Tag: Taraba

  • Taraba: House empowers Suntai’s deputy to act as governor

    Taraba: House empowers Suntai’s deputy to act as governor

    The Taraba State House of Assembly has passed a resolution empowering Deputy Governor Garba Umar to step into the capacity of Acting Governor.

    This follows the absence of Governor Danbaba Suntai, who was flown to Germany last month after crashing a small plane owned by the state government into a farm near the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation depot in Yola, the Adamawa State capital.

    Governor Suntai was flying the plane and had some of his security aides as well as the co-pilot onboard.

    None of them died in the accident.

    The lawmakers passed the resolution by invoking section 190 of the 1999 Constitution.

    The section reads, “Whenever the Governor transmits to the Speaker of the House of Assembly a written declaration that he is proceeding on vacation or that he is otherwise unable to discharge the functions of his office, until he transmits to the Speaker of the House of Assembly a written declaration to the contrary such functions shall be discharged by the Deputy Governor as Acting Governor.”

    It was not made clear whether the governor sent a letter to the assembly on the matter.

    The motion to make Umar the acting governor was moved under “matters of urgent public importance” by the Majority Leader, Charles Maijankai.

    Lawmakers who contributed to the motion include the Deputy Speaker, Abel Diah, and Mark Useni of Takum 2 Constituency.

     

  • Taraba divided over governor’s fate

    Taraba divided over governor’s fate

    In what is reminiscent of the dark days when the late President Umaru Yar’Adua was flown to a Saudi Hospital, thus creating a vacuum in the presidency, the accident that sent Taraba State Governor Danbaba Suntai to a German hospital for treatment is creating tension in the state. Correspondent FANEN IHYNGO captures the general mood among politicians and government officials in the state.

     

    The plane crash involving Taraba State Governor Danbaba Suntai and some of his aides has been pushed into the political arena in the state.

    If Suntai survives, he would come back to serve or rule a deeply divided state.

    Suntai was on Thursday, October 25, involved in an crash, in a plane flown by him. Also on board the ill-fated Cessna 208 aircraft were his Aide de Camp (ADC) Dasat Iliya, the Chief Security Officer (CSO), Timo Dangana and his Chief Detail, Joel Dan. They all survived the mishap, but sustained varying degrees of injuries.

    The governor is said to be recovering and this should be good news. But in Taraba, it is bad news to a host of people. While millions of Nigerians are praying for the governor’s speedy recovery, many Taraba people have been found to behave in a way suggesting that they are more comfortable with the current state of affairs. The crash has shown that the state is gravely divided against itself. What is the governor’s sin? “Politics”, said an analyst.

    When the accident occurred, it was first reported that the governor had died. It was appalling to learn that while some people were agonising, others publicly celebrated the news..

    Investigation reveals that the polarisation is deepening by the day. On Monday, a group of people protested in Jalingo, demanding the where abouts of the governor.

    Sources even alleged that not a few political allies of Deputy Governor Alhaji Garba Umar had gone a step further to congratulate him over his boss’ accident, expressing optimism that the deputy governor will soon wear the governor’s crown.

    Although, Umar who was only sworn in on October 5, to replace impeached Alhaji Sani Abubakar Danladi, has said he will never wish his boss dead.

    “It has been my prayers that he recovers speedily”, he told journalists at a press briefing while reacting to gossips that a repeat of what happened when the late President Umaru YarAdua was flown to Saudi Arabia was in the making in the state.

    But, importantly, what does the law say? Following the Yar’Adua incident that compelled the National Assembly to invoke the doctrine of neccesity as an ingenious way out of the constitutional logjam, the legislators, in 2010, amended the constitution to introduce an automatic take over by deputy governrs in acting capacity in the event that, for any reason, the governor is absent from his desk for three weeks.

    section 190 of the constitution, as amended, provides that 21 days is enough to invoke the section in the event that the chief executive at the state level fails to transmit to the House of Assembly a letter transferring power to his deputy in the interim. The same applies at the federal level in case the President fails to adhere to the provision of the amended section 145 of the Constitution.

