Tag: Taraba

  • Taraba community relishes peace

    One clear sign that peace has returned to the community is the resumption of its market. Traders at Ibi, one of the crises-torn local government councils in southern Taraba State, were happy to display their fish and other articles once again, their clients equally delighted to patronise them.

    Such activity was seriously hampered when residents often engaged one another in conflicts which claimed several of them as well as their homes and businesses.

    Things have changed. Old griefs have been brushed aside, the people happy to live together again.

    They have the new administrator, Alhaji Bello Yero to thank for that. In him the people of Ibi have built an absolute trust and have shown that they are really tired of war.

    Before Yero’s coming, there were constant conflicts which claimed lives and property valued at millions of naira. The latest crisis was in November last year, reportedly between Christians and Muslims. Ten people were reported killed, and worship centres, commercial and residential buildings were torched in the conflict.

    Yero came on board on December 3 to replace Ibi Local Government chairman Alhaji Isiaku Adamu.

    The State House of Assembly, after an investigation of the crisis, found the former chairman culpable. He was removed with all the councilors.

    Acting Governor Alhaji Garba Umar had only a few words for the new council chief: “Go and stabilise Ibi,” he told Yero at his inauguration. Since then, Yero has been very committed to the assignment.

    When Newsextra visited Ibi, Yero was holding a security meeting which lasted almost a whole day. In the meeting were government functionaries, youth leaders and traditional rulers, including the Sarki Ibi, His Royal Majesty Alhaji Abubakar Salihu.

    Ibi used to be a popular market hub, where fish dealers and connoiseurs were sure of the best supplies. But when war erupted, there was no fish, and no sellers or buyers in sight. The Ibi market, located strategically on the bank of River Benue, separating the area from Nasarawa and Plateau states, was deserted. As peace eluded the area, businessmen and women left the town.

    But normalcy has returned. The traders are also back, and there is much fish to buy even though, Newsextra’s survey of the market showed a low turnout.

    After roving the town and ascertaining the level of security, the reporter sought to meet with Yero. He spoke frankly.

    “I have been up and doing,” he said. “I have been very proactive in my approach to the assignment given to me. I came down from Jalingo [the state capital] and met with all the stakeholders, the chiefs, various communities, the leaderships of Christians and Muslims and several other groups and associations. I told them my mission; that I am a career civil servant and a neutral party. That is why the state government decided to pick me to come and restore peace in Ibi.”

    He continued: “I don’t belong to any of the factions in Ibi. For the records, I don’t have any faction here; I don’t care about your religion, I don’t care about your political divide, I don’t belong to any of the socio-political spectrums.

    “I don’t belong to any of the ethnic groupings here. I am in Ibi for a special assignment. As a career officer, I have to protect my job as well. So, I am very seriously committed to this assignment, and more so, internal security management is not a strange task for me. It has been a familiar job.

    “All I did, after taking the oath of office was firstly to pray to God to guide and lead me to be fair and just. So, as far as this assignment and law and order are concerned, I don’t tolerate any nonsense from anybody. Though I listen to wise counsel, I do the job according to what I consider as appropriate. I made a lot of consultations including the leadership of the state House of Assembly and that is why peace has returned to Ibi”.

    Yet, Yero is not carried away. He extols God for giving him the wisdom.

    “I must say I am very grateful to God for making [my assignment] a solid success so far. I feel humbled and I am grateful to the entire populace of Ibi local government area for all the appreciation and good remarks they are according me. At the same time I am being strengthened by their commendations and I have promised I will not let anybody down. But to be honest, the people of Ibi are tired of fighting. I have been in their midst for about six months, and I know their psyche and how they feel; they are tired of fighting. I meet with them regularly and I know their pulse. They are tired of violence, just that some few people who are not God-fearing like fomenting trouble, and when there is a problem in the land they run away. The insecurity here was so worrisome that the Acting Governor Garba Umar and the state legislature had to step in to do what they did.”

    Yero’s success, however, did not come all that easy, even as the council chief knows how to speed off and when to apply the brakes.

    He said: “When I assumed duty initially, we were having local government security meetings daily. It is one of the directives given to me by the state government. The state executive and the legislative arms said I should hold security meetings and be in constant touch with them. And I have been doing it since assumption of office.

