Tag: tragedies

  • Avoidable tragedies

    Avoidable tragedies

    • We can do with fewer building collapses if governments and citizens play their parts well

    In what has become a reflexive and routine response during such now frequent occurrences, the Governor of Oyo State, Mr Seyi Makinde, and the Olubadan of Ibadan, Oba Akinloye

    Owolabi Olakulehin, Ige Olakulehin 1, sent separate condolence messages to victims and families of those affected by the collapse of a building in Ibadan, the state capital, early this month. At least 13 persons are reported to have lost their lives and several others injured in the tragic incident which occurred around 2am in the Jegede Olunloyo community in Ona Ara Local Government Area, while officers of the Oyo State Fire Agency rescued seven persons alive.

    Both the Oyo State governor and the Ibadan monarch described the building collapse as avoidable and inexcusable, and the governor promised that the incident would be thoroughly investigated by the state authorities to determine its cause and forestall future occurrences.

    But, despite such messages of sympathy and promises of fact-finding probes when such tragedies happened anywhere in the country in the past, building collapse continues to be an alarmingly recurring phenomenon across Nigeria.

    For instance, on Monday, November 4, a two-storey building under construction collapsed at about 2pm at the Egela Mgbaraba area of Ogbogoro community in Obio/Akpor Local Government Area of Rivers State. The incident occurred while contractors were working on the site, resulting in the death of one worker while another sustained serious injuries. Three weeks before this, another building was reported to have collapsed at the Iriebe axis of the same local government area, although no life was lost in that case.

    Apart from condoling the family of the deceased victim of the November 4 building collapse, the Rivers State government has sealed the premises of the structure and declared the property developer, Vincent Nwoye, wanted. The state commissioner for physical planning and urban development, Mr Evans Bipi, accused the developer of gross negligence and violation of the building laws and regulations of the state, including failure to obtain government-approved building plan, and use of substandard materials.

    Read Also: TETFund rakes N1.5trn as education tax in 2024

    Initial eyewitness accounts at the building collapse site reported that the foundation of the building was only three feet deep, which is inadequate for a two-storey building; insufficient cement was used in casting the first decking; the decking was not chained and had no centre beam or pillar in the middle while the quality of iron rods was below the required standard. According to Mr Bipi, “The government has sealed this property in question and declared the owner wanted because a life has been lost; we need to question him to know why he chose to use substandard materials to execute the project and why he decided to use a 12mm rod for a 2-storey building.

    “It would interest the public to know that even the property does not have government approval; it is something the government will not take lightly; we will use this developer as a scapegoat for others to learn“.

    But then, the ire of the Rivers State government must be directed not only at the property developer, if the allegations are proven to be true, but also to the leaders and staff of the regulatory agencies which have the responsibility of monitoring and ensuring adherence to stipulated laws, building codes and quality of materials by property developers.

     Incidentally, the preliminary causal factors identified in the Rivers State building collapse have also been severally cited as being responsible for the high number of such occurrences, particularly in urban areas across the country.

    It is disturbing that those found culpable in the scores of previous building collapses have hardly ever been prosecuted to serve as a deterrence to those who violate building codes and regulations with impunity at various levels.

    There must be a coordinated effort spearheaded by government to get all stakeholders in the construction industry to collectively seek solutions to these challenges. We endorse the recommendation by the Building Collapse Prevention Guild that state governments should adapt and enforce the National Building Code since this is a problem that affects the entire country.

  • 33 killed in Sallah tragedies

    33 killed in Sallah tragedies

    •Truck runs into worshippers, crushes two •Policeman lynched in bid to rescue driver from mob •Boko Hara hits IDP camp, stabs 11 to death •Auto crash claims 19 lives •Six injured as Ifeanyi Ubah FC’s van collides with passenger vehicle

    One Boko Haram attack. Three auto accidents. Thirty-three deaths. Several injuries.

    The foregoing was the situation in parts of Borno, Ogun and Edo states yesterday after Boko Haram terrorists attacked an Internally Displaced Persons (IDP’s) camp at Banki on Nigeria’s border with Cameroon, stabbing 11 to death, and a timber laden truck ploughed into a crowd of Muslims at Eid el Kabir prayers in Ijebu Igbo, Ogun State.

    Two children worshippers were instantly.

    Enraged by the development, other worshippers swooped on the truck driver in order to lynch him, but they ended up clubbing to death one of the policemen from Ijebu-Igbo Police Divisional Headquarters who came to the driver’s aid.

    The deceased policeman’s colleagues gave his name as Joseph Adejuwon.

    Eyewitnesses said the truck was navigating a hilly road on the seedy Atikori area when it veered off the road and crashed into a packed vehicle before mowing down the two victims.

    Several other people were injured.

    An official of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), who did not want to be identified by name, said two pedestrians were killed on the spot.

    He said: “The crash occurred with a truck killing two on the spot. I learnt that a mob (gathered) and became irate, even preventing security operatives access to the scene.”