    Before the ill-fated incident, there were already growing concerns as to why the governor had chosen to be flying aircrafts by himself. A pharmacist, Suntai also holds a Private Pilot’s Licence (PPL) which he obtained in 2010, after attending the Nigeria College of Aviation Technology (NCAT) Zaria, Kaduna State. He successfully flew the Caravan Cessna plane to obtain his licence. Since then, he has been embarking on solo flights in his leisure or official trips.

    But, given the risks involved, his opponents had argued that it was unwise of him to take the task of running a state and flying an aircraft at the same time; he should have employed the services of a pilot, they argued. Suntai’s opponents had also accused him of dedicating more time to flying than governance, especially as the road network in Taraba State is still largely underdeveloped. Even now that his condition is between life and death, many are still criticising him, wondering why the chief executive loved running around in a plane at the least opportunity when 90 per cent of Taraba masses were trekking and grappling with the vicious cycle of poverty.

    The governor himself had once admitted that flying, to him, was more of a “passion.” Many had actually predicted the disaster before it finally occurredy..

    When it occurred, the scientific or methodical reason was that, while approaching the Yola Airport for landing, Suntai lost contact with the Control Tower and the aircraft disappeared on the radar. His subsequent efforts to ascend with the aircraft failed. Whether it was a hi-tech problem or a blunder on his part, the biggest question many have been asking is, “why must the governor be flying himself?”.

    Another issue is that the governor’s aides were flown abroad for treatment only after grim criticisms and protests from the victims’ families and other concerned Nigerians. Critics had challenged why the governor was treated “as a god while his subjects as dispensables” in an unfortunate accident which left all their mortal bodies injured. “What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander”, they held.

    Before the crash, it was an open secret that Suntai was serving a politically polarised State, split into at least six factional groups. The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), on whose platform Suntai won his first and second terms, is fragmented. The state civil service is divided into two camps, with some aligning with the governor’s opponents. Then, there is religious division.

    Suntai is a Christian, but because of the combination of his names, many take him for a Muslim faithful. Since the creation of the state on August 27, 1991, the Muslims have only played the second fiddle. There is no gainsaying that the Muslims are clamouring for a Muslim governor. The Christians, who believe they have the numerical edge over their Muslim brothers, have also been scheming how Suntai would successfully hand over the baton of power to another Christian in 2015.

    Last but not the least is ethnic politics. Taraba is made up of so many ethnic groups, with a total population of about 2.4 million. appointments are sometimes made to reflect ethnic diversity, rather than the state’s geo-political zones and or the individual’s experience. For instance, a Jukun governorship aspirant for 2015 believes the poll would be his, so also feels a Kuteb, a Kona, Fulani, Chamba, Wurukun oran Ichen.

    The state has been ruled by only two ethnic groups,: by former Jolly Nyame, a Mumuye, and Suntai of Chamba extraction. Already, the political atmosphere in Taraba is charged, with allegations that Suntai was grooming another Mumuye to succeed him when he bows out in 2015. Amid these disputations, the days ahead are really uncertain in the aftermath of the governor’s plane crash. Power abhors vacuum. If Suntai does not survive or survives with incapacitation, his deputy, a Muslim would be constitutionally sworn in as governor. If his time to recover takes too long, Umar would also be sworn as acting governor. This has been the proverbial dry meat for the people of Taraba these days as no discussion has been complete without a mention of the injured governor’s condition and what it holds for the state.

    If Umar takes charge, by freak of fate, as one analyst simply puts it: “the political direction will change”.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • I was not chased out of Govt House, says Taraba Deputy Gov

    Taraba State Deputy Governor, Alhaji Garba Umar said yesterday that he was not chased out of Government House, Jalingo by thugs. Umar, who was reacting to yesterday’s lead story of The Nation, said he left Jalingo for Yola immediately he heard about the involvement of Governor Danbaba Suntai in a plane crash. “I had to go and assist him (Suntai) to survive”, he said.

