardauna of Sokoto Sir Ahmadu Bello.

    “I feel humbled to be honoured by the people of Mambilla. As I took time to reflect on the significance of this event, I have come to the conclusion that, for whatever reasons, I have been chosen to serve as the Sardaunan Mambilla. What I will not shy away from is the fact that I have, again, been called upon to do more.

    “I assure the royal fathers and everyone present that I will do my best to justify the confidence reposed in me,” he said.

    The Emir of Muri, Abbas Tafida praised the people of Mambilla Plateau for “building a bridge of peace,” by conferring on the Acting Governor the title of Sardaunan Mambilla, as Umar hails from Karim-Lamido Local Government Area of the state.

    Tafida sued for unity among the various ethnic and religious groups in Taraba State to enable the state to develop. He added that the people would have nowhere to go if Taraba is destroyed.

    He said: “Developing Mambilla Plateau must be a priority of the government of Taraba State, because it will mean developing the people of the area by encouraging their education for the exploitation of the abundant potential that abounds there.

    “The state government should establish a potato processing plant to tap the potential as well as set up special insemination units on the Mambilla Plateau to produce better cows with better value.

    “The government should acquire and provide grass seeds which could be grown on the Plateau to improve the forests for both domestic and international consumptions; for the people and cattle.”

  • ‘PDP will lose Taraba, if Umar gets ticket’

    ‘PDP will lose Taraba, if Umar gets ticket’

    Former Secretary to the Taraba State Government (SSG) Ambassador Emmanuel Njiwah, in this interview, says the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) will not win the governorship election, if Acting Governor Garba becomes the flag bearer for next year’s poll. Senior Correspondent FANEN IHYONGO met him in Jalingo, the state capital.

    Why were you sacked from the Taraba State Executive Council by Acting Governor Garba Umar?

    You have asked me as a person, but I will speak on behalf of the team that was sacked by the deputy governor. First and foremost, Garba Umar became the deputy governor by appointment; he did not contest the election with Governor Danbaba Suntai. He only came onboard when our former deputy governor, Sani Abubakar Danladi, was impeached by the  House of Assembly. Umar had spent barely three weeks when Suntai had a plane crash with his security aides. The deputy governor did not know anything about governance. He was in the private sector, but he had to take over the mantle of leadership as the acting governor, following the governor’s mishap. But, before the crash, Suntai had set up committees for disbursing the flood funds for the purchase of relief materials for those who were affected by the flood disaster in 2012. The main committee was chaired by the deputy governor, with some of us as members, including the Chief of Staff, the former Head of Service and Commissioners for Justice, Environment, Finance, Health and Information. Most of the job had been done before the governor had the crash. There were two main committees in charge of purchases. The materials bought were determined by the main committee through the logistics committee, which was to do market survey and identify the quantity, quality and price of the items to be purchased. No member of the main committee was involved in purchases, except the wife of the Chief of Staff, now the SSG, who got the contract to purchase the items. So, I don’t know the money Umar said we tampered with. The reports of the two committees are there. There is no missing fund in the report. There is nobody who said he was not giving some money to purchase items. I don’t know how I, as the SSG, who was in the main committee, tampered with the funds. Even the commissioners who were involved in the purchases returned more than nine million naira as discount  from the purchases.

    But, there was a report...

    When the report was submitted, it was supposed to be scrutinised by the executive. But, the deputy governor, who was now in acting capacity, was finding a way to do away with some of us. He was trying without success to lobby some of us to assist him to take over as the substantive governor. He wanted me, particularly, to prepare a memo stating that Suntai was incapacitated so that his deputy can assume his office. He promised to make me the deputy governor, with the sum of N100 million, lobbied through a permanent secretary and two other commissioners, which I will only mention their names, if he (Umar) denies this. This was what happened. So, he decided to link the commissioners who were very loyal to Suntai and I, who refused to write the memo, with the flood funds so as to remove us from office. No one tampered with the flood funds. It was what he planned and executed. The report is there and it was even published in one of the newspapers in the state for the public to see. So, I don’t know how he got us indicted. The truth is that nobody tampered with the flood disaster money. Few minutes before he sacked us, Umar asked his Muslim brother; the former commissioner of health; to resign his appointment. The former Commissioner for Information was not sacked, but he voluntarily left the government when Umar was disloyal to the governor. The truth is that Governor Suntai had warned that nobody should take even transport fare from the funds  and we all complied. So, the deputy governor should explain his source and  how we tampered with the flood funds.

