Tag: Yobe

  • Boko Haram attacks army brigade in Yobe  kills soldiers

    Boko Haram attacks army brigade in Yobe kills soldiers

    Boko Haram insurgents on Saturday evening attacked an Army brigade in Buni Yadi, Yobe State.
    Confirming the attack, the spokesman of 27 Task Force Brigade, Lt. George Okupe in a text message said the attack was successfully repelled by the troops.
    He however could not disclose the casualty both on the side of the Army and Boko Haram.
    Lt. Okupe said, “Buni Yadi came under attack at about 0615pm…but things are under control. Casualty figure of BHTs yet to be confirmed, on locales, none for now likewise own forces. However, details will be relayed to you soon”.
    But a military source who spoke to our correspondent in confidence said it was a surprise attack by Boko Haram insurgents who Saturday night lunched a daring attack on 27 Task Force Brigade of the Nigerian Army Buni Yadi killing five soldiers, including a captain.
    The source also noted that the insurgents came from the eastern side of the brigade in large numbers and lunched superior fire power on the military formation before they were repelled.
    The source added that the Captain, name withheld is a medical doctor who has just been posted to Buni Yadi.
    The casualty on the side of Boko Haram is yet to be disclosed, but another military source disclosed that the insurgents also suffered heavy casualty in the attack as many dead bodies were seen scattered in the bush.
    He maintained that troops are still in pursuit of some of the fleeing insurgents.
    “Nobody had time to start counting the numbers of the bastards that were killed because we were busy pursuing the one that were running, but I must tell you that many of them were killed and their dead bodies scattered in the bush”, the source informed.
    This is the first time the 27 Task Brigade has suffered a heavy attack from Boko Haram since its relocation from Damaturu to Buni Yadi in 2015.
    Buni Yadi, the headquarters of Gujba Local Government was taken over by the insurgents for almost a year before it was recaptured by the military in May 2015.
    The attack on 27 Task Force Brigade is coming barely two weeks after the insurgents are said to be in disarray in the north east following their dislodgement from Camp Zero, the last strongest fortress of the insurgents in the Sambisa forest.

  • ‘8.5 million people need help in Borno, Adamawa, Yobe’

    ‘8.5 million people need help in Borno, Adamawa, Yobe’

    A medical doctor, Dr Ayoade Olatunbosun-Alakija, is a humanitarian whose life has largely been dedicated to transforming lives and bringing social justice to those suffering in Haiti, Rwanda and other nations in crisis. Now, she is home to assist her fellow Nigerians in the Northeast. Her work with the Inter Ministerial Task Force of Nigeria chaired by Minister of State, Budget and National Planning Mrs  Zainab Ahmed includes acting as interlocutor with international partners including donors, UN/INGOs and puts her in position to assess and evaluate  firsthand the humanitarian crisis. She discusses a befitting response plan for the region and how they took to feeding of over a million people last month alone.

    What have been the main benefits of establishing the 24/7 Emergency Coordination Center (ECC) which you lead?

    There was an identified gap in information sharing, coordination, both between and within sectors, necessary to facilitate an immediate scale up of the humanitarian response to save lives. The ECC is a living breathing space, some describe it as a ‘war room’ with data, maps and information all over walls and windows, constantly changing almost daily as the situation evolves. We have maps from live google images telling us about the displacement of peoples, on a week to week basis. There is a live video link up with offices in the field, especially in Maiduguri. It has enabled trouble shooting at 1am in the morning, when aid convoys have been under fire from insurgents and other emergency situations, it means that we get very little sleep but it truly has been the critical enabler of our Nigerian response.

    It was early in October, within a 72-hour time frame that we established and operationalized a 24-hour Emergency Coordination Center which is supported by USAID/OFDA. This information-sharing and collaborative space was essential as it has allowed over 2000 humanitarian stakeholders to meet and work towards concerted and rapid solutions to the crises in the northeast.