    The Nation had reported that the thugs who were not disposed to Umar succeeding Suntai in the event that he did not survive invaded the Government House to harass him. The Editor stands by the story.

    Umar who was sworn in only on October 5 in succession to the impeached Alhaji Sani Abubakar said he remains deputy governor, in spite of the governor’s condition.

    “I am not in acting capacity. I am still the deputy governor despite the air mishap involving my boss. And I can’t be sworn in as acting governor of Taraba State because my boss is still alive. I don’t even wish that to happen. It has been my prayers that he recovers speedily”.

    “I was not attacked by thugs on the evening my boss was involved in the accident. There was no attack on me on the day my boss was involved in the plane crash. And there has been no attack at all on me in Jalingo or elsewhere. I want to reiterate here categorically that on the said night I was in Yola where my boss was in the hospital.

    Umar said: “You know very well that I can’t receive such news on my boss and I will sit here in Jalingo …doing what? I was in Yola to assist him, and for your information there are no thugs in Taraba to do such act”.

     

  • Taraba grapples with flood, blasts

    Taraba grapples with flood, blasts

    Hit by flood and a rash of bomb blasts, fate has been unkind to Taraba State lately.

    No fewer than 19 persons died in the flood in the state, which swept through several parts of the country. About 12 people are still missing in the state, while 218 villages were wrecked by the waters in eight of its 16 local government areas. It is reckoned that 69,640 persons were directly affected in the disaster.

    The affected local government areas are Ardo-Kola, Ibi, Wukari, Gassol, Lau, Karim-Lamido, Kurmi and Sardauna.

    But as the people grieved, Jalingo, the state capital, was rocked by explosions, its fourth experience since the Boko Haram hostilities began. At least eight persons were injured in the blast in Mallam Joda, a rustic suburb of the state capital.

    The bomb hit the usually quiet community just a day after another bomb rocked Dorowa, a 24-hour bubbling ghetto in the spine of the capital city.

    The victims included petty traders and commercial sex workers in the vicinity. Apart from the building, food, drinks, cigarette, kola-nut, condoms were ruined.

    Eyewitnesses said a bomb was detonated at dusk time in a drinking outlet in Mallam Joda in the same fashion as the Dorowa incident.

    Police posts and government structures had been the targets of terror attacks, but recently local brew bars, patronised by fun seekers, have become an attraction in the state.

    Police spokesman in the state, Amos Alaoye, in a chat with Newsextra, said: “The state command has arrested some suspects who are in the custody, in connection with the bombings”.

    Residents think some of the suspected bombers may live in the neighbourhoods, probably making their explosives locally.

    Many residents have been living in fear since the area became a scene of bomb blasts.

    Grappling with the security challenge in the affected districts has not been easy, it was learnt.

    A government official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told Newsextra how his younger brother may have foiled a bomb attack on his wife’s business joint. He said some suspected bombers first went to his wife’s drinking place but were not allowed to settle down by his younger brother who said he noticed their unusual dressing and behaviour. No sooner had they left the place than the sound of a bomb blast was heard outside the shop.

    The source said: “When I was returning home from work, my younger brother called me, saying that he has seen a strange person in my wife’s place. I asked him how strange the intruder was; he said they looked like Boko Haram members, so he chased them away. He insisted I must come back quickly because they were afraid”

    “In less than 10 minutes before I could return, I heard a bomb explode close to my wife’s joint and the same person who was chased away by my younger brother was among the two people the youths arrested and handed over to the policemen who rushed to the scene of the blast”.

    The explosions have paralysed the Taraba state capital. The bustle that characterised Dorowa, for instance, has vanished. It is said with only N50, one could eat a plate of food in Dorowa and be satisfied. But since the blasts, things have changed, said Agnes, a resident.

    Dozens of persons have fled the state capital in the aftermath of the blasts. This is not good for a state that was already traumatised by flood, which destroyed houses and vast farmlands as well as livestock.