    “We started with daily meetings, then thrice and later twice in a week. Now, we hold security meetings weekly–every Wednesday, because the security situation has remarkably improved. So, I thank God”.

    With this unprecedented feat, Yero has attracted the accolades from a visionary leader and achiever, who sees the council chief as a man of the masses.

    After stabilising Ibi, he has gone a step further to improve the infrastructure to transform the face of the area. Acting Governor Garba Umar now sees him as a dependable force in good governance.

     

  • That Polio outbreak in Taraba

    SIR: Polio (poliomyelitis) is a highly infectious disease caused by a virus. It invades the nervous system and cause irreversible paralysis in a matter of hours.

    The last time the case of polio was reported in Nigeria, it was in March in FCT Abuja. It is rather unfortunate that we are also hearing about the case of another polio outbreak in Taraba State. On June 7, there was a report of an outbreak of polio in Saayor village Sandirde Ward in Gassol Local Government Area of the state.

    The first case of polio virus was recorded in Dissol, Wuryo Ward in 2012. The current outbreak in Gassol local government is said to be the most dangerous and has already paralyzed eight innocent children in the community.

    It was reported that the chairman of Gassol local government, Alhaji Takura Bashir was worried about the new outbreak particularly as he claimed that immunization officials had already visited the affected areas to asses as well as to immunize all children below the age of five to zero. He blamed the outbreak on the immunization supervisors and focal officers in the LGA for their inability to carry out proper supervision.

    I will still like to share my experience as World Health Organization (WHO) independent monitor during the immunization plus days in 2010 covering two villages, Ogbooro and Agbonle in Saki East LGA of Oyo State. During that immunization period, I discovered that some health workers employed by local government to administer the vaccine to the children in the rural area did not reach there. What they did was pour away the vaccine meant for some of these remote villages. Some of these health workers also complained that some of the local government health officials that engaged them short-paid them.

    Though we have not heard of any polio case in Oyo State, this attitude calls for concern.

    The Taraba State case should be a wake-up and clarion call to the individuals and agencies in charge of administering polio vaccine to be more proactive.

    Taraba, with population of about 2,688,944 and with the 16 local governments must therefore be very serious with the welfare of her little children. It was reported that the acting Governor, Alhaji Garba Umar recently launched the 2013 second round immunization days in Mutun-Biyu, the headquarters of Gassol local government area where he charged the council chairman and traditional rulers to handle immunization with all seriousness. I will enjoin religious leaders to also join the fight against polio in Taraba State so that our little children will no more be victims of this preventable disease.

    I will also like to call on the three Senators from the state, Anthony Man, Dahiru Gassol, and Emmanuel Bwacha and members of House of Representatives from the state to join in the fight against polio in their different constituencies.

    Neighboring states to Taraba must watch against polio outbreak in their domains.

    On its part, the Federal Ministry of Health must not relent in its effort and campaigns to eradicate polio in Nigeria because until polio is eradicated across the country, every state is still at risk because the virus is spread through person-to-person contact.

    Let’s always remember that ‘a stitch in time saves nine’.

    • John Tosin Ajiboye

    Lagos.

  • Taraba community relishes peace

    Taraba community relishes peace

    Administrator reconciles warring residents

    One clear sign that peace has returned to the community is the resumption of its market. Traders at Ibi, one of the crises-torn local government councils in southern Taraba State, were happy to display their fish and other articles once again, their clients equally delighted to patronise them.

    Such activity was seriously hampered when residents often engaged one another in conflicts which claimed several of them as well as their homes and businesses.

    Things have changed. Old griefs have been brushed aside, the people happy to live together again.

    They have the new administrator, Alhaji Bello Yero to thank for that. In him the people of Ibi have built an absolute trust and have shown that they are really tired of war.

    Before Yero’s coming, there were constant conflicts which claimed lives and property valued at millions of naira. The latest crisis was in November last year, reportedly between Christians and Muslims. Ten people were reported killed, and worship centres, commercial and residential buildings were torched in the conflict.

    Yero came on board on December 3 to replace Ibi Local Government chairman Alhaji Isiaku Adamu.

