Tag: Yobe

  • Yobe urges FG to develop proposed 5,000-hectare grazing reserve

    Yobe urges FG to develop proposed 5,000-hectare grazing reserve

    The Yobe Government on Tuesday appealed to the Federal Ministry of Agriculture to develop 5,000 hectares of land it received from the state to establish the proposed grazing reserve.

    Dr Mustapha Gaidam, the Manager of Yobe Pilot Development Programme, made the call in an interview in Damaturu.

    He said that Yobe Government donated 5,000 hectares of land to the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development to enhance the implementation of its cattle ranch programme.

    “The Yobe Government provided Federal Ministry of Agriculture with 2,500 hectares of land at Jakusko/Nazari in Jakusko Local Government Area and another 2,500 hectares at Gumsa in Nguru for the development of the grazing reserve.

    “Yobe State has 28 grazing reserves, out of which 16 have been gazetted,” he said.

    Besides, Gaidam said that the state government had demarcated 1,560 kilometres of cattle routes from 2007 to date.

    “The state government has also constructed water facilities along the cattle routes to curb cattle encroachment into farmlands in search of water.

    “Government has, within the same period of time, vaccinated over six million herds of cattle, goats, sheep and dogs against trans-boundary animal diseases and rabies.

    “It has become a deliberate policy of this administration to maintain healthy animals for public consumption.

    “When a country, state or society has healthy animals; the animals produce healthy meat and milk and this, in turn, translates into healthy human population,” he said.

    NAN

  • Residents celebrate with soldiers after victory against Boko Haram in Yobe

    Residents celebrate with soldiers after victory against Boko Haram in Yobe

    Goniri Village was yesterday thrown into jubilant mood after troops crushed a Boko Haram attack lunched on the Village.

    A resident of the Village Zarami informed that the entire village went into wide celebration with local hunters and soldiers shooting in the air after soldiers of Operation Lafiya Dole in the area lunched a successful fight against some Boko Haram elements who came late evening of Saturday to attack the Village.
    Residents sources informed that most of the insurgents that came for the attack didn’t returned alive as they were all killed by the troops. A feat that made the villagers to come out and started singing victory songs and praises for the troops.
    Another resident informed that, “within forty five minutes, the soldiers have finished with all the Boko Haram that came to attack us. We are so happy with what transpired that is why the people of the village couldn’t resist coming out to celebrate with the soldiers. We are proud of them,” he said.
    A top security source who does not want to be quoted has also confirmed that “the insurgents met their waterloo in an attempt to over ran Goniri yesterday. The soldiers gave them a good fight and inflicted heavy casualty on them. Though I cannot tell how many precisely were killed but many of them that came didn’t survive”.
    Yesterday’s attack on Goniri appears like a resurgence of the Boko Haram activities in a relatively peaceful Yobe after the insurgents barely a week killed about ten soldiers in a dastardly attack at Sasawa, another settlement in the state.
  • Army repels Boko Haram attack on Yobe village

    Army repels Boko Haram attack on Yobe village

    The on Sunday said it has  repelled an attempted attack on Goniri village in Yobe on Saturday.

    Col. Kayode Ogunsanya, the spokesman of 3 Div. with tactical headquarters in Damaturu confirmed this to News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Damaturu.

    Ogunsanya, however, could not immediately give details of the operation.

    A villager, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said “the insurgents came in from the western flank of the village but were repelled by the soldiers.

    “The soldiers had been on red alert since the attack on Sasawa village last Tuesday, making them battle ready.

    Read also: Eight soldiers feared dead as Boko Haram attack Yobe community

    “It did not take long when we heard the soldiers chanting victory songs, indicating that they were successful over the insurgents,” he said.

    NAN reports that two attacks were recorded in less than a week after a long period of relative peace enjoyed across the state. (NAN)

  • Polio: Yobe vaccinates 1.1m children

    Polio: Yobe vaccinates 1.1m children

    Dr Hauwa Goni, the Executive Secretary, Yobe Primary Healthcare Management Board, said over 1.1 million children under age five have been immunised against polio virus this year.