    What did you do when you were sacked?

    We went to court within the first three days, because we knew we were wrongly sacked. We went to court in July last year. The judgment was to be passed on May 11, but the court is yet to rule on the case. I wish to say somebody somewhere is tampering with justice in the state, but I don’t want to talk about the matter, since it is already in the court of law. The deputy governor said he booted us from office because, according to him, we are corrupt. We said we are innocent. We went to court, but the deputy governor is pre-empting the judgment by saying we are corrupt. I don’t know where he got his own judgment or whether he has taken over the duties of the court.

    How much did the committees spend?

    N100 million was set aside to rehabilitate the infrastructure that was affected by the flood. These included infrastructure for schools, dispensaries, mosques, churches and culverts. So, apart from some bank charges, about two hundred million naira was disbursed.

    What happened to the N100 million, at the time you were sacked?

    It was intact in the state’s treasury. All the funds disbursed were from the treasury and the Commissioner for Finance submitted a letter informing us that the N100 million was still intact.

    Umar has always said his relationship with his boss is still very cordial and that he is taking care of the governor and his family. Do you have a different view?

    There is no better word to describe the kind of relationship he presently has with the governor. It is not cordial in any way. Immediately the governor had the plane crash, Umar started plotting on how he could take over. Anybody who has a cordial relationwith his boss would not do that. He also removed all the appointees of the governor to clear the way for him to become the substantive governor. Is that cordiality? He said he is taking care of the governor. It is not true. Suntai is the executive governor of the state and he is entitled to be taken care of by the government and not by Garba Umar. Umar does not have the resources to take care of Suntai. Before his appointment as the deputy governor, Umar was not a rich man. All we knew about him was that he was a trader, selling nuvan (mosquito insecticides) in Gombe State. So, Umar does not have the capacity to take care of Suntai in any regard. It is the government that is supposed to take care of the governor, but the government being run by Umar is not doing that.

    How has the state fared under Umar?

    If there is any time in the life of Taraba State that there was the worst administration, Umar’s time is worse than that worst. Somehow, I have been in the government of Taraba State at various times, since its creation. I was a director in the ministry, commissioner, board chairman and SSG. So, I know that no government, military and civilian, has been as bad as the one steered by Umar. He has not developed anything in the state. All the projects started by Suntai have stopped. The state university, which Suntai established for the education of our children, is not being funded. When I was there, I had to persuade him to fund the university, but he would not. The other time the university wanted to embark on strike, but for the intervention of a third fund and other federal government agencies in the tertiary institutions, the  university would have been closed down. It is  not being funded by the deputy governor, who has declared himself as the acting governor. Taraba State is in its worst period. Under Suntai, even when all the Northeastern states had some crises, Taraba never experienced any. The governor was proactive and he knew how to arrest the crisis and crackdown on suspected insurgents. There is insecurity. As the acting governor, he is the chief security officer. As the chief security officer, he should be able to know where the roof is leaking to mend it. But, he is not doing that. He seems to be taking side. And the reason is simply because he is hell-bent to take over Taraba. So, he cannot hesitate to do anything that can pave the way for him to succeed.

    The acting governor claimed that he has done well. If the people asks him to contest, he said he will contest…

    I don’t know that kind of clarion call. Honestly, the greatest mistake Suntai has made in his life was picking Umar as his deputy. There can be no mistake worse than this. Suntai had relied solely on elders to pick someone for him from the Northern zone. The governor did not know this man. If he had known, he wouldn’t have picked him. The College of Agriculture Governing Board had paid him a courtesy call. The members advanced some demands. I was there as the SSG. He told them, yes, I would do these things; no I would not do those ones. At the end, I summed up the things he said he was going to do and those he turned down. I prepared a memo in that regard for his consideration and approval. But, upon giving him the memo, he asked me what is this SSG? I told him these are the things you approved for the college. He said no, I didn’t mean what I said; it was only a political talk. I asked what do you mean Your Excellency?  I told him he is acting governor, so whatever he promises the people or public institutions, he has to fulfill it and that’s how the government works. Then, I asked him why he gave them fake promise. May be, that is why he is angry at me. I doubt if he has granted those requests.