    The State House of Assembly, after an investigation of the crisis, found the former chairman culpable. He was removed with all the councilors.

    Acting Governor Alhaji Garba Umar had only a few words for the new council chief: “Go and stabilise Ibi,” he told Yero at his inauguration. Since then, Yero has been very committed to the assignment.

    When Newsextra visited Ibi, Yero was holding a security meeting which lasted almost a whole day. In the meeting were government functionaries, youth leaders and traditional rulers, including the Sarki Ibi, His Royal Majesty Alhaji Abubakar Salihu.

    Ibi used to be a popular market hub, where fish dealers and connoiseurs were sure of the best supplies. But when war erupted, there was no fish, and no sellers or buyers in sight. The Ibi market, located strategically on the bank of River Benue, separating the area from Nasarawa and Plateau states, was deserted. As peace eluded the area, businessmen and women left the town.

    But normalcy has returned. The traders are also back, and there is much fish to buy even though, Newsextra’s survey of the market showed a low turnout.

    After roving the town and ascertaining the level of security, the reporter sought to meet with Yero. He spoke frankly.

    “I have been up and doing,” he said. “I have been very proactive in my approach to the assignment given to me. I came down from Jalingo [the state capital] and met with all the stakeholders, the chiefs, various communities, the leaderships of Christians and Muslims and several other groups and associations. I told them my mission; that I am a career civil servant and a neutral party. That is why the state government decided to pick me to come and restore peace in Ibi.”

    He continued: “I don’t belong to any of the factions in Ibi. For the records, I don’t have any faction here; I don’t care about your religion, I don’t care about your political divide, I don’t belong to any of the socio-political spectrums.

    “I don’t belong to any of the ethnic groupings here. I am in Ibi for a special assignment. As a career officer, I have to protect my job as well. So, I am very seriously committed to this assignment, and more so, internal security management is not a strange task for me. It has been a familiar job.

    “All I did, after taking the oath of office was firstly to pray to God to guide and lead me to be fair and just. So, as far as this assignment and law and order are concerned, I don’t tolerate any nonsense from anybody. Though I listen to wise counsel, I do the job according to what I consider as appropriate. I made a lot of consultations including the leadership of the state House of Assembly and that is why peace has returned to Ibi”.

    Yet, Yero is not carried away. He extols God for giving him the wisdom.

    “I must say I am very grateful to God for making [my assignment] a solid success so far. I feel humbled and I am grateful to the entire populace of Ibi local government area for all the appreciation and good remarks they are according me. At the same time I am being strengthened by their commendations and I have promised I will not let anybody down. But to be honest, the people of Ibi are tired of fighting. I have been in their midst for about six months, and I know their psyche and how they feel; they are tired of fighting. I meet with them regularly and I know their pulse. They are tired of violence, just that some few people who are not God-fearing like fomenting trouble, and when there is a problem in the land they run away. The insecurity here was so worrisome that the Acting Governor Garba Umar and the state legislature had to step in to do what they did.”

    Yero’s success, however, did not come all that easy, even as the council chief knows how to speed off and when to apply the brakes.

    He said: “When I assumed duty initially, we were having local government security meetings daily. It is one of the directives given to me by the state government. The state executive and the legislative arms said I should hold security meetings and be in constant touch with them. And I have been doing it since assumption of office.

    “We started with daily meetings, then thrice and later twice in a week. Now, we hold security meetings weekly–every Wednesday, because the security situation has remarkably improved. So, I thank God”.

    With this unprecedented feat, Yero has attracted the accolades from a visionary leader and achiever, who sees the council chief as a man of the masses.

    After stabilising Ibi, he has gone a step further to improve the infrastructure to transform the face of the area. Acting Governor Garba Umar now sees him as a dependable force in good governance.

     

  • 2015: Taraba acting governor opens campaign office

    Ahead of the 2015 general elections, a faction of the Peoples Democratic Party in Taraba State yesterday opened a campaign office for the Acting Governor Garba Umar and President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The office, with the PDP logo, is located at 29, Barde Way, beside the National Broadcasting Commission (NBC), Jalingo, the state capital.