  • Open defecation: Yobe constructs over 200 public toilets

    Open defecation: Yobe constructs over 200 public toilets

    The Yobe Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Agency ( RUWASSA ) says it has constructed more than  200 toilets at Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps and other public places to curtail open defecation.

    The General Manager of  the agency,  Alhaji Mohammed Bukar, disclosed this in an interview on Monday in Damaturu.

    Bukar said the agency had also launched a campaign on hand washing, water safety and waste disposal to create awareness on public health and combat open defecation.

    He said the toilets were constructed at Pompomari, Kukareta, Kasaisa and Muhammadu Gombe farm IDPs camps, schools and motor parks, among others.

    According to the general  manager, water facilities were also provided for effective waste management and to support hand washing and personal hygiene.

    He said the agency also  ensured regular evacuation of the toilets in the public institutions to ensure that the facilities were always “functional and  serviceable”.

    “We have a time-table for periodic dislodgment of the toilets and maintenance of the water facilities to maintain efficiency and safety.

    “Our target is to create awareness on effective use of the facilities provided in IDPs camps, schools, markets and motor parks to check outbreak of diseases.

    “The State Government and international donors have also constructed 20 new water facilities and rehabilitated 200 others in communities where the people have returned home,” he said.

    Bukar said with more funding and support from donor agencies, the facilities would be extended to other communities to effectively curb open defecation, improve sanitation and waste management.

    He said this would “put the state of public health on a higher scale in Yobe”.

    NAN

  • Yobe to empower farmers with Irrigation scheme

    Yobe to empower farmers with Irrigation scheme

    Yobe Commissioner for Agriculture Mustapha Gajirema says the state government will empower farmers in Nguru and Muguram with irrigation scheme before the end of the year.

    Gajirema told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Damaturu on Tuesday that work on the construction of channels from the Nguru lake was almost completed.

    The commissioner said that yobe government constituted Irrigation Task Force project to promote 12 calendar months farming activities in the state.

    He said that the water channels were being constructed to provide farmers with water from the Nguru lake.

    “The project is designed to make farming an all year round activity where farmers will be switching off from wet season farming to irrigation and vice versa.”

    According to him, this will help to improve the economy and enhance food security.

    “The 35 hectares rice irrigation trail project in Muguram village and the maize farm in Jumbam village recorded bumper harvests.”

    He said that farmers would cultivate wheat from November to March, while rice would be cultivated between April and October.

    He said the state had 500 hectares of arable lands in Nguru and 400 others in Muguram for gradual expansion of the irrigation scheme.

    The commissioner assured that government would support wet season and irrigation farmers with inputs to promote agricultural production in the state.

    Gajirema also cautioned farmers against rushing their harvests to the markets.

    “We must resist temptations of extravagance, you are encouraged to preserve your harvests,” while assuring that government would also provide markets for the harvests.

    “Government will buy the products for the Strategic Grains Reserve programme to be sold out to the public at a subsidised rate during periods of need.”

  • The toil after the peace

    The toil after the peace

    SINCE the administration of Governor Simon Lalong came into being in Plateau State in May 2015, the midnight attacks suffered by residents of various communities in the state between 2010 and 2015 have become a thing of the past. The Lalong administration made deliberate efforts to halt the trend as soon as he became the state’s chief executive. Last week’s incident in which 20 people were killed, however, came as an exception that punctured the long period of peace.

    But the humanitarian problems posed by previous conflicts in the state are still posing serious humanitarian challenges to the government and the people. The grave conditions of the people displaced by the conflictswere worsened by the prevailing economic situation in the country on account of which the government cannot meet up with its responsibility with respect to providing the necessary aids to victims.

    However, one humanitarian organisation that has never relented in providing succour for humanity in conflict situations globally is the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). The humanitarian body has rendered its services to victims of conflicts in Plateau, Benue, Adamawa, Yobe and Borno states.

    But for the work done by ICRC to save lives since the beginning of the conflicts, the humanitarian situations in the affected states could have been worse than was experienced during the Nigerian civil war. According to a recent facts and figures compiled by ICRC, the humanitarian challenges facing the country could be the worst in its history.