    The ECC team facilitated the Humanitarian Needs Overview/Humanitarian Response Plan for Nigeria within this unit. This HRP was recently launched at the UN headquarters in Geneva. The HNO/HRP process has set the foundation for both Nigerian and humanitarian actors with regards to scaling up of life saving activities. On the global scene, it is currently being described as international best practice, we have somehow managed to find the opportunity for Nigeria to excel within a crisis.

     What would you say is the main focus of the planned humanitarian interventions for 2017?

    The three states that have been determined to be in greatest need are what are referred to as the BAY states (Borno, Adamawa and Yobe). This determination has been done on basis of statistics and evidence based needs assessments. Whilst the other three states of the Northeast are affected, the need is not as urgent and as critical as the BAY states. Therefore, the main focus in the immediate term is on those who need urgent intervention. We have facilitated a process whereby the international humanitarian actors have already activated implementation in these states. For instance, 8.5 million people have been calculated to be in need of immediate food assistance in those states, and the international community have committed to meet 100% of that need in 2017. Health needs are to be about 55% met by international partners with the remaining portion to be addressed through the mobilisation of domestic resources, both within specific MDA budgetary allocations and State level interventions.

    The other states will of course continue to receive the necessary attention and interventions that they require and the nexus between humanitarian action and development activity becomes particularly critical within these communities. We must do both together in coordination and cohesion. It is not either/or, it is both.

    What has been the response from Nigerians so far in assisting with the crisis?

    That is an interesting question, there have been shining examples of patriotism and private partnership from a few, an example being Sahara Energy, who provided aviation fuel within 72 hours to Maiduguri in an emergency to enable us resume humanitarian flights which had hitherto been grounded due to scarcity, but overall we need greater involvement of Nigerians from all sectors. The Humanitarian crisis is a collective responsibility for us all, there is no Northeast or Southwest, or Southsouth divide when it comes to a national crisis. There are just Nigerians and one Nigeria, and all of us as Nigerians are morally obligated to do what we can to help. Just as when our military are posted to fight in Sambisa Forest, nobody checks their ethnicity, or their creed. So also, it is for humanitarians who are putting their lives on the line, and making huge sacrifices to restore life and dignity to millions.

    When I worked in Haiti during their humanitarian crisis, nobody ever asked me where I was from, or why I was helping. They just assumed that it was a shared humanity that had brought me to help my fellow man. This common humanity is what has been displayed by communities across the Northeast, as they have welcomed strangers into their homes, and it is this humanity that the rest of us as a nation need to learn and embrace. Charity begins at home, and we cannot ask the global humanitarian community to help if we are not willing ourselves to step out of our comfort zones and assist fellow Nigerians.

     Early in December, you were in Bama, Gwoza, and Maiduguri alongside global humanitarian directors from the United Nations, what was your mission in the northeast, and what has changed since their visit to Nigeria?

    I visited Gwoza and Bama to see first-hand conditions and participate in distribution of specialized foods for malnourished children. My previous experience deep field in Borno was to Dikwa as the humanitarian crises was emerging. That was an extremely depressing visit, as the scale of the problem seemed nearly insurmountable in May 2016, approximately 75, 000 people in one camp (more of an open field) recently liberated from Boko Haram with very little shelter, limited access to food or water within challenging security conditions, it was heartbreaking but also motivated one to greater action.

    Therefore, this recent trip to Gwoza and Bama for myself and the team demonstrated hope and showed how quickly things can be turned around given high level political will and commitment as has been shown within that state, at federal level, and by international humanitarian actors. The scale of reconstruction efforts alone is astounding, the Emir’s palace has been restored to its former glory or better. Governor Shettima and his team have done an incredible job on the ground.

    On the International side, significant scale up in humanitarian aid delivery has been achieved since the ED mission. As directors returned to Rome, New York, and Geneva, to mobilise greater support, and as requested by the Nigerian government, to send us their A-teams. The proof of the pudding it is said is in the eating and we are literally and metaphorically seeing the manifestation of this effort. The 1.01 million people fed in December alone can be attributed to the fruit of this mission.

    What is the current humanitarian situation in the Northeast, Borno State in particular, given the fact it is the epicenter crisis?