    The pandemonium resulting from the blasts has refused to leave Jalingo people, who have now moderated their operations, especially at night.

    It would be recalled that on April 30, a bomber rode on a motorcycle and hit the convoy of the former state Commissioner of Police, Mr. Mamman Sule.

    At least 11 persons were killed in the early morning suicide attack, which appeared to be targeted at the police chief who was newly redeployed to Jalingo. Twenty persons were seriously injured, including a police corporal Usman Suleiman who was the outrider on the commissioner’s convoy. The bomber was also blown up by the blast that sent the city to sleep as soon as it woke up for the day’s activities.

    There was another bombing on May 11. Although, there were no casualties, the panic paralysed the economic and social life of the once peaceful people. Two suspected bombers reportedly drove past a police van before dropping an explosive. It was gathered that the timing was miscalculated, so the bomb exploded a few seconds after the police van had passed the scene.

    After those bombings, the terrorists changed tactics: in the last blasts, they struck at night.

    The flood is a different disaster. President Goodluck Jonathan has visited the camps of flood disaster victims in Taraba. He was in Lau, where seven people died.

    The president cheered up the people, saying flood is a natural disaster, which ravages even developed nations.

    “My personal residence is now under water,” he told the people.

    Jonathan put Taraba in category B’, alongside Jigawa, Kano, Bauchi, Kaduna, Niger, Nasarawa, Cross River, Edo, Lagos and Imo states in the ranks of desolation by flood.

    But Commissioner for Information, Mr. Emmanuel Bello said Taraba was relegated in the grouping.

    “We have the worst scenario of the flood disaster and ought to have been in category A or even A plus”, he said, explaining that the longest stretch of River Benue is found in the hinterlands of Taraba which caused devastations that many people especially passers-by have not seen.

    Executive Secretary, State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), Nuvalga Dan Habu, said “10 persons were drowned in Karim-Lamido, seven died in Lau, while two perished in Gassol. Twelve persons are still missing; 28,139 persons have been displaced”.

    It was gathered that a bridge and 50 culverts collapsed to the flood even as 13 roads were either submerged or covered by debris, affecting the movement of people and traffic. Also 49 schools submerged by the flood, which has kept several pupils and students outside the classrooms.

    The flood also destroyed about 3,051 livestock, 80,764 farmlands, 26 churches and 27 mosques as well as 14 clinics in Taraba, said SEMA.

    Mama Hebbini Ciroma, an over 100-year-old resident of Karim-Lamido Local Government Area is among the victims. She said the last time she saw flood was about 85 years ago when she got married.

    “But the flood wasn’t up to this magnitude,” she said.

    Some expectant mothers gave birth in the camps without healthcare services. In 2005, flood destroyed the Nukai-Jalingo Bridge, killing 105 people, including a senior lecturer and deputy commissioner of police.

  • New Deputy Governor sworn-in for Taraba

    New Deputy Governor sworn-in for Taraba

    Alhaji Garba Umar, a businessman and politician, has been sworn-in as the new Deputy Governor of Taraba State.

    Presiding over the ceremony at the Dome of the Jallingo Motel on Friday, Gov. Danbaba Suntai urged the new deputy governor to live up to the dictates of the oath of office he swore to.

    He said that it was the beginning of a new chapter in the history of Taraba State and urged all to rally round government to ensure that the interest of the state was put first.

    Suntai said that as the number two officer in the State, Garba was expected to carry the people along in harmony with the PDP, the ruling party in the State.

    In his acceptance speech, the new deputy governor pledged total loyalty to the Governor as well as the people of the State.

    NAN reports that Garba’s appointment followed the impeachment on Thursday of the former Deputy Governor, Alhaji Sani Abubakar, based on allegations of gross misconduct levelled against him by the State lawmakers.

    The State’s Acting Chief Judge, Justice Josephine Tuktur, administered the oath of office on Garba at a crowded ceremony amidst tight security. (NAN)

  • Taraba deputy governor impeached

    Taraba deputy governor impeached

    Taraba State House of Assembly on Thursday impeached the state Deputy Governor, Alhaji Sani Abubakar.