    The media officer of ICRC in Nigeria, Eleojo Esther Akpa, who authored the figures, noted that “more than five million people in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states were in dire need of food, while an estimated two million persons have been displaced from their homes in Adamawa, Bauchi, Borno, Gombe and Yobe states.”

    Akpa said: “The situation is further compounded by the steady flow of returnees from neighbouring countries of the Lake Chad Basin who took refuge there at the peak of the armed conflict in Nigeria. In the places they are returning to, the scale of devastation is astounding and implies continued hardship for those heading home. People’s sources of income have been decimated. Their fields have been left uncultivated, pastoralism has been disrupted and trading opportunities cut off. The conflict has separated families and destroyed access to food, water, education, shelter, and health care.”

    She said to help mitigate the conflict’s humanitarian consequences, “the ICRC has been delivering emergency aid, as well as supporting health-care services and livelihoods, particularly in remote areas where few other humanitarian organisations are able to operate.

    “Together with Red Cross societies in the Lake Chad Basin, the ICRC is searching for more than 10,000 persons who have been separated from their families as a result of the conflict.

    “Apart from the conflict in the North-East, communal clashes in the Middle Belt and urban violence in the Niger Delta have led to forced displacement, disruption of health services and long-term psychological trauma.

    “In these conflict-prone states, the economic base and sources of livelihood of residents, especially farming and trading, have been inconsistent, and lack of food remains one of the most urgent humanitarian needs. People are bracing themselves for a prolonged lean season due to the sporadic rainfall and several missed planting seasons.

    “The situations of the most vulnerable groups such as children, women and the elderly, is of particular concern. They will remain dependent on aid for some time, and sustained food assistance will be necessary to prevent further malnutrition and death.

    “The ICRC, in partnership with the NRCS, aims at meeting the immediate needs of the most vulnerable populations in hard-to-reach areas through the distribution of food and essential household items to the displaced, returnees and vulnerable residents.

    “Those returning to homes that they had abandoned in search of security are apprehensive about rebuilding livelihoods. The ICRC has started, whenever feasible, to move from emergency food relief to greater support to livelihood initiatives for these affected communities, identifying with ways and avenues to provide more durable and sustained solutions centered around resilience and self-reliance.

    “We seek to support sustained livelihoods through the provision of improved seed for farming activities as well as cash and vouchers in areas with active markets. In particular, households where women and particularly widows are the main breadwinners receive cash for the purchase of items that they consider the most important.”

    According to ICRC, in all, almost 398,380 people in the North-East and the Middle Belt regions received food for three months or longer. It also noted that in the area of the health of the victims of the conflicts, the period of conflicts exacerbated the already difficult access to health care in the North-East, whose development had lagged behind the rest of the country. Many clinics and health care centres were destroyed while the health personnel fled for safety.

    However, the ICRC continues to support primary health care centres of the Ministry of Health in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states with medicine and technical support for the identification and treatment of diseases. Two ICRC surgical teams provide care for the wounded in need of emergency surgical care in the North-East while the ICRC trains the staff of Nigerian hospitals nationwide to enhance their skills in the treatment and management of wounded patients.

    The ICRC also provides psycho-social support for trauma-affected victims of the armed conflict and the NRCS volunteers working to assist them. The ICRC first aid training programme spans over 15 states and includes the North-East, the Middle Belt and Niger Delta states.

    According to the data provided by ICRC, “Close to 255,300 patients attended 23 ICRC- supported centres for primary health care and three mobile clinics serving the displaced, returnees and residents in North-East Nigeria and the Middle Belt; over 13,050 children were delivered in ICRC supported clinics; around 6,520 children under five suffering from severe acute malnutrition were treated in ICRC- supported clinics in North-East Nigeria, including 170 children with medical complications from Borno South treated in Biu stabilization centre; over 990 patients benefited from free surgical care with 720 of them treated as out-patients while 360 patients were admitted to the ICRC surgical ward and a total of 820 surgeries were performed; 33 NRCS and community volunteers were trained and supported by the ICRC to provide basic mental health and psychosocial support.”