    The current humanitarian situation in Nigeria is complex, and in sheer numbers is comparable to those in need in Syria, but we have received far less global attention and even less funding support. The recent coordination mechanisms put in place have ensured now that the voices of our children and our people are being heard on an international stage, because social justice for one is social justice for all.

    We recently saw the arrival of 3 A330 cargo planes direct into Maiduguri airport, carrying over a 100 metric tons of humanitarian relief, containing humanitarian hubs from Sweden, which will be stationed in strategic places in the Northeast to facilitate more efficient delivery of relief materials to millions of affected individuals.

    We have data that supports the fact that in the 6 Northeast states, there are currently 14 million people in need of assistance due to this crisis. Of those, over 70% are women and children. Of that number, approximately 2.5 million are IDP’s. So you will see that this is not just an IDP crisis, but a wider humanitarian crisis.

     With specific examples, how would you enumerate the humanitarian response from the Federal Government and International partners in 2016, bearing in mind, your coordinating role?

    In the last three months since the establishment of the ECC we have seen significant progress, an over fivefold increase in numbers of people reached, with food and medical interventions. A rapid response mechanism (RRM) has been set up, with multi agency partnerships taking food, medicines and planned agricultural interventions to communities at the same time. There is innovation, but most of all there is great compassion and a speedy response has been deployed.

    We have been able to bring in 3 cargo planes of humanitarian relief directly into Maiduguri for immediate deployment into the field. Food distribution has gone up from 165,000 when we began this project in September, to 1.01 million in December, with a projected 1.8 million for the month of January. It has been noted internationally that there has never been a scale up of this magnitude achieved within such a short time frame.

    Yes, we were all slow in coming to the table, but now that we’re here, we are confident that this humanitarian crisis can be arrested, and prevented from becoming a chronic humanitarian crisis. We have developed a humanitarian response plan for Nigeria, both for the international community and a mirror image plan has been created for Nigeria.

    Give us a quick round up of the humanitarian crisis in 2016 ensuing from Boko Haram in the last few years, what do you think are the challenges experienced and the lessons learnt?

    There is no such thing as a quick round up of the humanitarian crisis, there is no way to describe the suffering entire communities and states have had to endure. The crisis first became apparent as the Nigerian army made significant inroads into previous held Boko Haram territory and with the liberation of 16 LGAs, revealing hundreds of thousands of people who had previously been inaccessible to both the Nigerian government and international humanitarian actors. Initially this was seen as an IDP crisis, but we do not have an IDP crisis we have a humanitarian crisis that spans all aspects of life. Of 14 million people calculated to need humanitarian aid, only about 2.5 million are IDPs.

    What is your take on the allegations that humanitarian partners and UN agencies, have either been misapplying resources meant for humanitarian response and are more interested in their welfare in terms of buying Armoured Vehicles (AVs) and renting houses at exorbitant costs in Maiduguri?

    Those allegations stem from a place of misunderstanding and miscommunication. With regards to the issue of exorbitant rents, it really is simple economics and down to supply and demand. If there is anyone who is benefitting from that it would be we as Nigerians, who are charging said exorbitant rents on a limited supply of housing. Therefore, you could say the economy is being boosted.

    It is important to understand that ultimately Nigeria benefits, as resources brought in on humanitarian’s missions are not permitted to be removed from the country. In the short term, there are certain international safety rules and regulations that agencies must comply with in order to deliver aid and provide assistance when needed.

    Without complying with these basic international standards, they will be unable to operate in Nigeria. In addition, we do not want a situation, where aid workers are being attacked or killed within our territory so it is in all our interests that they are protected, by whatever means necessary. The current reality is that from the 1st to the 30th of December, approximately 1.01 million people have been provided with food rations in Borno and Yobe states. It is the ability to travel in helicopters and AV’s and to be based in properties no matter how expensive within Maiduguri that has enabled this scale up. I guess you would call it the cost of doing business.

     You monitor humanitarian interventions in the Northeast; what is your reaction to allegations of gross diversion of foods meant for IDPs by officials at the federal and state levels?