    Was there any agreement between Umar and Suntai that Umar would not run for office? If there is, was the agreement written or oral?

    On several occasions, Governor Suntai emphasised to him (Umar) that I have brought you to complete my tenure with me. Under no account should you nurse any form of ambition to contest, because the Northern and Central zones have produced governors. So, in 2015, we shall relinquish power to the Southern zone, and the reason why I appointed you as my deputy is because of your age; so that you would not have any ambition to take over. So,  please abide by this and, if at the end of our tenure, you don’t see me advancing you, don’t be annoyed because we must give the governorship slot to where it belongs for justice and equity. Umar said no, I am very okay sir; I am not going to contest. But now, he has forgotten.

     

  • ‘PDP will lose Taraba, if Umar gets ticket’

    ‘PDP will lose Taraba, if Umar gets ticket’

    Former Secretary to the State Government (SSG) of Taraba, Ambassador Emmanuel Njiwah, in this interview, warns the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) of ceding the governorship ticket to Acting Governor Garba Umar, as that will make the ruling party lose to the opposition in Taraba. He also speaks on why he and other commissioners were sacked by Umar. Senior Correspondent FANEN IHYONGO was there. Excerpt:

    The Acting Governor of Taraba State, Garba Umar, in a recent interview with Thisday, accused you and other former commissioners of “tampering” with N400 million flood mitigating grant, which is why he booted you out of office. May we hear from you why you were sacked?

    You have asked me as a person but I will speak on behalf of the team that was sacked by the deputy governor. First and foremost, Garba Umar became the deputy governor by appointment; he did not contest the election with Governor Danbaba Suntai. He only came onboard when our former Deputy Governor, Sani Abubakar Danladi was impeached by the State House of Assembly. Umar had spent barely three weeks when Suntai had a plane crash with his security aides. The deputy governor had not known anything about governance. All along he had been in the private sector, but he had to take over the mantle of leadership as acting governor, following the governor’s mishap. But before the crash, Suntai had set up committees in charge of disbursing the flood funds for the purchase of relief materials for those who were affected by the flood disaster in the state in 2012. The main committee was chaired by the deputy governor, with some of us as members, including the Chief of Staff, the then Head of Service and commissioners of Justice, Environment, Finance, Health and Information. Most of the job was done before the governor had the crash. There were two main committees in charge of purchases. The materials bought were determined by the main committee, through the logistics committee which was to do market survey and identify the quantity, quality and price of each of the items to be purchased. No member of the main committee was involved in purchases, except the wife of the Chief of Staff –now SSG, who got the contract to purchase the items. So, I don’t know the money Umar keeps saying we tampered with. The reports of the two committees are there. There is no missing fund in the report. There is nobody who said he was not giving some money meant to purchase an item. I don’t know how I, as the SSG who was in the main committee tampered with the funds. Even the commissioners who were involved in the purchases returned the sum of more than nine million naira as discount gotten from the purchases. When the report was submitted, it was supposed to be scrutinised by the executive. But meanwhile, the deputy governor who was now in acting capacity was finding a way to do away with some of us. He was trying without success to lobby through some of us to take over as substantive governor. He wanted me, particularly, to prepare a memo stating that Suntai was incapacitated so his deputy should assume his office. He promised to make me the deputy governor, with the sum of N100 million, lobbied through a permanent secretary and two other commissioners, which I will only mention their names if he (Umar) denies this. This was what happened. So, he decided to attach the commissioners who were very loyal to Suntai and I who refused to write the memo, to the flood funds so as to remove us from office. No one tampered with the flood funds. It was what he planned and executed. The report is there and was even published in one of the newspapers in the state for the public to see. So, I don’t know how he got us indicted. The truth is that nobody tampered with the flood disaster money. Few minutes before he sacked us, Umar asked his Muslim brother –the former commissioner of health to resign his appointment. The former commissioner of Information was not sacked, but he voluntarily left government when Umar became disloyal to the governor. The truth is that Governor Suntai had warned that nobody should take even transport fare from the funds which we all complied. So, the deputy governor should explain his source, how we tampered with the flood funds.