    Speaking separately, the Public Relations Officer of the state’s traffic agency, TRACE, Mr Babatunde Akinbiyi, said the driver of the truck lost control following a break failure, and first crashed into a stationary Toyota car before running over the worshippers.

    He said: “This morning, just before the Eid prayer at the Atikori praying ground, Ijebu-Igbo, a Bedford truck with Registration Number AA523JGB laden with logs had a break failure, lost control and ran into a parked Toyota Thundra with Registration number APP995DD.

    “It damaged the Toyota before running over two children at the praying ground, killing them while several other Muslim faithful sustained various degree of injuries, including some security operatives.

    “According to the Chairman of the Local Government, Hon. Adekoya, both the dead and the injured, including a Civil Defence officer, were taken to the general hospital in Ijebu Igbo while the deceased police officer died on arrival at Shilom, a private hospital.”

    The Ogun State Police Public Relations Officer, Abimbola Oyeyemi, said the deceased policeman was an orderly to a Divisional Police Officer.

    Oyeyemi said the driver of the truck had been arrested.

     

    Boko Haram men stab 11 IDPs to death in Borno

    Members of the deadly Boko Haram sect sneaked into IDPs camp at Banki on Nigeria’s border with Cameroon on Thursday night, stabbing 11 people to death.

    The camp is home to more than 45,000 people.

    Reports yesterday said the terrorists, at about 11.30pm on Thursday, smashed the barricade protecting the camp and descended on helpless IDPs.

    Eleven people were killed while two others were wounded before soldiers guarding the camp were alerted to chase them.

    They went away with food items meant for the IDPs.

    It was gathered that the hoodlums resorted to the use of knives as against guns to avoid alerting soldiers.

    A victim however raised the alarm, attracting the attention of the soldiers who responded accordingly.

    Banki is 130 kilometres (80 miles) southeast of Maiduguri, the Borno State capital.

     

    19 die in auto crash in Edo, says FRSC

    Twenty hours to the celebration of the Eid-el-Kabir, 19 people, including five children, died in a separate auto accident at Ogoneki, off the Asaba-Benin Expressway in Edo State.

    The accident, which involved a trailer and a passenger bus, occurred at 4.30 pm, according to the state sector Commander of the Federal Road Safety Corps (FRSC), Mr. Samuel Odukoya.

    He said 24 persons were trapped in the accident.

    Sixteen of the victims died on Thursday while three others gave up the ghost in a hospital yesterday.

    Five others sustained various degrees of injury.

    “The trip was from Benin to Auchi and the cause of the accident was attributed to dangerous overtaking,” Odukoya said.

    “Three females, 11 males, a female child and four male children were killed in the accident, while five men were injured and have been taken to the hospital.”

    The third accident involved a Nissan Civilian bus conveying players and officials of Ifeanyi Ubah Football Club to Ijebu Ode, Ogun State.

    The team was on its way to the city for the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) Match Day 36 fixture with Sunshine Stars of Akure billed for tomorrow.

    The club’s Chairman, Chuma Ubah, who described the incident as pathetic and excruciating, said the team was coming out of the trauma.

    He assured their fans that two of the seriously affected players of the team were responding to treatment while others and their fans had continued to support the team.

    Ubah, in a statement, said: “Sequel to the reports making the rounds this morning, we wish to confirm that FC Ifeanyi Ubah’s team bus conveying the players and officials was involved in an auto accident.

    “The accident occurred along Benin/Ore Expressway while we were on our way to Ijebu Ode to honour the Nigeria Professional Football League (NPFL) Match Day 36 fixture with Sunshine Stars billed for Sunday, Sept. 3.

    “Six of our players sustained varying degrees of injuries and two that are unconscious hitherto have regained consciousness and are receiving treatment presently at the closest medical facility near the scene of the accident.

    “We wish to express our felicitations for your concern, support, show of emotions, deepest thoughts and prayers at this sad time,” he said.

    Ubah said the club would come up with decisions on the matter as related to their ability to honour the match as scheduled.

  • And they feast on our human tragedies

    The suspension of Mr. Babachir Lawal as Secretary to the Federal Government of the Federation came four months after the publication of this piece on December 24, 2017. When Lawal arrogantly and dismissively his suspension with now famous “who is The Presidency?” rant, it was in line with same malignant stupidity he exhibited when reacting to his initial indictment by the Senate. Now that ‘The Presidency” seems to have cut his oversized Babariga, I hope those who think they are above the law would learn one or two lessons about the transience of power from the fall of the government’s scribe no matter how temporary his ouster may be. Notwithstanding the four-month, the piece remains relevant todays and it should serve as a reminder to Lawal in case he has forgotten when the shoes began to pinch him. Read on….