    His impeachment  followed the assembly’s adoption of the recommendation of the seven-member Judicial Commission of inquiry set up by Justice Josephine Tuktur, the acting Chief Judge of the state.

    The commission, with Mr Usman Dangiri as Chairman, was set up to investigate allegations of gross misconduct against the deputy governor.

    Dangiri, submitted the findings of the panel to the plenary sitting of the assembly on Thursday, saying that the deputy governor was found guilty of the three allegations against him.

    Mr Charlse Maijankai, the House’ Majority Leader, representing Karim I Constituency, moved the motion for the adoption of the report.

    The report said Abubakar used his office to divert MDG projects to Yagai Academy, a private school, which belonged to him.

    Similarly, the report stated that the deputy governor was guilty of using his office to influence the posting of an officer and interfering in the affairs of his Karim-Lamido Local Government .

    It said the interference was to the extent that the communities were complaining of the negative attitude of the officer.

    On the third allegation of the inability of the deputy governor to convene a meeting of the state Boundary Commission, the panel described it as incompetence on his part.

    Twenty of the 24 members of the assembly voted in favour of the report.

    Mr Istifanus Gbana, the Speaker, thereafter announced that “by virtue of section 188 (9) of the 1999 Constitution, the deputy governor stands removed.”

    Gbana directed the clerk of the house to communicate the decision to the governor, the deputy governor, the commissioner of police and the director, State Security Service for further action. (NAN)

  • NDIC builds varsity lab in Taraba

    NDIC builds varsity lab in Taraba

    The Nigeria Deposit Insurance Corporation (NDIC) has built and donated a science laboratory complex to the Kwararafa University, a community-based varsity in Wukari, Taraba State.

    The edifice is worth N20 million, the chairman, Board of Trustees (BOT), Dr. Samuel Danjuma Gani stated in Wukari during its launch.

    Gani was represented by the BOT Secretary, Mr. Timothy Agbu.

    He said the Kwararafa University was approved as a private university by the Federal Executive Council of Nigeria in June, 2005. The institution became operational in March 2006, with 61 students and two colleges: Natural Sciences and Management/Social Sciences.

    The Vice-Chancellor of Kwararafa University, Prof. Yakubu Ochefu said: “the donation was a testimony that NDIC shares a vision for educational development, particularly in promoting science and technology”.

    Ochefu said the university needs another N27 million to furnish and equip the laboratory building. He urged other stakeholders and the government to emulate NDIC by supportingh the university.

    NDIC Managing Director, Alhaji Umaru Ibrahim, decried the fact that most institutions of learning in Nigeria lack infrastructural facilities, resulting in poor standards of education.

    “It is against this background that it became necessary for corporate organisations and well meaning individuals and groups – within and outside the country to come to the aid of our educational institutions”, he said while commissioning the edifice.

    Ibrahim, who was represented by the Director, Legal and Board Secretary of the NDIC, Mr. Alheri Bulus Nyako, commended the leadership of the university for “judiciously utilizing the fund (N20 million) provided to the university by the corporation”.

    He added that “the Kwararafa University is among the foremost Nigerian educational institutions in the training, development and education of our youth”.

    The Dean, College of Natural and Applied Sciences, Prof. Innocent Adikwu said the project will spur the school’s academic performance. “It is a complete project, in which our students and teachers will benefit”, he said.

    The Basic Sciences Laboratory Complex has three laboratories; one each for Physics, Chemistry and Biology; five offices and a storage and reagents room for the chemistry and biology laboratories.

    Kwararafa University, formerly known as the Jubilee University, is among the 36 lucky beneficiaries of the NDIC’s revamped project-based support programme.

    The NDIC is a safety-net player in the financial system of the country. It guarantees banks’ deposits, supervises insured institutions and resolves the problems of failing and or failed financial institutions.