    What did you do when you were sacked?

    We went to court within the first three days, because we knew we were wrongly sacked. We went to court since July last year. The judgment was to be passed on May 11 this year but the court is yet to rule on the case. I wish to say somebody somewhere is tampering with justice in the state, but I don’t want to talk about the matter since it is already in the court of law. The deputy governor said he booted us from office because, according to him, we are corrupt. We said we are innocent. We went to court, but the deputy governor is preempting judgment by still saying we are corrupt. I don’t know where he got his own judgment or whether he has taken over the duties of the court.

    How much did the committees spend in total?

    N100 million was set aside to rehabilitate the infrastructure that was affected by the flood. This included infrastructure from schools, dispensaries, mosques, churches and culverts. So, apart from some bank charges, about two hundred and something million naira was disbursed.

    What happened to the N100 million, at the time you were sacked?

    It was intact in the state’s treasury. All the funds disbursed were from the treasury and the commissioner of Finance submitted a letter informing us that the N100 million was still intact.

    Umar has always said his relationship with his boss is still very cordial. That he is taking care of the governor and his family. Do you have a different view?

    There is no better word to describe the kind of relationship he presently has with the governor. They are not cordial in any way. Immediately the governor had the plane crash, Umar started plotting on how he could take over. Anybody who is cordial with his boss would not do that. He also moved to remove all the appointees of the governor in order to clear the way for him to become the substantive governor. Is that cordiality? He said he is taking care of the governor. It is not true. Suntai is the executive governor of the state and he is entitled to be taken care of by the government and not by Garba Umar. Umar does not have the resources to take care of Suntai. Before his appointment as deputy governor, Umar had not up to N20 thousand in all his accounts. All we knew about him was that he was a trader, selling nuvan (mosquito insecticides) in Gombe state. So, Umar does not have the capacity to take care of Suntai in any regard. It is the government that is supposed to take care of the governor but the government being run by Umar is not doing that.

    In the same interview, Umar claimed Taraba people are having the best governance now. Don’t you think he has done beyond criticising him, primarily in the area of infrastructural development?

    If there is any time in the life of Taraba state that there was the worst administration, Umar’s time is worse than that worst. Somehow, I have been in the government of Taraba state in different phases, since its creation. I was a director in the ministry, commissioner, board chairman and SSG. So, I know that no government –both military and civilian, has been as bad as the one steered by Umar. He has not developed anything in the state. All the projects started by Suntai have stopped. The state university which Suntai established for the education of our children is not being funded. When I was there, I had to persuade him to fund the university but he would not. The other time the university wanted to embark on strike action, but for the intervention of a third fund and other federal government agencies in the tertiary institutions, the state university would have been closed down. It is terribly not being funded by the deputy governor who has declared himself as acting governor. Taraba state is in its worst period. Under Suntai, even when all the north-eastern states had some crises, Taraba never experienced any. The governor was proactive and knew how timely to arrest such crisis and to crackdown on suspected insurgents. But this man is rather aiding the insurgents by purchasing arms for them. And I am not the one saying it, but the people who know it are reliably saying it and are ready to testify. This is because, as governor in acting capacity, he is the chief security officer of the state. And as chief security officer, he should be able to know where the roof is leaking so as to mend it but he is not doing that. He seems to be taking side. And the reason is simply because he is hell-bent to take over Taraba so he cannot hesitate to do anything that can pave the way for him to succeed.

    He said he has done well, so if the people ask him to contest the governorship –as a clarion call, he will.