    The data added that “almost 106,000 displaced persons in North-East Nigeria improved their sanitation and hygiene conditions. Almost 10,000 returnees and persons affected by communal clashes in Michika (Adamawa), Barkin Ladi, Riyom and Bokkos (Plateau) received ICRC support to rebuild 860 houses. Over 40,000 displaced persons in camps in Borno State, North-East Nigeria, live in 120 family tents built by the ICRC. In Borno, the ICRC improved access to health services for 310 people through the construction and rehabilitation of health care facilities.”

    The most pathetic aspects of the conflicts are cases where a father or mother could not locate their children after escaping from fire. While running for his life, a father would find himself in Jos but does not know the whereabouts of his wife and children. Some children who found themselves in one camp in Jos were restless because they did not know the whereabouts of their parents. Some who found themselves in Cameroon had no contact with other members of their immediate families.

    But the ICRC says it has come to the rescue of many in this regard, working with the NRCS and other Red Cross societies in the Lake Chad region to locate and where possible reunite families. With the use of Red Cross messages and free phone calls, “separated family members have been able to get back in touch with their displaced relatives. About 4,590 new tracing requests were opened by persons looking for relatives with the ICRC or the NRCS. For instance, a victim named Falmata was overcome with emotion when she was reunited with her grandson, her only surviving relative, after two years of separation.

    “No fewer than 180 Red Cross messages containing family news were exchanged among separated family members; 730 free phone calls were made available by the Red Cross to persons searching for their family members. Over 47,770 people in the North-East and the Middle Belt received essential household items such as cooking pots and water containers, as well as clothes, hygiene products, and sleeping and shelter materials, while 76,460 people received agricultural inputs including seeds, fertilizers, machinery and tools to start farming or to increase their farming production through donations in-kind and vouchers, and more than a dozen villages like Egba in Agatu LGA Benue State, devastated by several years of communal violence, receiving assistance to rebuild homes and livelihoods.

    “About 26,150 people including widows received cash and basic training on small businesses to help them start a sustainable livelihood. In addition, 17, 620 persons received repeated multi-purpose cash assistance. Over 100 sensitization sessions to raise awareness of mental health issues stemming from conflict and violence were organised with a total of 5,060 community members and 14 health staff in attendance.

    “Almost 5,510 displaced persons benefitted from ICRC’s mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) programme. 260 victims of violence received group counselling support while 60 hospitalised wounded patients benefited from individual counselling support. In all, 1,030 group and 90 individual MPHSS sessions were conducted. Around 6,000 casualties were treated and evacuated by the NRCS emergency first aid teams, while 660 community first aid responders in 15 states covered by the ICRC-supported first aid programme were trained.

    “The high number of the displaced in the North-East put a strain on basic resources, such as water and sanitation installations. The ICRC creates or upgrades water points and sanitation facilities in the camps for the displaced and affected host communities. We also build tents and emergency shelters. To promote hygiene in the camps, the ICRC works with the NRCS and displaced persons on cleaning the environment. In areas where returns are possible, the ICRC has stepped up its work to repair or construct water systems benefitting both host communities and returnees.

    We have built over 6,700 emergency shelters to house the displaced across North-East Nigeria.”

  • Sallah: Borrno, Yobe Police restrict movement 

    Sallah: Borrno, Yobe Police restrict movement 

    The police in Borno and Yobe States have placed restrictions on movements of people and vehicles during the Sallah eid prayers in the state.

    The measure is part of security reorganizations to ensure hitch free celebrations in the security challenged states.

    The Yobe State Police Commissioner Sumonu Abdulmaliki told our correspondent on phone that all vehicular and human movement in the state will be restricted from 10.00pm of Thursday 31/08/2017 to 11.00am of Friday 01/09/2017 on Sallah day.

    CP Abdulmaliki disclosed that all security measures to ensure the safety of worshippers at the various Eid ground within the metropolis and the entire state have been put in place.

    He disclosed that the decision was taken at a state security meeting under the chairmanship of the Secretary to the State Government, Baba Malam Wali.

    In Borno State, the movement of people including vehicles and  animals  in any form, either on tricycles, bicycle will seize on the day of Sallah.

    In a statement signed by the police Public Relations Officer Victor Isuku said, “There will be restriction of vehicular movement on the day of Eid prayers, 01/09/2017.