    It is that time of the year when Christians all over the world feast and celebrate the birth of Christ, the reason for the season. But, interestingly and just like it happened last year, not many people are in celebratory mood in the country. If anything, they just appreciate the grace of being alive in a year that has consumed many lives in mysterious circumstances. As I write this, many civil servants, their families and dependents are faced with the reality of a bleak Christmas. Their stories may not even change going into the New Year as the governments, both in the states, local and federal, owe some categories of staff backlog of salaries. The lucky ones, who get paid as and when due, face immense pressure with demands from loved ones who simply desire to have some food on the table. The story has been the same for the second year running in the life of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration that promises to etch a permanent smile on the faces of a people that have been traumatised in countless years of hope deferred. The tragic irony is that no one knows if this harvest of firm grip on grim hope would ever stop especially with the salacious, shameless and ego deflating tales coming from the government’s inner room.

    The latest of those sorry tales is the allegation that no less a personality than the government’s Number One ombudsman and an unabashed advocate for the naming and shaming of corrupt public officials, Mr. Babachir Lawal, has his ten fingers soaked in the bloody rivers of corruption. Of course, one wouldn’t have bothered if the allegation had been made by any of those innocuous civil society groups masquerading as social crusaders. I am equally sure that the matter wouldn’t have generated the furore it attracted if the lawmakers at the upper legislative chamber of the land had not asked Lawal to ‘step down’ and defend his integrity in the court of public opinion.

    It is also not impossible that Lawal wouldn’t have come out threatening fire and brimstone over an allegation he has described as ‘balderdash and absolutely nonsense’ had he been put to the stakes by an unknown quantity in the public space. But when senators gang up against you on any matter, it is definitely not a time to keep calm. By the way, let me state that I do not have any problem with the egotistical rant by the President of the Senate, Dr. Bukola Saraki who seized the opportunity to paint Buhari as a humbled leader desperately seeking rapprochement with an estranged Senate. We must understand it was Saraki’s time to exhale. And didn’t he do it so well in his seemingly audacious condemnation of Lawal’s denigration of the duties and responsibilities of the emperors in the hallowed chambers? Even if Buhari is petulantly outraged, that anger should be unleashed on Lawal who, through his indiscretion, provided a veritable platform for Saraki to bleat and gloat with relish.

    For, if we must say the truth, Saraki was right when he juxtaposed the indignant heresy of Lawal’s posture against the distinguished lawmakers to Buhari’s recent plea for cooperation and understanding. Having been smitten several times with the rejection of some of his proposals including the outright refusal to approve the nomination of Ibrahim Magu as Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Lawal’s ‘indictment’ by the Senator Shehu Sani led Ad-hoc Committee on Mounting Humanitarian Crisis in the North-East is, no doubt, an added burden on the shoulders of a traumatised Presidency.

    Yet, this piece is not about those who have seized the opportunity to gain political mileage from the horrifying imprudence of one of Buhari’s trusted men. It is more about the despicable act of feasting on the nation’s worsening humanitarian crisis by mostly privileged Nigerians. For those who have not read the interim report submitted by the 11-man committee including Senator Oluremi Tinubu, the report is not just about how Lawal allegedly awarded questionable land clearing contracts worth over N200 million to a firm in which he was a sole signatory to the accounts even as a retired ‘Director’ following his appointments as SGF.

    Those questioning the rationale behind the focus on the SGF’s firm miss the point. When you take up the image of a vociferous voice of an administration that vows to wrestle corruption to a pin fall, you do not give any room for those you are fighting to tar you with the brush of the poster boy for corrosive corruption. Unfortunately, that is the unflattering position Babachir has found himself by allowing a company with interest in information and communication technology to be involved in a multi-million naira contract for the ‘removal of invasive plant species in Komadugu, Yobe Water Channels.’

    How, we ask, does this white elephant project help alleviate the abject nay crying poverty afflicting the over 5 million Internally Displaced Persons in this region? Why waste such money, precisely N223m according to the findings of the committee, when some of the strong members of the IDPs would have done the job for lesser fees as a form of empowerment? And why should the contract go to a firm in which Babachir has interest if what was at play was nothing but banal cronyism? We may not understand the damage this form of attitude has wrought on the psyche of the vulnerable persons in those camps if we continue to focus on the politics of an indictment of one powerful individual in Buhari’s government.

    In its report, the committee noted, among others, that ‘there is hunger, diseases, squalor, deprivation and want amongst the IDPs; that there was vivid absence of the Federal Ministry of Health in all camps visited; that despite the claim by some Federal government agencies to the effect that huge sum of money is being spent on IDPs in the North East, what is on the ground as seen by the Committee does not justify/reflect the claims; and that all contracts from the Presidential Initiative on North East (PINE) were awarded under the principle of emergency situation as stipulated in Section 43 (i) & (ii) but with absolute disregard to Sub-section (iii) & (iv) of the same Section 43 of the Public Procurement Act, 2007 which demands that all procurements made under emergencies shall be handled with explanation but along principles of accountability, due consideration being given to the gravity of each emergency.’

    We ought not to lose sight of the implication of the findings on our collective humanity. In simple terms, the Shehu Sani committee has painted a worrying scenario in which care givers systematically ruin the future of these estimated 5.1 million helpless Nigerians for nothing other than selfish acquisition of wealth. As if that is not enough, the Senate committee report exposed a systemic rot in which the high and mighty with the connivance of their cronies persist in inflicting deep pains on these victims of a deadly war. Add that to the recently released video of underfed soldiers in the Boko Haram warfront and you will shiver at how some people still find it convenient to feast on this harvest of humanitarian tragedies that debase our humanity.