    Some loyalists of ailing Governor Danbaba Suntai have been reacting to the development.

    They accused Umar of being “too ambitious”.

    Since last October, when Suntai has been incapacitated following the injury he sustained in a plane crash near Yola, the Adamawa State capital, Umar has been holding forte.

    The governor is still receiving treatment in a US hospital.

    A member of the House Representatives representing Karim-Lamido, Lau and Ardo-Kola in Taraba State, Jerry Mamwe, campaigned for President Jonathan during the opening of the office.

    This was apparently in defiance of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) order that parties and politicians should stop campaigns for 2015.

    “In 2011, we voted for President Goodluck Jonathan. We shall still vote for him in 2015, whether he is good or bad.

    “With the support of the acting governor (Garba Umar), President Jonathan must win in Taraba,” Mamwe said.

    The politician said the organisers of the event were not bothered about what some people were saying and their perception of the event.

    He said: “Whatever thoughts anyone has on what we are doing here is welcome.”

    Speaking with The Nation on why he was campaigning for Jonathan, despite INEC’s warnings, the Representative said he was only promoting the Taraba PDP Youth Vanguard and not campaigning on the platform of a party.

    Mamwe said: “Whether Jonathan is running or not, I am asking him to contest.”

    It was learnt that the leadership of the ruling party in the state, headed by Mr. Victor Bala, was against the development.

     

  • 39 killed, 30 injured in Taraba religious clash

    39 killed, 30 injured in Taraba religious clash

    • Unofficial sources say death toll may top 100

    • 24-hour curfew imposed on Wukari

    • Killings must stop, Acting Governor, Umar, vows

     Wukari, Taraba State, was a ghost town yesterday 24 hours after the eruption of a fierce sectarian violence in which the police confirmed 39 people dead.

    Residents believe that as many as 130 lives may have been lost.

    Thirty others were injured and about 70 houses and shops torched.

    The Acting Governor, Alhaji Garba Umar, in a broadcast yesterday condemned the killings and destructions saying, “This is unacceptable. The killings must stop.”

    A visibly saddened Umar, who imposed the 24-hour curfew in the area, described the killings as “very unfortunate.”

    He noted that the government would do everything possible to protect lives and property, adding that perpetrators of the crisis must be punished.

    The cost of the buildings, vehicles and other assets lost to the mayhem runs into billions of naira.

    Security men have taken over the streets to restore order while the state government imposed a round-the-clock curfew on the town, forcing all residents indoors.

    Locked in the bloody battle were the Jukun and the Fulani.

    Eye-witnesses said the mayhem began during the burial procession of a high ranking Jukun Chief.

    The mourners alleged that the Fulani, who are mainly Muslims, barricaded the road to the burial ground. The Muslims said they only gathered for the Jumat prayers.

    Coming so soon after a similar confrontation in February in which 20 people died, an argument soon ensued between the two sides; temper rose until the situation got out of hand and pandemonium broke out.

    Some fled the scene while others reached for daggers, axes, cudgels and even guns.

    As news of the crisis spread, fighters mounted roadblocks along the Wukari-Jalingo Road where they attacked ‘enemies’ plying the road..

    Thousands of residents fled Wukari, some of them taking refuge in Zaki-Biam, Kyado and Jootar in neighbouring Benue State.

    The police moved in to quell the violence and clear the mess.

    Government followed with a 24hour curfew.

    At press time, the police said they had recovered 39 corpses which were deposited at the Yam Market on the Wukari-Jalingo Road.

    Some of the bodies were headless. One of those beheaded was a pregnant woman. Also gone were her legs.

    The private parts of some other victims were also removed. It was a gory sight.

    The police said they have arrested over 30 suspected rioters.

    They are working to prevent a spill over to neighbouring towns .

    “We are now patrolling Wukari town -to maintain law and order,” Police Spokesman, Joseph Kwaji, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), told The Nation.

    Kwaji said the severely injured are receiving treatment at the General Hospital, Wukari.

    An aid worker said:”We have recovered 20 bodies from the violence so far. We are still going round the town in search of more bodies,” he said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the media about death tolls.