    I don’t know that kind of clarion call. Honestly, the greatest mistake Suntai has made in his life was picking Umar as his deputy. There can be no mistake worse than this. Suntai had relied solely on elders to pick someone for him from the northern zone. The governor did not know this man. If he had known how bad he is, he wouldn’t have picked him. I don’t want to speak on his intelligence, otherwise, I worked with him and I know he doesn’t have the moral and intellectual capacity to be governor of the state. For example, the College of Agriculture Governing Board had paid him a courtesy call. The members advanced some demands, which I was there –as the SSG. He told them yes I would do these things; no I would not do those ones. At the end, I summed up the things he said he was going to do and those he turned down. I prepared a memo in that regard for his consideration and approval. But upon giving him the memo, he asked me what is this SSG? I told him these are the things you approved for the college. He said no I didn’t mean what I said; it was only a political talk. I asked what do you mean your Excellency?  I told him he is acting governor, so whatever he promises the people or public institutions he has to fulfill it –that’s how the government works. Then I asked him why he gave them fake promise. So, I know, though not very sure, that was one of the reasons he got angry with me. And I doubt if he has granted those requests.

    Was there any agreement between Umar and Suntai that Umar would not run for office? If there is, was the agreement written or oral?

    On several occasions, Governor Suntai emphasised to him (Umar) that I have brought you to complete my tenure with me. Under no account should you nurse any form of ambition to contest, because the northern and central zones have produced governor. So, in 2015, we shall relinquish power to the southern zone, and the reason why I have appointed you my deputy is because of your age –so that you would not have any ambition to take over, so please abide by this and if at the end of our tenure you don’t see me advancing you, don’t be annoyed because we must give the governorship slot to where it belongs, for justice and equity. Umar said no no no, I am very ok sir; I am not going to contest. But now he has forgotten that the governor picked him from an inconsequential corner.

    Do you think he is bond by that agreement, considering the fact that it is not constitutional? 

    Constitutionally, he is not bond by it. Morally, he is. That is why I said he lacks the moral right to contest. Umar has no moral competence. Recall his promise with the College of Agriculture which he reneged on.

    Do you mean, apart from Umar who is kicking against power shift, stakeholders from the north and central zones are in support of power shift to southern zone?

    You know, before now, when former Governor Jolly Nyame was leaving office, people from all the zones contested to succeed him including those from the northern zone where he comes from. This was because nothing had come up clearly on how power should shift in the state. But after Suntai succeeded Nyame from the central zone, morally, those of us who have been resident in the state, who grew up in Taraba and served in the state, feel the fairest thing to do is to support the southern zone to produce the next governor. Unfortunately, Umar does not share this opinion, because he is a Taraba indigene by extension. He was not born in Taraba; he didn’t grow up in the state; he didn’t school in Taraba and he didn’t reside in the state for a week. He wasn’t known in Taraba state so he does not know the politics of Taraba. In Taraba, we always ensure we have a united front –the north, central and south. Once we get a candidate, we do it together. And so, since the north and central have had it, power has to shift to the south in 2015. What moral right does Umar have that he wants to contest from the northern zone? After 18 years of rule by the north and central zones, he still doesn’t want the southern zone to have it, why? Democratic governance, both at the level of presidency down to governorship and other positions, has to be rotational.

    He (Umar) said if the people ask him to run, he will, irrespective of the zoning arrangement which his people have argued that it is not constitutional.

    Who are the people that will ask him to run? A street beggar has other street beggars that can ask him to do something. We had a man (now late) in my area who was mentally derailed. He said he was contesting the presidency of this country, and anywhere he went the people addressed him as president. Was he the president? Is it such kind of people that will ask him to run? Umar does not have the moral and intellectual capacity to be governor. So, who will ask him to run? Suntai had put to end the system of thuggery in the state but Umar has reintroduced it. Recently he was in Takum to attend the birthday anniversary of the state Minister for Niger Delta Affairs, Arc. Darius Dickson Ishaku, and he went with thugs. So, is it his thugs that are asking him to contest?

    Is there religious division in Taraba?

    The deputy governor has brought a terrible polarisation in the religious front, not only between Christians and Muslims, but even within the Muslim community. He has deeply divided them. He is telling people to support his ambition because he is a Muslim. This is wrong; being a Christian or Muslim is not the yardstick for becoming the president or governor, but what you have to do for the people and country. For Umar, he is simply not qualified, whether he is a Muslim or Christian.

    How would you assess the state’s economic status now, because the acting governor says he has saved some money and is paying monthly salaries before receiving the federal allocation?