    Change, I must emphasise, cannot happen if all we do is bicker and flex muscles over the double-faced cant of an SGF who should have walked the integrity lane by resigning his appointment to clear his name. Well, he never did until a justifiably purloined Presidency ordered him to step aside. But can we really blame him for refusing to commit economic suicide by vacating his juicy post? Has Saraki resigned as President of the Senate even while facing corruption charges at the Code of Conduct Tribunal? Did the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara vacate his office to allow for an independent inquest into mind-boggling allegations of graft by the leadership in the case of budget padding brought against it by suspended Abdulmumin Jibrin? And did it not take intense pressure on the National Judicial Council before judges accused of engaging in corrupt practices were asked to step down to face charges at the courts?

    So, while we mull our fate in this season, it is important we also interrogate issues raised by the Senate ad-hoc committee on the plight of the IDPs in the North-East if we must prevent a continuation of this seeming official larceny. So, we ask, could it be true that most of the contracts awarded by the Presidential Initiative on North East have no direct bearing/impact to the lives of the displaced persons? Did PINE take undue advantage of the provision of emergency situation contract award in the Public Procurement Act, 2007 to over inflate contracts? And would this government of change and transparency implement the committee’s 9-point recommendations on the way forward with the aim of stopping this callous malfeasance at the peril of a beaten, wasted and hopeless remnant of a senseless war? Or do we just wish this away as privileges the rich enjoy over the poor in their insatiable quest for wealth? One thing is clear: the Senator Sani committee has offered us how best to halt this feast on the graves of the living dead.

    The question is: would the government ignore the messenger including Saraki’s zinger and tackle the message? Four months after, the government appeared to have finally seen the sense in what its embattled SGF brusquely dismissed as mere ‘balderdash and absolute nonsense.’ The public can’t wait to unravel the mystery behind the N200 million grass cutting contract that remains baffling till today. What is clear is that the Vice President Yemi Osinbajo investigative committee has its job cut out for it. We wait, with bated breath; to see if the committee will live its promise to discharge that onerous task without fear or favour in addition to showing that sense of purpose that ‘The Presidency’ is powerful enough to rein in the noisemakers and empty barrels who make the loudest noise within its fold!

  • And they feast on our human tragedies

    And they feast on our human tragedies

    It is that time of the year when Christians all over the world feast and celebrate the birth of Christ, the reason for the season. But, interestingly and just like it happened last year, not many people are in celebratory mood in the country. If anything, they just appreciate the grace of being alive in a year that has consumed many lives in mysterious circumstances. As I write this, many civil servants, their families and dependents are faced with the reality of a bleak Christmas. Their stories may not even change going into the new year as the governments, both in the states, local and federal, owe some categories of staff backlog of salaries.

    The lucky ones, who get paid as and when due, face immense pressure with demands from loved ones who simply desire to have some food on the table. The story has been the same for the second year running in the life of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration that promises to etch a permanent smile on the faces of a people that have been traumatized in countless years of hope deferred. The tragic irony is that no one knows if this harvest of firm grip on grim hope would ever stop especially with the salacious, shameless and ego deflating tales coming from the government’s inner room.

    The latest of those sorry tales is the allegation that no less a personality than the government’s Number One ombudsman and an unabashed advocate for the naming and shaming of corrupt public officials, Mr. Babachir Lawal, has his ten fingers soaked in the bloody rivers of corruption. Of course, one wouldn’t have bothered if the allegation had been made by any of those innocuous civil society groups masquerading as social crusaders. I am equally sure that the matter wouldn’t have generated the furore it is presently attracting if the lawmakers at the upper legislative chamber of the land had not asked Lawal to ‘step down’ and defend his integrity in the court of public opinion.

    It is also not impossible that Lawal wouldn’t have come out threatening fire and brimstone over an allegation he has described as ‘balderdash and absolutely nonsense’ had he been put to the stakes by an unknown quantity in the public space. But when senators gang up against you on any matter, it is definitely not a time to keep calm. By the way, let me state that I do not have any problem with the egotistical rant by the President of the Senate, Dr. Bukola Saraki who seized the opportunity to paint Buhari as a humbled leader desperately seeking rapprochement with an estranged Senate.

    We must understand it was Saraki’s time to exhale. And didn’t he do it so well in his seemingly audacious condemnation of Lawal’s denigration of the duties and responsibilities of the emperors in the hallowed chambers? Even if Buhari is petulantly outraged, that anger should be unleashed on Lawal who, through his indiscretion, provided a veritable platform for Saraki to bleat and gloat with relish.