    I’m not really qualified to speak to allegations of diversions of food, but it is important to note that that is what they are, allegations. What I do know is that there has been a concerted effort by the Borno State governor to ensure that his people are fed, and that gaps in food pipeline are identified and closed. I personally joined him and his SEMA team in distributing food to those in some of the most remote and difficult to reach areas of the state. Part of my current role is ensuring a coordinated response between Federal and State levels, working from a 37,000-foot perspective, and looking holistically at issues of bottlenecks and process delays, which are  some of the things that have resulted in perceived diversions.

     

  • Gaidam threatens to sack sleeping  commissioners

    Gaidam threatens to sack sleeping commissioners

    Gov. Ibrahim Gaidam of Yobe on Thursday directed a sleeping commissioner  at the  presentation of the 2017 budget to the State House of Assembly to go home for more sleep.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the governor had barely commenced reading the budget speech when the cabinet member started snoring.

    Gaidam warned that any public officer henceforth caught sleeping stood sacked.

    “As from today, any commissioner or special adviser caught sleeping stands sacked and will immediately be replaced.

    “We will borrow a leaf from the North Korea experience to make government affairs a serious business,” he said.

    Gaidam while reviewing the budget performance of the outgoing year paused and directed the sleeping commissioner to go home.

    “I am referring to the commissioner who is sleeping, you can go back home to sleep since you cannot endure the session,” he said.

    Although the governor did not mention the name of the sleeping commissioner, he pointed to the row of the commissioners to issue the directive.

    NAN reports that the  bewildered commissioners looked at each other in embarrassment and sat up to avoid dozing and being victims of the governor’s sledge hammer.

    Alhaji Adamu Dala-Dogo, speaker of the assembly, however, advised public officers to take beverages that would keep them awake during public functions. (NAN)

  • NTIC pupils lead Yobe in NECO-SSCE

    The Nigeria-Turkish International College (NTIC) has been commended for its pupils’ performance in this year’s June/July Senior School Certificate Examination (SSCE) conducted by the National Examinations Council (NECO).

    The school is being recognised by the Learn Africa Education Development Foundation, the Corporate Social Responsibility arm of publishing firm, Learn Africa PLC, for producing the top three candidates in the examination in Yobe State.

    In letters addressed to the Principal of NTIC Damaturu and signed by the Chairman, Board of Trustees of the firm, Chief Emeka Iwerebon, the school was informed of plans to honour the trio of Bulama Mohammed Gaji, Ibrahim Abubakar Brah and Banjabah Abdullahi Lawan.

    The letter reads in part: “We are pleased to inform you that LearnAfrica Education Development Foundation, the corporate social responsibility arm of Learn Africa Plc, has concluded plans to honour a student of yours, Mr. Bulama Mohammed Gaji, with an award of excellence for emerging the First Placed Candidate at the June/July 2016 NECO Senior Secondary School Certificate Examination in Yobe state.

    “The awards were instituted in February 2012, to underscore the importance of excellence in education to our national development. More specifically, the prizes are aimed towards encouraging hard work, appreciating diligent scholarship and healthy competition among our students, rewarding teachers for their dedication and recognising some of the students who have become beacons of excellence at the Senior Secondary education level.”

    The foundation requested that the school submit the name of its most outstanding teacher to be honoured at its yearly awards in Lagos.

     

  • Yobe targets kids in anti-polio road show

    Yobe targets kids in anti-polio road show

    Following the resurgence of the polio virus in neighbouring Borno State, Yobe is not taking anything for granted, targeting children coming into the state through the major highways.

    The State primary healthcare agency, the World Bank, UNICEF and the state Committee on Polio Prevention and Eradication headed by the state Deputy Governor Abubakar Aliyu has organised immunisation points on the Maiduguri-Kano-Jos Road  to track and immunise all children coming or passing through the state.

    According to the immunisation of officials, over 500 children have so far been immunised in this initiative.

    During one such advocacy and inspection of the exercise at one of the entry points from Maiduguri, Aliyu  said the state decided to take such a proactive measure of tracking children in transit due to the insurgence of the virus in neighboring Borno State.