    A woman, who also does not want to be named, said: “I slept in the bush to escape with these kids,” pointing to his three children-two boys and a girl.

    The State’s Acting Governor, Alhaji Garba Umar is said to be shocked and saddened by the development.

    Only 24 hours before the incident, he had inaugurated a seven-man Judicial Commission of Inquiry to investigate the previous crises in Wukari and Ibi local government areas.

  • 39 feared killed, 30 injured in Taraba crisis- Police

    39 feared killed, 30 injured in Taraba crisis- Police

    A fresh orgy of religious violence was on Friday recorded in Wukari, Taraba state with no fewer than 39 persons killed and over 30 injured.

    At least 70 houses and commercial centres were torched.

    Wukari shares boundary with Benue and Narasawa states.

    Although more more than 100 persons were reportedly killed and about 60 injured  in the violent clash, police said 39 corpses have been recovered and 30 persons confirmed injured. The bodies were seen being deposited at the Yam Market –along Wukari-Jalingo Road.

    Some of the bodies have been beheaded, with body parts removed.

    A joint force of police and the army kept watch in the  the area.

    Eye-witnesses said the crisis began on Friday when a Jukun Chief Warder –a monarch third to the Aku-Uka died and was about to be buried.

    The mourners alleged that the Muslims barricaded the way to the burial ground.

    This triggered retaliatory attacks that led to many deaths. But a Muslim spokesman told The Nation that they were gathered only for their Jumai (Friday) prayers.

    A dusk to dawn curfew has been imposed to quell the uprising.

    The troops said they arrested over 30 suspected rioters while making  efforts to prevent a spill of the crisis to neighbouring states.

    “We are now patrolling Wukari town -to maintain law and order”, Police Spokesman, Joseph Kwaji, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) told The Nation.

    Kwaji said the severely injured are receiving treatment at the General Hospital, Wukari.

    Christian and Muslim residents of Wukari have been up-in-arms against one another in recent times.

    Apart from attacks on residences, fighters mounted roadblocks along the Wukari-Jalingo Road where they eliminated “enemies” plying the route.

    Thousands of residents have fled Wukari. Particularly the Muslim escapees have taken refuge in Zaki-Biam, Kyado and Jootar areas of Benue state. While others are running to Jalingo –the Taraba state capital.

    A Christian woman police who spoke to The Nation said her husband was trailed throughout yesterday night by rioters. She said: “I slept in the bush to escape with these kids”, (pointing on two males and a female).

    Only in February, over 300 persons were feared killed and properties worth billions of naira destroyed in Wukari in a similar religiously claimed hostilities.

    Taraba State Acting Governor Alhaji Garba Umar is said to be shock and saddened by the unfortunate development.

    Umar had on Thursday inaugurated a seven-man ‘Judicial Commission of Inquiry’ to investigate the previous crises in Wukari and Ibi local government areas, only for a fresh orgy of violence to begin to shine off the following day (Friday).

     

  • I didn’t know I’d be chosen, says Taraba Speaker

    Taraba State House of Assembly’s new Speaker Haruna Tsokwa has said he had no idea he would replace his impeached colleague, Istifanus Haruna Gbana.

    Tsokwa spoke yesterday in his office in Jalingo, the state capital.

    He said: “It is God that has chosen me. I didn’t know I was going to be chosen. I didn’t even think of it.

    “There are many other good members too, but God’s favour located and shone on me for my colleagues to vote me as the Speaker.”

    Gbana, his deputy as well as the former Majority Leader were removed on April 22 by the House for alleged “gross misconduct”.

    Tsokwa said he would work hard for the House to ensure good governance.

  • Taraba Assembly removes Speaker

    Taraba State House of Assembly Speaker Istifanus Haruna Gbana was removed yesterday by the Assembly for “gross misconduct.

    Gbana’s offences, according to the members, include “abuse of office” and “misappropriation of public funds”, among other infractions.

    The members alleged that the offences amounted to gross misconduct.

    Also removed as were the Deputy Speaker Abel Peter Diah and the Majority Leader Charles Maijankai.

    The Assembly’s principal officers were accused of being Governor Danbaba Danfulani Suntai’s men.