    For, if we must say the truth, Saraki was right when he juxtaposed the indignant heresy of Lawal’s posture against the distinguished lawmakers to Buhari’s recent plea for cooperation and understanding. Having been smitten several times with the rejection of some of his proposals including the outright refusal to approve the nomination of Ibrahim Magu as Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, Lawal’s recent ‘indictment’ by the Senator Shehu Sani led Ad-hoc Committee on Mounting Humanitarian Crisis in the North-East is, no doubt, an added burden on the shoulders of a traumatised Presidency.

    Yet, this piece is not about those who have seized the opportunity to gain political mileage from the horrifying imprudence of one of Buhari’s trusted men. It is more about the despicable act of feasting on the nation’s worsening humanitarian crisis by mostly privileged Nigerians. For those who have not read the interim report submitted by the 11-man committee including Senator Oluremi Tinubu, the report is not just about how Lawal allegedly awarded questionable land clearing contracts worth over N200 million to a firm in which he was a sole signatory to the accounts even as a retired ‘Director’ following his appointments as SGF.

    Those questioning the rationale behind the focus on the SGF’s firm miss the point. When you take up the image of a vociferous voice of an administration that vows to wrestle corruption to a pin fall, you do not give any room for those you are fighting to tar you with the brush of the poster boy for corrosive corruption. Unfortunately, that is the unflattering position Babachir has found himself by allowing a company with interest in information and communication technology to be involved in a multi-million naira contract for the ‘removal of invasive plant species in Komadugu, Yobe Water Channels.’

    How, we ask, does this white elephant project help alleviate the abject nay crying poverty afflicting the over 5 million Internally Displaced Persons in this region? Why waste such money, precisely N223m according to the findings of the committee, when some of the strong members of the IDPs would have done the job for lesser fees as a form of empowerment? And why should the contract go to a firm in which Babachir has interest if what is at play is not banal cronyism? We may not understand the damage this form of attitude has wrought on the psyche of the vulnerable persons in those camps if we continue to focus on the politics of an indictment of one powerful individual in Buhari’s government. In its report, the committee noted, among others, that ‘there is hunger, diseases, squalor, deprivation and want amongst the IDPs; that there was vivid absence of the Federal Ministry of Health in all camps visited; that despite the claim by some Federal government agencies to the effect that huge sum of money is being spent on IDPs in the North East, what is on the ground as seen by the Committee does not justify/reflect the claims; and that all contracts from the Presidential Initiative on North East (PINE) were awarded under the principle of emergency situation as stipulated in Section 43 (i) & (ii) but with absolute disregard to Sub-section (iii) & (iv) of the same Section 43 of the Public Procurement Act, 2007 which demands that all procurements made under emergencies shall be handled with explanation but along principles of accountability, due consideration being given to the gravity of each emergency.’ While the ego show between the Senate and the Presidency goes on, we ought not to lose sight of the implication of the findings on our collective humanity. In simple terms, the Shehu Sani committee has painted a worrying scenario in which care givers systematically ruin the future of these estimated 5.1 million helpless Nigerians for nothing other than selfish acquisition of wealth.

    Beyond reports that food and medical items were routinely diverted, some soldiers and policemen including staff of some humanitarian bodies were recently sanctioned for sexually abusing these victims of insurgency in the most despicable cases of man’s inhumanity to his fellow human beings. As if that is not enough, the Senate committee report exposed a systemic rot in which the high and mighty with the connivance of their cronies persist in inflicting deep pains on these victims of a deadly war. Add that to the recently released video of underfed soldiers in the Boko Haram warfront and you will shiver at how some people still find it convenient to feast on this harvest of humanitarian tragedies that debase our humanity.

    Change, I must emphasise, cannot happen if all we do is bicker and flex muscles over the doublefaced cant of an SGF who should have walked the integrity lane by resigning his appointment to clear his name. But can we really blame him for refusing to commit economic suicide by vacating his juicy post? Has Saraki resigned as President of the Senate even while facing corruption charges at the Code of Conduct Tribunal? Did the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara vacate his office to allow for an independent inquest into mind-boggling allegations of graft by the leadership in the case of budget padding brought against it by suspended Abdulmumin Jibrin? And did it not take intense pressure on the National Judicial Council before judges accused of engaging in corrupt practices were asked to step down to face charges at the courts? So, while we mull our fate in this season, it is important we also interrogate issues raised by the Senate ad-hoc committee on the plight of the IDPs in the North-East if we must prevent a continuation of this seeming official larceny. So, we ask, could it be true that most of the contracts awarded by the Presidential Initiative on North East have no direct bearing/impact to the lives of the displaced persons? Did PINE take undue advantage of the provision of emergency situation contract award in the Public Procurement Act, 2007 to over inflate contracts? And would this government of change and transparency implement the committee’s 9-point recommendations on the way forward with the aim of stopping this callous malfeasance at the peril of a beaten, wasted and hopeless remnant of a senseless war? Or do we just wish this away as privileges the rich enjoy over the poor in their insatiable quest for wealth? One thing is clear: the Senator Sani committee has offered us how best to halt this feast on the graves of the living dead.