    Aliyu who was in company of the State Commissioner for Health Dr. Bello Kawuwa, stated that Yobe has devised several ways to eradicate  the virus in the state with the highway immunisation initiative as one of them.

    “Because of the three cases of polio that we got in Borno State ,we decided to scale up the campaign against the virus by devising so many means of eradicating the diseases and stopping it from coming into our state. This measure is one of our own measures as a state to ensure that the certification of Nigeria as a polio free nation by the WHO is not dragged backward further because of what happened in Borno State.

    “This exercise that you see is a response of what happened in Borno State. As you are aware, this checkpoint where we are is the one leading to Maiduguri where those three cases were discovered, so the idea is to target those children of polio age at the entrance point in Yobe State. These vaccinators are in all other entrances to the state carrying out the exercise,” Engr. Aliyu said.

    Another cheery news has emerged that immunisation officials have started accessing the Boko Haram liberated communities in Gujba and Gulani Local Government areas, the deputy governor has announced at the advocacy visit on the highway where he administered the oral polio vaccines to children travelling with their parents through the state.

    The Executive Secretary Yobe State Primary Healthcare Management Board Dr. Hauwa Goni Fika also collaborated the news of the deputy governor  at a polio survivor rally held in Damaturu  that health officials have started accessing the hard-reached areas of Gujba and Gulani that were hitherto taken over by Boko Haram.

    “The good news is that our people have started accessing those hard-to-reach areas of Gujba and Gulani which were no go area because of the Boko Haram crisis,” Dr. Hauwa informed.

    During the survivors rally, Dr. Hauwa called on the victims to desist from begging but rather identify meaningful trades that would change their lives while charging them to be ambassadors of kicking out the disease from Nigeria.

    The Nation reports that the survivors of polio victim penultimate week staged a grand rally in Damaturu, the Yobe State capital, to sensitise the community on the need to accept the vaccine and kick out the disease out of the state and Nigeria at large.

    The rally which is one of the campaigns against the disease in the state   had in attendance hundreds of polio victims including men and women ridding on their wheelchairs with others on their rollers, members of the Yobe State Social Mobilization Committee, drum beaters and members of the press  began at the head office of the Cripple Association Damaturu behind KeyStone Bank opposite the Damaturu Ram Market and went through some of the major  settlements cutting through some major streets in the metropolis singing, dancing and distributing pamphlets to the locales.

     

     

     

  • Borno, Yobe tighten security ahead of Sallah

    Security in Borno and Yobe States has been tightened to ensure a hitch-free Sallah.

    Borno State Commissioner of Police Demian Chukwu said the command deployed personnel in the 13 major praying grounds in Maiduguri metropolis.

    He added that Ramat Square, which is the central praying ground, where the governor, Shehu of Borno and other dignitaries would worship, has been taken over by the police.

    The commissioner called on the people to be orderly, and give information to avert danger to the security agencies.

    Acting General Officer Commanding, 7 Division, Maimalari Cantonment, Maiduguri Brig.-Gen. Victor Ezugwu, on behalf of officers and soldiers of the division, wished the Muslim Ummah and all law abiding citizens in Borno State a happy Eid.

    He urged Muslims to use the Sallah to pray for lasting and sustainable peace in the state and the country.

    In neighbouring Yobe State, traffic has been restricted by six hours today.

    A statement by Governor Ibrahim Gaidam’s spokesman, Adbullahi Bego, said vehicles have been restricted from 6 am to 2 pm today.

    The statement reads: “This is to inform the public that following meetings with heads of law enforcement agencies, the government has approved the placement of restriction on vehicles throughout the state between 6 am and 2 pm today.

    “The six-hour restriction is part of measures to ensure public safety as we mark the Eid. The public is advised that security agents will not allow any form of vehicles for the duration of the restriction.”

  • Yobe seeks more support for IDPs

    Yobe State government on Wednesday said it will continue to seek assistance of donor agencies and international organisations for the resettlement and rehabilitation of the displaced people in the state.