    Never in the history of Taraba state that the treasury has been looted by government officials as it is the case today. You will be surprised to note that it is under Umar that salaries of a previous month are paid in the week of the following month. The reason is that he has taken so much bank overdrafts that any money that comes in from the federation account will try to reduce what he has taken, then he would have another overdraft to pay the salaries of the previous month. Is that saving money? Is that paying salaries without the federal subvention? He does not pay salaries as at when due, until the following month. Pensioners used to collect their pension around 25th of every month. Today, we don’t get our pension until a new month comes. The treasury is terribly battered and he is trying to restructure it so that he can siphon more money. If you are in Jalingo, just interview anybody on the street, or the lowest profile civil servant, or a cleaner and they will tell you that this is the first time they are experiencing this kind of situation –where salaries of a previous month are paid in the following month.

    Do you know what he does with the money?

    Since he is not developing Taraba state with the money, since all the roads in the state are not being developed, since the university and other institutions of learning are not being funded, since he is only making political talks, and since the money is not there, we know where the money is going: he has an unsearchable ambition. He is so desperate to forcefully take over as substantive governor of Taraba state and to contest the governorship election. The money is now residing in the corridors of those who buy his idea and keep telling him we shall make you governor. I tell you, just dress in elegant clothes and go to Jalingo. When you see the deputy governor, tell him you have finalised every preparation to remove Danbaba Suntai for him to take over as substantive governor. Begin to quote some names, I bet you will come back with millions of naira. So, the state’s resources have become business funds for Garba Umar to waste on his unsearchable ambition of taking over.

    Some people still find it difficult to believe when people like you accused Umar of disloyalty. Because he always says he is still 100 percent loyal to Suntai and always referred to the governor as his boss. And again, he has not packed into the Government House and the portraits of Suntai still adorn his walls. So, what is this disloyalty that Suntai people keep talking about?

    I don’t really know the best adjective to describe the degree of Umar’s disloyalty to Suntai. First and foremost, when his boss was flown abroad for treatment, he vacated the official quarters assigned to him by his boss. He moved to the Presidential Lodge on his own –without the permission of his boss. Two, Suntai has not put barricades where he stays, but Umar has erected barricades to block both sides of the road where he stays. The street where he stays is not passable now. Residents of the area are finding it difficult as they are not allowed to pass there. Three, Umar dislodged all the political structures of his boss, starting with the leadership of the House of Assembly to pave the way for him to become the substantive governor. Four, he removed the SSG and commissioners who refused, at his request, to raise a memo to the House of Assembly for the lawmakers to confirm him as substantive governor. Five, he has made several attempts, using money, to dislodge the party executives. He sent his allies to go round and collect signatures to dislodge the party structure that was put in place by his principal. Today he is working with Advisers that were not appointed by the governor. The SSG and commissioners working with him today are not Suntai’s appointees. I heard him said he appointed from Suntai’s family. He should name just one person in his cabinet that is from Suntai’s family. Which of the commissioners he has appointed visits Suntai when the governor is in Government House Jalingo? We go there daily to see and discuss with the governor but we don’t see any of them. He has used the state’s funds to buy the House of Assembly members who ceded the running of the state to him. Is that loyalty? Today, the Assembly is split into two factions, some for him and some for his principal. Is that loyalty? Has he forgotten so quickly how he came onboard? Did he contest any election? Or was he part of the team that accompanied Suntai round the state to campaign for the reelection of the governor in 2011? We don’t even know the party he is working for, because he seems not to be working for the growth of the PDP in Taraba state. So, where is the loyalty he has for Suntai? A man who had travelled abroad to see his boss on the sickbed, upon his return, he asked me to prepare a memo so that he could take over as governor of the state while I would be the deputy. Is that loyalty?

    Do you think the plethora of crises affecting Taraba will affect the 2015 elections in the state?