    The question is: would the government ignore the messenger including Saraki’s zinger and tackle the message? Is this government seeing sense in what its embattled SGF brusquely dismissed as mere ‘balderdash and absolute nonsense’ when his company’s N200 million role in the grass cutting contract that baffles millions of Nigerian citizens was uncovered?

  • Rescue agencies avert tragedies as multiple fire outbreaks hit Lagos

    Men of the Nigerian Fire Service and the National Emergency Management Response Agency (NEMA) yesterday averted series of tragedies that would have hit Lagos following multiple fire outbreaks across the state.

    There was a fire at a gas plant at Ajah and another at a local depot at Olodi-Apapa.

    A two-bedroom bungalow at Ejigbo was also razed yesterday.

    A loaded fuel tanker at Ikotun, which had its content spilled on the expressway, was diluted by chemicals to avoid a disaster.

    The Olodi-Apapa incident was said to have occurred at 8pm. It affected three buildings.

    It took the agencies about two hours to put out the fire.

    According to the Director, Lagos State Fire Service, Rasaq Fadipe, the fire was caused by six fully loaded tankers, which were parked at residential area.

    He said: “It happened at Edmor Street, by Wilmer Crescent in Olodi-Apapa. It affected two storey buildings and a three-storey building surrounding the open space.

    “Although this is raining season, we attended to four fire incidents today. Of the four incidents, only one was suspected to have been caused by an electrical fault at 3A Apostle Morakinyo Street, Ejigbo. It involved two bedroom flats. The firemen at Isolo responded promptly to it. One of the buildings was badly damaged, but we were able to save the other one.”

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Kano… an ancient city’s many tragedies

    Kano… an ancient city’s many tragedies

     The suicide bombing at a motor park in Kano yesterday, once again, brings to the fore the many tragedies that have befallen North’s commercial nerve centre, writes Assistant Editor OLATUNJI OLOLADE

     

    kano is breathtaking for once and only once; just past noon, while you are perching in the heart of the city centre, in a plane. In that space and at that hour, you get to see what the founders had dreamed many years before: pearl of the north, melting pot of commerce and culture, and long, open avenues forking into an ancient and yet metropolitan paradise – all within the shining veins of a city with warmth like the return of better times.

    However, cruising through the city, you get to see the perversion of that dream. Living in Kano is like sleeping in the folded petals of a poisonous flower. Ask Hafiza Shema, a traditional bone-setter. “Life in this place has become very dangerous. Death is around the corner everywhere you go,” she said.

    Yesterday’s suicide bombing in the ancient city, which left many dead and scores injured, sure confirms Shema’s view.

    The bombings in Kano have seen many desert the city. It has suffered a record high death toll and human casualties as a result of sporadic bomb attacks and gun violence in recent times. On January 20, last year, a series of coordinated attacks on security institutions and federal establishments left over 200 persons dead. In the wake of the attacks, not a few residents of Kano, natives and immigrants alike, fled the city. While many natives fled to seek safe haven with close and distant relatives in neighbouring states, immigrants to the state – from the Southeast, Southsouth and Southwest – relocated to their home states.

    The situation has deteriorated with every subsequent attack by the Boko Haram sect and every gun battle between it and the security forces in the state.

    An atmosphere of fear prevails among the city’s residents as random attacks and mafia-styled executions render the city uninhabitable.

    Not too long ago, the Joint Task Force (JTF) discovered a bomb depot during an early morning raid at Tudun Bayero by Tamburawa in Dawakin Kudu Local Government Council, few kilometers away from Kano metropolis. Shortly after the operation, Bassey Eteng, Director of State Security Service (SSS) in Kano, revealed that three suspected members of the Boko Haram sect were arrested during the operation that lasted several hours.

    According to the SSS director, “The operation was successful. We were able to discover 12-primed bomb cylinder, 12 hand held improvised explosive devices, army uniforms, some face masks, 10 electronic detonators, AK47 rifles, two pump action, submachine gun and seven bags of urea. Intelligent information also indicates that plans of these people were to launch attacks on Sallah day. Investigation is still going on.”

     

    Perversion of Kano city

     

    Life in Kano city has taken a

    turn for the worse. Until the

    first multiple bomb blasts rocked the city, residents lived without fear of being blown apart by deadly bomb devices. Today, however, every little sound causes the residents to scamper about in panic. The violence has virtually snuffed the once boisterous city of life. Residents lament total collapse of almost every industry in the city as a result of the violence and curfew imposed by the government. The usually busy streets are now deserted as early as 6.00pm. “We have no choice but to close our shops and hurry home. Nobody wants to be harassed or molested by the soldiers on the street. Even with proper identification they still go ahead and molest innocent citizens. And if you are unfortunate enough to be outside seconds after Boko Haram strikes, they won’t ask you questions, they will simply shoot you,” said Bauwa Abubakar, an animal feed dealer.

    The commercial business sector in the city has nose-dived. Banks, saloons, shopping arcades and even the local markets, to mention a few, are taking the heat as they are forced to offer skeletal services. Traders at the popular Kurmi market, for instance, lament very low patronage. This, they attribute to the declining number of patrons that visit the market.