    Suntai is receiving treatment in a European hospital following the injury he sustained in last year’s plane crash near the Yola airport, Adamawa State.

    Haruna Tsokwa, representing Takum II, was immediately sworn in as the new Speaker and Tanko Maikerfi as the new Deputy Speaker.

    The member representing Lau State Constituency, Joseph Albasu, moved the motion (to impeach Gbana). The motion was seconded by Abubakar Jugulde. Abalsu was voted the new Majority Leader.

    John Kizito Bonzima presided over the sitting as Speaker pro-tempore. He declared Gbana impeached.

     

     

     

  • 16 feared killed, 11 missing in Taraba Kuteb-Tiv crisis

    AT least 16 people have been reportedly killed and 11 others declared missing in a renewed communal crisis between Kuteb and Tiv speaking people of Yangtu Development Area of Taraba State.

    Police were still investigating the whereabouts of six persons yesterday when reports came on the behading of two people and the abduction of five others at Tumator Mbayange, bringing the missing figure to 11.

    Two women are believed to be among the abductees.

    Yangtu is between Takum (in Taraba) and Katsina-Ala Local Government Area of Benue South.

    The two neighbouring communities have been pitted against each other over a disputed land at Kaaor settlement, near the Army Barracks in Takum.

    The affected areas include: Tompo, Age, Campo-Ugbenger, along Kashimbilla Road and Tse-Azer.

    Sources said the hostilities have spilled over to the suburbs of Takum, despite police/army surveillance. Hundreds of residents are fleeing the area.

    Residents of Taraba South have been up-in-arms against one another over land, as the area has the most fertile soil for cultivation in the sub-region.

    Behind the festering feud is the battle to control the land.

    In 2005, a similar clash between the Tiv and Kuteb claimed several lives. Farm produce and houses were destroyed.

    It was gathered that a prelude to the latest crisis followed the missing of four Tiv farmers, which an eye-witness account claimed, triggered the fresh round of violence.

    What began as skirmishes last week snowballed into a fierce and full-scale offensive.

    “Many are being killed in different locations in a string of attacks”, a source said.

    The police are still searching for the missing persons, their spokesman, Joseph Kwaji, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) told The Nation.

    Kwaji said: “We are still searching. As I speak with you, the State Commissioner of Police, Jubril Adeniji, has deployed our men to the area to search for the four farmers who went to their farmlands and couldn’t return home.

    “We are also searching for two persons – wood cutters, who went for logging and couldn’t come back. As at today (yesterday), the bodies of the six missing persons have not been recovered. Nobody knows whether they are still alive or dead.”

    Coordinator of Yangtu Development Area, Mr. Kefas Maiyaki, said the casualty figure could not be ascertained.

    He said: “This is a war taking place in the forest. You can’t exactly know who and who and how many people have been killed.

    “For instance, the bodies of the four farmers killed have not been recovered. But I am asking the government to intervene speedily to maintain law and order in the area”.

    He preached peaceful co-existence between the warring communities.

    “My prayer is for the displaced residents to go back to their homes and farms, as continued violence could lead to food shortage and other economic woes,” he said.

  • CPC vows to capture Taraba in 2015

    CPC vows to capture Taraba in 2015

    The Congress for Progressive Change (CPC) in Taraba said it would sweep the polls in the state in 2015.

    The state Acting Chairman of the party, Alhaji Hassan Ardo, said this on Monday in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Jalingo.

    Ardo was speaking after the meeting of wards, local governments and state executive members of the party.

    According to him, the meeting discussed the party’s restructuring and merger plans with other political parties to form the All Progressive Congress (APC).

    He denied the notion that the CPC was tending toward one religion and described it as a political gimmick to cause disaffection in the party.

    He added that the notion was also aimed at discouraging people interested in joining the party to reap some political gains.

    Ardo said that the fact that CPC had the likes of Pastor Tunde Bakare and Tony Momoh, holding key positions at the national level, knocked off the notion.

    He described his appointment as a call to duty and promised to run an all inclusive administration for every member of the party to contribute to its progress.

    Ardo, therefore, urged party members to imbibe the spirit of unity and play the game of politics according to the rules.

    “We are simple in our dealings but firm in our decisions,” he said.