    Yes. Yes. The first to affect the election is the insecurity he has created in the state. He has dislodged Christian villages in Wukari, Gassol, Donga, Ibi and Bali. He tried to dislodge the Wukari town but it wasn’t possible. He has done all these things in a scheme to reduce the Christian population so as to enable him take over the state. It is very unfortunate. Taraba people will not vote on religious sentiments. We shall vote on the basis of competence and the will to serve and deliver democratic dividends. Don’t forget that the state is going to experience hunger by next year. After dislodging the Christian farmers, their farm crops were uprooted. Majority of those displaced are Tiv people. The Jukuns were not displaced much because they live in compact settlements unlike the Tiv farmers who dwell in isolated sparse settlements. No fewer than 700 persons have lost their lives in Taraba, many more were injured and hundreds of thousands displaced within the time that Umar has been in charge. He tried the official way without success and now he is trying to dislodge, maim and suppress the people, but I know he would not succeed. About five local government areas of Taraba state have not received their voter cards because of the insecurity. That tells you that the election is already affected by the crisis. We are aware of how hired insurgents came into the state, and we want the federal government to do something about it. There is no way insurgents could invade a state and the security council/agencies would not know. We are aware that all the local government areas in the state are being besieged by insurgents who are ready to strike. Will the chief security officer of the state and his government claim they are not aware of this development? He should fish out the culprits to prove his innocence, for Taraba to vote next year. But I want to assure you that the campaign for a credible candidate in Taraba state is going to be the easiest because people now know the man who is acting, such that if you give Umar the PDP ticket, the ruling party will lose Taraba. This is because his coming has been a disaster and nobody is willing to have him as governor for four years. It is not possible. The easiest way for PDP to lose Taraba state is to give its governorship ticket to Umar.

     

  •  ‘How to boost Taraba’s tourism sector’

     ‘How to boost Taraba’s tourism sector’

    Dr. Yakubu Tor-Agbidye is Special Adviser on Culture and Tourism in Taraba State. In this interview with FANEN IHYONGO, he reveals that Taraba has much tourism potential that could boost its economy and that of the country. He advises that infrastructure be put in place for the industry to flourish, among other issues. Excerpts: 

    Taraba has witnessed some quiet periods in tourism activities in recent times. What could be responsible for the situation?

    It is not quite true that tourism activities in Taraba State have been dull. There are circumstances that have forced activities in the culture and tourism sector to be seemingly quiet.

    We have had series of disturbances in the state. We have been promoting culture and tourism in Taraba for quite a long time, by organising festivals in which we invite people across the region to participate.

    Last year, we celebrated the World Cultural Day in Gembu, Sardauna Local Government Area. We were planning very seriously to also launch the Nwonyo Fishing Festival when the ethno-religious crisis in Southern Taraba resurfaced. The crisis seems to have caused tourism activities not to be vibrant.

    You cannot promote tourism when there is insecurity in the area. So, the violence in the state has slowed down tourism activities, but it is just a matter of time; it is temporary. When the crisis is over, tourism activities will resume in full swing. I have a lot of plans on ground, which I believe shall take the state to an enviable pedestal when peace returns.

    Appraising what Taraba has invested so far in the culture and tourism sector, will you confidently say it has reaped the benefits of its investments?

    When I assumed duty as Adviser on Culture and Tourism three years ago, I noticed that the state boasted of  much tourist attractions that could be utilised to promote tourism nationally and internationally. I realised that we have a lot of potential (I mean just potential) but the infrastructure was  not developed.

    To fix the infrastructure, we need huge sums of money, which the state does not have at the moment. So, the potential are there, but untapped. I have divided the state into three zones –A, B and C–in terms of tourism. My desire is to ensure that, at least, we develop an attractive cultural/tourist centre in each of the zones. But looking at the amount of resources needed to build these infrastructure to a point of attracting national and international tourism, it wouldn’t be that easy because we don’t have that kind of resources.

    We can just package our tourism very well and sell it. We cannot ask tourists to come and build the infrastructure for us. The state has to fix the infrastructure to attract tourists to invest and promote our tourism.

    So, our basic problem is the huge resources required to develop the infrastructure before we can think of marketing our tourism industry to the outside world.

    Will the state reap from tourism if the huge sums of money are available to fix the infrastructure?

    Recall what Governor Suntai said the other day; that the Nwonyo Fishing Festival which was being organised annually, for instance, is a waste of resources because it has not generated any revenue to Taraba State.