    Reality, indeed, corroborates the traders’ complaints. For instance, the 600-year-old Kurmi market, fabled for its labyrinth of skinny alleys lined with stalls crammed with every imaginable object and enterprise, is in the throes of a record lull. Vendors and shop owners at the market blame it on the violence. Some of them, however, accuse security operatives of scaring away their customers by their overzealousness and transferred aggression on innocent citizenry in the wake of any Boko Haram attack.

    Local artists and traders at the dye-pits equally complained of their inability to make sales. Many of them complained of having lost their most loyal customers, most of whom have relocated from the city to neighbouring cities and their home states in the wake of the violence.

     

    Impact on agriculture

     

    The violence has also affected the

    state’s trade in Kola. The upsurge

    in violence has made it difficult for farmers in Kano to market their produce due to persistent insecurity in the capital city. Consequently, lots of Kolanut remain unsold, according to Yaya Haliru, a Kolanut trader. Although many farmers in the state were expectant of a bumper harvest this year, many of them dread the situation whereby they won’t be able to find any market for their crops. “If the current situation persists, it will severely hamper crop sales for many farmers,” stated Anid Bako, a large scale grocer.

    The crisis in the North has forced some of the crop farmers and pastoralists to abandon their lands and relocate to the neighbouring countries of Niger, Chad and Cameroun. In March, the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) said about 65 per cent of northern farmers had migrated to the South because of the insecurity they faced.

    The agency warned that the country faced a famine by the end of this year because most of the small-scale farmers and mechanised farmers in the Nigeria’s northeast are threatened by terrorist attacks. “The attacks on these farmers who produce beans, onions, pepper, maize, rice, livestock and catfish in the Lake Chad area for the southern states, have forced them to migrate since the Boko Haram insurgency broke out in Borno State in July 2009,” it said.

    A countrywide food crisis, therefore, looms, considering NEMA’s disclosure. Since most of the foodstuffs consumed and traded in Nigeria are grown in the north, the agency warned about an impending famine. Incessant bombings and other violent attacks on local markets perpetrated by both the Boko Haram sect and Nigerian armed forces pose grievous risks to northern farmers, livestock breeders and dealers in farm produce, forcing them to migrate to new locations far from their farmlands, while placing additional burden on the transportation of food and farm produce to other states.

    Consequently, prices of foodstuffs have skyrocketed, particularly in the southern part of the country. The influx of migrants to the less volatile northern states and the south has made rental accommodation expensive, just as several families have been rendered homeless, and without medical assistance. The forced movements and relocations have devastated communities and disintegrated key social ties and networks. Though difficult to measure, communal support networks and social capital lost as a result of the forced disintegration of communities also comes into reckoning, according to Victoria Ohaeri, Executive Director at Spaces for Change, a non-governmental organisation.

    “It’s a very sad situation. Kano used to be revered as the commercial capital of northern Nigeria, now we are known for violence and bloodshed. We no longer have the groundnut pyramids and our kolanut business is in the doldrums. I can’t remember the last time I saw our youths gainfully engaged plucking groundnuts or picking kola. All they do now is carry guns and bullets about. Many of us have fled the city. Many are still preparing to flee…I moved my family to Ibadan (Oyo State) in November last year. I stayed back because of business but now I have no choice but to relocate with them,” lamented Danladi Abu, a commercial transporter.

     

    A history of violence

     

    The first host-settler violent eruption in Kano occurred in 1953 following northern opposition to the Southern motion in 1953 for Nigeria’s political independence in 1956. The northern representatives believed that the country was not yet mature for self-rule. The South decried this refusal in disparaging language and booed Northern representatives on the streets of Lagos. The campaign for independence sparked off riot in Kano. The rioters attacked Sabon – Gari and at the end, about 35 people were declared dead, while 251 were wounded. In the January 1966 coup d’ tat led by an Igbo major, eminent politicians and high – ranked military men mostly from the North were killed. The North perceived this development as an attempt by the South (Igbo) to dominate them and the promulgation of decree 34 for unification of Nigeria by an Igbo general confirmed their fear. On March 29, 1966, the rioters again attacked Sabon-Gari. The counter coup d’ tat of July, 1966 produced similar attacks in other Northern cities killing thousands of settlers in the state.

    After 1966, conflicts between the Kanawa and the settlers became more religiously defined. The 1980 Maitatsine riot and the 1996/97 Shiites attacks on orthodox Muslims were intra-religious conflicts with some political undertones between the fundamentalist religious groups and orthodox Muslims in Kano. Kano had played host to many Islamic fundamentalists scholars from Chad and Cameroon from the 1940s. Several clashes between them produced hundreds of casualties. In severe cases, death tolls were high. Intra-religious riots scarcely spread to other parts of Kano.