    “The restrictions though regretted will include vehicular, human tricycles bicycle and animals except those on essential duties,” the statement said.

    The statement further advised Muslim fateful to ensure that they find the nearest praying ground in their vicinity and go early to undergo security checks before gaining entrance into the praying ground.

    “Muslim fateful are advised to pray at their prayer grounds close to their homes and ensure they go early enough for security screening. And to avoid rush when prayers are about to Commence thereby compromising the placed security measures,” the state advised.

    It also added that, “Parents who go to prayer ground with their children are advised to watch and take proper care of their children so to avert incidences of missing children. In addition, youths are are advised not to carry with them any dangerous Eason like knives to prayer grounds and recreational centers like zoos. An body found with such dangerous weapons will be treated as a common criminal and prosecuted”.

  • Yobe, World Bank, others support IDPs with farm inputs for economic recovery

    Yobe, World Bank, others support IDPs with farm inputs for economic recovery

    Yobe Government in collaboration with the World Bank and humanitarian agencies had supported returnee displaced persons and those still in camp with farm inputs to enable them to engage in agricultural activities toward economic recovery.

    Alhaji Musa Jidawa, Permanent Secretary, Yobe State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA), disclosed this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Damaturu on Sunday.

    Jidawa said the state government had provided 300 Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) with farmlands, tractors seeds and fertilisers.

    He said the UNDP in collaboration with Japanese Government, the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) and the Victims Support Fund (VSF) had also supported the IDPs with cash, improved seeds, fertilisers and livestock.

    The World Bank Fadama lll Additional Financing ll project on its part, has supported vulnerable persons and IDPs with agricultural inputs, livestock, poultry and inputs for fish farming under the North- East food security and livelihood support project.

    Alhaji Musa Garba, the State Project Coordinator, Fadama lll AF ll, said the Yobe Government had paid N20 million counterpart fund for the project with 5,000 households expected to benefit from the programme.

    Garba said over 2,000 vulnerable households from Gujba, Gulani, Nangere, Bade, Jakusko,Yunusari, Giedam and Potiskum local government areas had already benefitted from the projects.

    “Those in irrigation farming were provided with water pump machines, sprayers, fertilisers and herbicides, we also supported poultry farmers with birds and feeds.

    “The livestock beneficiaries were supported with a set of three She-goats and one He-goat or, three sheep and two rams per household.

    “It is very encouraging that the poultry farmers have started selling eggs to improve their economy, while the goats have started multiplying,” he said.

    The project coordinator said foodstuff such as rice, beans, maize and vegetable oil were also provided to the benefitting households to protect the water pumps, birds and the livestock from being sold off.

    Malam Wakil Kaigama, a farmer in Bumsa village, said, “I have expanded my rice farm and established a banana plantation with support from Fadama lll AF ll.

    “Each of the 20 Fadama lll beneficiaries in this village received a water pump machine, seeds, sprayers, herbicides and pesticides,’’ Kaigama said.

    Abdu Liman, a poultry farmer in Buni-Gari, said he was supported with 40 hybrid poultry layers.
    “My family members now eat eggs daily, and we also sell a cartoon of eggs every day,” Liman said.

  • Lassa fever: Four quarantined in Yobe Hospital, says Commissioner

    Lassa fever: Four quarantined in Yobe Hospital, says Commissioner

    Four people are being quarantined for clinical analysis in Yobe over suspected case of Lassa fever, Dr Bello Kawuwa, the state Commissioner for Health said on Wednesday.

    Kawuwa told newsmen in Damaturu that seven people were initially held, but three had been discharged after clinical analysis.

    The commissioner said though, earlier results did not indicate that the four people have Lassa fever, a second laboratory test would be carried out on them.

    “In July, about seven cases of suspected Lassa fever were reported in Yobe.

    “They were subjected to normal clinical appraisal and three of the seven were looking less of Lassa fever.

    “We will let you know when the result of the second laboratory test is released.

    “We have isolated the cases to prevent unnecessary contact.

    “Our epidemic response team has also gone to the affected communities to carryout contact-tracing as well as enlighten the people on how to deal with the  situation,” Kawuwa said.