    In pursuance of its corporate social responsibility and in an effort to promote educational excellence in tertiary institutions in the country, the NDIC in 1994 instituted an Endowment Fund and Prize Award for select institutions. Under the scheme, N500 thousand was granted to each of the beneficiaries. The amount was later increased to N1.5M, in which 31 institutions benefitted.

    The corporation in 2003, having observed the deteriorating condition of infrastructural facilities in the institutions of higher learning, it reappraised the scheme by giving financial assistance to institutions of higher learning for the development of academic related projects initiated by the institutions.

    It started with N10 million per beneficiary and later raised the amount to N20 million, to ensure that a notable project was executed.

    At the moment, about 36 universities and polytechnics spread across the six geo-political zones of the country have benefitted from the NDIC’s revamped project-based support programme.

  • Taraba Assembly directs CJ to set up panel  against Deputy Governor

    Taraba Assembly directs CJ to set up panel against Deputy Governor

    The Taraba State House of Assembly yesterday continued impeachment proceedings against Deputy Governor Alhaji Abubakar Sani Danladi. The lawmakers directed the Chief Judge of the state, Justice Josephine Tuktur as a matter of urgency, to constitute an investigative panel that will probe Danladi’s alleged offences. The deputy governor was on September 4, served with an impeachment notice, for alleged “gross misconduct, sharp practices and lack of capacity to function as a deputy governor”. He was given 14 days to satisfactorily respond, failure which he would be impeached.

    The deadline expired on Tuesday, a day after he (Danladi) was stopped from receiving the national honour of the Officer of the Order of the Federal Republic (OFR) by President Goodluck Jonathan.

    The directive (on the judiciary) followed Danladi’s response to the impeachment notice, which compelled the legislators who are on recess to convene an emergency sitting at about 9.30p.m last night. The dusk plenary was attended by 21 members, who formed quorum.

    Having deliberated on Danladi’s reply, which lasted for several hours, the Assembly members unanimously decided that the Judiciary should come in as an arbiter to investigate all the allegations that led to the impeachment process and whether the House’s moves were lawfully.

    19, out of the 23-member House had signed the impeachment notice. But yesterday the two members that initially refused to sign the impeachment notice appended their signatures on the document.

    To give Danladi fair hearing, the judiciary was given three months to carry out their investigation, which the House said they will abide by the outcome of the findings.

     

  • Taraba: Will national honours bring reconciliation

    Taraba: Will national honours bring reconciliation

    TODAY, the Taraba State  Deputy Governor Alhaji

    Abubakar Sani Danladi is being honoured by the President in Abuja. But, at home there is fire on the mountain as he is facing impeachment proceedings.
    Taraba State Governor, Danbaba Danfulani Suntai, a pharmacist; his deputy, Alhaji Abubakar Sani Danladi and Senator representing Taraba South, Emmanuel Bwacha are among the 149 Nigerians shortlisted to receive national honours today.

    Suntai and Bwacha are recipients for the Commander of the Order of the Niger (CON) while Danladi is to bag the Officer of the Order of the Federal Republic (OFR). But Danladi’s mood will certainly be that of mixed feelings, when he is being decorated. The State House of Assembly has served him an impeachment notice, for what it allegedly termed “gross misconduct, sharp practices and lack of capacity to function as a deputy governor”.

    The national honours were instituted by the National Honours Act No. 5 of 1964, during the Nigerian First Republic, to honour Nigerians who have rendered services to the benefit of the nation. Since then, it has been the practice for the president to confer a set of orders and decorations upon honest and credible Nigerians as well as friends of Nigeria who have contributed immensely to national development.

    The general view is that the 2012 list of honourees, contains names of a few impeccable Nigerians, as well as corrupt personalities, including those who are being probed by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for alleged graft and other contraventions. This implies that decorating people of questionable characters means the national honours have lost the respect and sincerity for which it was instituted for.