    The 1980s and 90s were periods of inter-religious violence as well. Nigeria opened up to fundamentalist Christian groups in the 1980s. Many of them are found in Kano and their activities, especially their mode of preaching, are often considered provocative by the Muslims. Eruptions were moves to check their excesses and ascendancy of Christianity. The fagge crisis of 1982 was aimed at preventing the reconstruction of a dilapidated church located close to a mosque. Also, the Muslims, in 1991, detested the tone of advertisement for Reinhard Bonnke’s crusade. More so, the permission given to Bonnke to preach in Kano could not be reconciled with the government’s refusal to allow Sheikh Deedat from South Africa into Kano for Islamic revival. Riot broke out October 13 as soon as Boonke arrived in Kano. The1991 riot marked a watershed in the history of conflicts in Kano. For the first time, the Southerners launched counter – offensive against their host. Again, both Christians and Muslims from the South were attacked unlike before when such attacks were restricted to the former. A riotous situation in 1994 following the beheading of an Igboman, Gideon Akaluka, by the Shiites for allegedly desecrating a Koran was quelled by the government.

     

    The lost economy

     

    Kano was a major producer

    of groundnuts. In fact, Kano

    produced about a half million tons which was about half of Nigeria’s groundnut production. Oil replaced agricultural commodities as the main source of foreign exchange and government revenue.

    The oil boom of the 1970’s made the government to neglect agriculture. Many of the rural dwellers rushed to the cities in search of “greener” pastures now they are fleeing the city for fear deadly bomb blasts.

    Commercial activity in Kano received its first encouragement with the establishment of Kurmi Market by Sarkin Kano Muhammad Rumfa in the 16th century. Subsequent leaders made contributions to the emergence of Kano as a leading commercial center in Africa. For example, the first two Emirs of Kano, Sarkin Kano Ibrahim Dabo and Sarkin Kano Sulaiman in the 19th century encouraged traders to move from Katsina because of Maradi raid. This was one of major contributing factors that made Kano the richest province in the Sokoto Caliphate.

    The Jihad leaders of the caliphate encouraged Kolanut trade and Kano was the greatest beneficiary with an annual turnover of about $30 million. Kano merchants were also very innovative and they were able to integrate commerce and craft industry during the pre-colonial period thus making substantial contribution to the prosperity of the province. Kano was producing an estimated 10 million pairs of sandals during that period because of economic harmony. Sarkin Kano Alhaji Muhammadu Sanusi established the Bompai Industrial Estate which was the first of its kind in the state through a loan guaranty that was later used against him by the Northern Regional Government.

    Kano State is the most important and largest commercial centre in Northern Nigeria. With about 10 million people, it provides a stable and continuous market for both manufactured and semi processed goods. The volume of trading activities conducted on daily basis in the markets, notably Muhammadu Abubakar Rimi Market (Sabon-Gari), Kwanar Singer, Kantin Kwari, Kurmi and Dawanau signify the state’s great potentials as a market for various products.

    In addition to the large and unique markets, Kano is also blessed with plentiful and various kinds of agricultural products which provide huge raw materials for Agro-Allied industries.

    Agricultural products like Maize, Guinea Corn, Rice, Cotton and Groundnut are readily available to serve as raw materials for oil milling, flour and textile industries. Other agro based raw materials are Gum Arabic, Livestock, Hides and Skin, Cowpeas, and Citrus fruits.

     

    A governor’s prayer

     

    Worried by the wanton

    destruction of lives and

    property in the state, the Kano State Governor, Rabiu Kwankwaso, has promised to ensure peace and stability in the state. His reassurances come at the heel of government officials’ and clerics’ conference to pray for peace in the state.

    The prayer gathering which was held in the wake of the January bombings, attracted some 200 Muslim clerics and political leaders to a mosque in the palace of the Emir of Kano, Ado Bayero, for special peace prayers.

    “I will pray to God that we should never re-live the catastrophe that resulted in the deaths and maiming in our city…We are working seriously to ensure peace in Kano State, and by the grace of God. I want to assure you that we have seen the first and the last of these attacks in Kano State. Kano will not explode again,” promised Governor Kwankwaso.

    Despite his heartfelt prayer, by 5:30 p.m. every day, the ancient city of Kano goes berserk with impatient motorists making hurriedly for home; the air simmers like draft from a stubborn harmattan fire and that is just the subtle city war renewing itself for another day. Unlike the major gun wars and bomb attacks, it is comparatively light on actual violence but intense with dread and bad feeling.

    You have to be pathologically insensitive not to sense the impacted rage and despair, impotent gnawing resentment that has turned Nigeria’s “Centre of Commerce” into a bloody battlefield.

    There, every bomb blast and gunshot reverberates in the hearts of the natives months after the last boom had gotten silent. Nothing so horrible ever happens in Kano that’s beyond prayer and cheap consolation.

    You did either meet an optimism that no violence could daunt or cynicism that eats the cynic empty every day until it turns hungry and malignant on whatever it could, for a bite. A skilled psychiatrist would call this “lashing out,” but the average Kano resident would call it “survival.” The people are so traumatised that these days, they talk as though killing a man was nothing more than depriving him of his vigour. Thus is the tragedy in Kano.

     

    •Parts of this article were first published in The Nation on September 22, 2012.