    There are certain fundamental principles that should be understood in developing the tourism industry. When I say the state has tourism potential, it doesn’t mean it is all about organising festivals and inviting people to come and feast on the jamborees.

    Let us consider the Central Taraba for example; the Mambilla Plateau in Gembu. There are a lot of sceneries that are good for visitors to come and watch. In Serti, there is the Gashaka National Gumti Park, with a lot of wild animals. One can develop the area for international tourism to take place.

    So, what I mean is that we need to develop our tourism industry very well. When we develop our tourism industry, then we can sell what is developed to the international community to come in with their money. That is the only time the state can reap or benefit from the money sunk in tourism. Not just organising festivals, but developing the infrastructure and selling what is developed to the international community, telling them what we have in Taraba that they participate in.

    There are different types of tourism that I want to talk about here: there is a tourism that is for leisure, where people could come, relax, watch things and enjoy themselves. We have medicinal tourism, where people can come for treatment and other things.

    In this case, we have a lot of medicinal products in Gembu, but we need to identify and put them there so that if anyone comes here, he will see what we have. We have a lot of wild animals that are not readily available elsewhere. We can put them in zoos for people to come and watch. Then we can build hotels around such areas so that when people come, they can go there and lodge in.

    When the infrastructure is developed and we sell our tourism to the international community, people coming in can patronise us, by spending their money–be it dollar, naira, euro or other currencies. That is when the state would reap the benefits, but not when the state takes huge sums of money and organises events. Many countries now rely on their tourism industries. Their states do not spend money. They have developed their infrastructure and they generate their revenue when foreigners visit their countries to spend their dollars.

    What particular type of tourism do you think Taraba State should develop, in terms of priority?

    As I said, we have leisure tourism, medicinal, historical; religious and other forms of  tourism. We can develop all of them.

    Which of them do you think the state should start with, considering revenue generation?

    You can start with the leisure, because people travel out for leisure. Medicinal tourism is for those who are particularly sick. So, we can start with the leisure because tourists like to relax when they seek break from the stress of day-to-day life.

    For example, if you go to Obudu Cattle Ranch, you are going there to relax, see fascinating scenery, enjoy the pleasant atmosphere and become happily refreshed. So, leisure tourism should be a starting point.

     

     

     

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    We need to develop our tourism industry very well. When we develop our tourism industry, then we can sell what is developed to the international community to come in with their money. That is the only time the state can reap or benefit from the money sunk in tourism. Not just organising festivals, but developing the infrastructure and selling what is developed to the international community

  • Scores feared killed in Taraba ethno-religious attack

    There appear to be no end to the ethnic and religious crisis in the southern district of Taraba state.

    Scores were feared killed and many injured in resurgence in Tunari village of Wukari on Sunday.

    Several houses were also torched.

    Hostilities began at about 10 a.m Sunday and lasted for several hours, it was learnt.

    Residents said the attackers were Fulani insurgents who invaded them from neighboring Plateau state.

    President of the Youths of Vision, Wukari branch, Tsa-Asen Agbu, said the attackers struck when majority of the residents –largely Christians were in the church for Sunday service.

    Agbu, a lawyer, faulted the state government being run by Acting Governor Garba Umar and the security personnel for “intentionally allowing the attacks and killings to continue.”

    He said the attackers were out to maim, kill and reduce the Christian population in Taraba state.

    He queried: “Why Taraba south? Why are the attackers’ weapons of war always directed at Jukun and Tiv Christian communities?”

    Agbu urged President Goodluck Jonathan to as a matter of urgency call the acting governor to order and declare a state of emergency in Taraba.

    Residents said over 20 persons might have been killed in Sunday’s attack. But police spokesman, Joseph Kwaji who confirmed the attack said he does not know the casualty figure.

    He promised to brief reporters whenever the authentic figure of casualties is made available to the police command.

    Kwaji said: “I can confirm that there was an attack in Tunari village of Wukari local government area, but the casualty figure is not known yet.

    “Tunari village was attacked this morning (yesterday morning) by the Fulani people. But our men have been drafted to the area to monitor the situation closely and restore peace.”