    The government is also canvassing  support for reconstruction of communities destroyed by Boko Haram insurgents.

    The state Deputy Governor, Engr. Abubakar Aliyu, who stated these while receiving the Director of Emergency, World Food Program, Mrs. Dennis Brown and some UNICEF officials in Damaturu on Wednesday, said the state is in dire need of food, health and nutritional interventions for the displaced people.

    He said the state government is appreciative of the Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) support for displaced persons in the state.

    Aliyu added that the government through the resettlement committee, which he headed, has assisted over 300,000 displaced people with food, water, healthcare and other interventions to ameliorate their problems.

     

  • High turnout of worshippers in Borno, Yobe

    •Celebration peaceful 

    Muslim faithful in Borno and Yobe States turned out in large numbers to mark the Eid-el-Fitr yesterday.

    Security was tightened at the praying grounds, with security men placed at strategic points.

    Vehicle movement was restricted, compelling worshippers to walk to praying grounds. There were also heavy security checks.

    At the Yobe Mosque and Islamic Centre in Damaturu, Deputy Governor Abubakar Aliyu, with the National Secretary of All Progressives Congress (APC), Maimala Buni, and other government officials, joined worshippers to offer thanks to Allah for the success of Ramadan.

    Leading the prayer session, Chief Imam of the centre, Ustaz Hudu Mohammed, admonished faithful to imbibe the spirit of tolerance, patience and to live peacefully with one another, irrespective of differences.

    Mohammed urged them to utilise the lessons of Ramadan in their daily lives, and to cultivate the spirit of sharing, love and peace during the Sallah.

    He offered special prayers for the sustenance of peace in the state, the country and the world.

    Governor Ibrahim Gaidam, in his message, admonished the people to use the knowledge acquired from Ramadan in their daily activities.

    In Maiduguri, there was a large turnout of worshippers at the Ramat Square. Thousands trooped out to observe the two Rakat prayers.

  • Boko Haram attack town in Yobe, cart away food

    Boko Haram insurgents on Monday night lunched an attack on Kannama town in the northern part of Yobe, state close to the Niger border with Nigeria.

    The attack was  on the first day of holy month of Ramadan.
    Security sources told our correspondent that the attack was a failed attempt by the insurgents to cause havoc on the town as no death was recorded.
    The State Police Commissioner Chika Abubakar Maidama who confirmed the attack disclosed that “no life was lost in the incident”. He however confirmed that three of his men were hospitalized at the Geidam General Hospital but have been discharged.
    The CP also informed that the insurgents carted away with food items and other valuables during the attack.
    The Spokesman of 27 Task Force Brigade, Lt. George Okupe also collaborated that no life was lost in the attack.
    Lt. Okupe said that enough security forces have been deployed to Kannama general area to boost confidence in the locales.
    Shehu Adamu, a resident of Kannama told our correspondent on phone that the “insurgents stormed the town yesterday by 9:00 in the evening shooting sporadically and attacked the divisional police station. They also attack some shops in the town in search of food”.

    In 2014 the Divisional Police Officer of the area was killed in one of the Boko Haram raids  carried  on the border town located some 34 kilometres away from Geidam town also in Yobe state bordering with Niger Republic.

     
  • Yobe officially closes IDPs camp

    Yobe State Government on Thursday officially closed down the Bukar Ali Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camp in Damaturu, which was established on June 27, 2015.

    Bukar Ali camp comprised Gambir, Malumti and Mattiri villages of Damaturu local government area of the state.

    The camp has a population of 391 persons, comprising 92 households.

    The Executive Secretary of Yobe State Emergency Management Agency, Musa Idi Jidawa, said the state government spent N35 million for the establishment, feeding and general welfare of people in the camp for the 333 days they stayed in the camp.

    He said the IDPs voluntarily agreed to discontinue their stay at the camp and requested to be returned back to their communities.

    The state government gave two bags of rice, 40kg bag of beans, 15litre of vegetable oil, one set of tower cooking pot, two nylon mats, four rolls of bathing soap and N20, 000 cash for each returning household.