    Danladi’s case is equally one of alleged fraud and dishonesty –to his state and national development. Is he still qualified to be decorated by the presidency, after being served with the impeachment notice? What could be of Danladi’s national honour, if, after bagging the OFR, he is pruned of his job by the legislature? Will the embattled deputy shy away from such an honour? No. He told The Nation he would receive the award. If he does, what will be his mood and the reaction of his boss (Suntai), who is said to have implored the legislature to carry out the curious impeachment process?

    But how will the Assembly feel if the allegations turn out to be falsehood and unimpeachable offences? By every indication, Sani will not return to celebrate his award as number two citizen of the state. He was given 14 days, beginning from Tuesday, September 4, to respond satisfactorily or face impeachment. The impeachment threat is more apolitical than a constitutional matter and thus, his survival chances are slim, The Nation learnt.

    Nevertheless, here comes an opportunity to heal the divisions. The National Honours award has set a stage for Danladi to reconcile with his boss and by extension, the state Assembly, to wave off his sins and at worse, caution him.

    Danladi is particularly being accused of using his office to divert MDG facilities meant for the state, such as MDG ICT centre, a motorised borehole and solar street lamps project to his private School, Yagai Academy.

    The legislators alleged that the deputy governor used his office to acquire a large parcel of land in Jalingo on which he built the Yagai Academy with multi-million-naira business ventures, such as Yagai Water, Yagai Printing Press and Yagai Restaurant, arguing that his total emolument as deputy governor could not justify the ventures.
    The Taraba State Assembly is usually perceived by many as a tamed, toothless and ineffectual appendage of the executive. It was therefore a surprise when last week the legislature bared its fangs and brandished an impeachment dagger at the deputy governor.

    The handwriting on the wall is crystal clear: Suntai is done with Danladi, and wants a substitute, his kitchen cabinet members have said. Sani’s sins, according to reliable sources, are many. His romance with Senators Aisha Alhassan and Tutare Abubakar as well as the former State Chairman of the PDP, Alhaji Abdulmumini Vaki. The romance is perceived as unhealthy to the Suntai government.

    Alhassan, who represents Taraba North in the senate and Tutare, who represents Taraba Central, have formed a stiff opposition bloc against the governor, with an eye on 2015. They fell apart with the governor during the last PDP congresses in the state where they accused the governor and his cohorts of sidelining them in the composition of party executives in their various senatorial districts.

    The political atmosphere in Taraba is already charged with scheming upon scheming. Suntai, who hails from the same zone with Tutare is making plans to go into the senate when he bows out in 2015, after serving two terms as governor.

    Tutare wants to be returned. Fierce acrimony and ruthless spite have rancorously plagued the body politic of state. The gladiators are all members of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), but ferocious campaigns for 2015 have ingrained a deep crack in the ruling party in the state.

    Reliable sources said the deputy governor allegedly held a meeting with Alhassan in Saudi Arabia during the last Umrah, to plot Suntai’s downfall. On getting knowledge of the development, an angrily disappointed Suntai truculently deployed his paraphernalia to oust Danladi, whom he reportedly said he had lost confidence in. But Danladi has debunked the allegation.

    The governor on Friday fired Vaki’s wife, who was his Senior Adviser, from office. “This is just the beginning of the end of our adversaries, including the deputy”, one of the governor’s aides said, adding that “Danladi’s removal is long overdue and oga (governor) is already shopping for his substitute”.

    The state PDP Chairman, Mr. Victor Bala told The Nation that he would wade into the crisis. But his promise sounded more of a political statement. “I am going to do something about it. If the children are quarrelling, the father has to intervene”, he said. Bala decried the fact that the issue was not just a party squabble, hence 19 out of the 23-member House, including the deputy governor’s kinsmen from Karim-Lamido Local Government area and non-PDP lawmakers, signed the impeachment notice.

    As Danladi receives his national honour, the state is keen to see how he will foil the impeachment process against him. If he does survive it, analysts have said, it would not be due to being political savvy but out of sheer sympathy from his boss (Suntai). Perhaps the national honours award will set a stage to pave the way for reconciliation.