THE member representing Gulani, Damaturu, Gujba and Tarmuwa Federal Constituency in the House of Representatives, Hon. Khadija Bukar Abba Ibrahim, has called for the replacement of the Joint Task Force Operations with the emergency rule currently running in the three north eastern States. The female lawmaker made the call while who fielding questions from newsmen in Damatutru, noting that the insurgency can be contained with a Joint Task Force security operations. The extended State of Emergency in the three states of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe is billed to expire on the April 19. “Personally, I think we need to have all the help that we need to curb the insurgency. You don’t have to impose a state of emergency. You can actually put in place a joint task force within the state without actually saying there must be an emergency rule. I think that is a possibility. So, I don’t see any reason why they should extend the state of emergency,” Khadija said. Hon. Khadija, wife of former governor of Yobe State Sen. Bukar Abba Ibrahim, who is also the current Senator representing Yobe East senatorial district, also lamented that the insurgency has killed her enthusiasm in politics. Hon. Khadija, who regretted that contractors executing constituency projects, sometime abandon the jobs for fear of Boko Haram attacks, stressed that “this has resulted to so many abandoned projects for the people.”
Tag: Yobe
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Yobe rep seeks Joint Task Force to replace emergency rule
A member of the House of Representatives from Yobe State, Khadija Bukar Abba Ibrahim has advocated for the replacement of Joint Task Force Operations with the emergency rule currently running in the three North Eastern States.
The female lawmaker representing Gulani, Damaturu, Gujba and Tarmuwa Federal Constituency who fielded questions from journalists in Damatutru noted that the insurgency could still be contained with joint task force security operations instead of a state of emergency.
The extended State of Emergency in the three States of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe is billed to expire on the 19th /04/2014.
“Personally, I think we need to have all the help that we need to curb the insurgency. You don’t have to impose a state of emergency. You can actually carryout joint task force activities within the state without actually saying there must be an emergency rule. I think that is a possibility. So I don’t see an issue why they should always extend a state of emergency”, Khadija said.
Khadija , wife of former governor of Yobe State Sen. Bukar Abba Ibrahim, who is also the current Senator representing Yobe East senatorial district also lamented that the insurgency has killed her enthusiasm in politics.
Hon. Khadija stated that contractors executing their constituency projects sometimes abandon their jobs for fear of Boko Haram attacks.
She said: “In fact, the insecurity has totally destroyed my zeal in politics. This is because, I cannot reach out to my people as I used to. Because of this insecurity, I cannot visit each ward from my constituency as i used to go and see my people ward by ward. Out of the 43 wards that i have, i haven’t been able visit them the way I used to except in Damaturu.
“My people normally come to see me whenever they hear that I am in town but you know how risky that is. Some people would come but they will not see me because of the security situation so it’s just so frustrating both on the side of my people and myself too. It’s very unfortunate what is happening to us hear but i believe that God will bring an end to this problem in the nearest future”, Hon. Kadija said.
The female law maker dismissed fears that election may not hold in Yobe State come 2015, stressing that, “the state conducted a very peaceful local government elections and Isha Allah, our wards, local governments and state congresses would be conducted without any hitch so why would somebody sit down in Abuja and decide that election will not hold in Yobe State? it is not possible”, she informed.
While calling on women to be more involved in politics, she said women are more hard-working and committed not just on women issues but other national issues as they affect the society in general.
Hon. Khadija also challenged the First Lady, Patience Goodluck Jonathan to take her Mama Peace project to Yobe, Borno and Adamawa where the peace is most desired.
“If you say you are Mama Peace then obviously you should look out and see where peace should exist. If she hasn’t come to areas like this, then she can’t sit in Abuja a think peace should come to her. She has to go out there and condole and console with the people that need the peace. I don’t know if she has representatives through the first ladies of the states…but I think the First Lady can do more with the resources at her disposal,” Hon. Khadija said.
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Wanted: A war cabinet
It was a catalogue of deaths and destruction last week when the Boko Haram terrorists went on a killing-spree in the three Nigeria’s northeast states of Yobe, Adamawa and Borno. The attacks started on Tuesday at the Federal Government College, Buni Yadi, Yobe State, where no fewer than 43 students were killed. From there, they moved to Shuwa, in Magadali Local Government Area of Adamawa state where a teachers’ college, a secondary school and a Catholic covent were attacked. By Saturday, it was the turn of Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, where a twin-bomb explosion tore through the heart of the city, killing more than 50 people. Mainok, a village about 50 kilometers from Maiduguri, also had a taste of the orgy of violence and blood-letting.
The attack on the Government College, Buni Yadi, bore the full imprimatur of a similar one on Saturday, September 28, 2013 at the College of Agriculture, Guijba, in the same state. In that attack, more than 50 students of the school met their untimely death. The terrorists attacked the college at midnight when most of the students were deeply asleep. That also, was not without precedence. In June 2013, the terrorists killed eight pupils and a teacher during an attack on Government Secondary School, Damaturu, capital of Yobe State. They also killed 29 pupils at Government Secondary School, Mamudo, also in the state.
On Saturday, April 13, 2013, an unspecified number of students of Monguno Secondary School, in Monguno Local Government of Borno State, were killed as they returned home on foot and bicycles from the centres where they wrote the West African Examination Council (WAEC) Senior Secondary Certificate Examination (SSCE). Before that daylight massacre, six secondary school teachers, including a principal, were also hacked down by the terrorists in the same local government area.
It is sad that our so-called security forces have always been caught napping each time these marauders come calling. In the killings of the school children who were accosted on their way from their examination centres in April 2013, no security agent was sighted at the scene of the slaughtering until more than three hours later. The same scenario has played out again and again. It was the same story at the School of Agriculture, Gujba. In the recent incident at FGC, Buni Yadi, the killers did not only have the luxury of time to carry out their devilish act, they also proved that they were out to destroy the hopes of tomorrow by separating the girls from the boys. While they mowed down the boys, they simply drove the girls away from school and advised them to go and get married instead of wasting their time at school. That is true to their name Boko Haram, which means “education is bad.”
What is more sickening in all these, especially in last week’s incident, is the fact that the security agents who were stationed within the proximity of the schools left their checkpoints shortly before the terrorists came calling. Now, the security agents are running helter-skelter to unravel those who might have been complicit in the attacks among the local populace. Talk of medicine after death. By the way, why is it that these security agents, with the hordes of intelligence officers in their midst, have never for once nipped these attacks in the bud while the so-called rag-tag terrorists are daily giving them a bloody nose?
There must be something wrong somewhere. It is either a failure of intelligence or non-intelligence at all, as the case may be (if I am permitted to put it that way). It is obvious that some people are aiding and abetting these criminals within the local population and among the security agents as well. For how long will the blood of our children be spilled like rotten milk on the altar of greed, selfishness and vaulting ambition of our overfed politicians both in uniform and babaringa? Every time, you hear about a fleet of vehicles consisting of more than 10 or 15 attacking a particular location. Why is it impossible for the security forces to pick them as they move along? I am quite aware that because of the dry season, almost everywhere in the affected areas is motorable at this time, but if the security forces are doing their work well, these terrorists should still be spotted.
It is rather superfluous that while the brigandage and blood-letting that have been going on in the northeast of the country in the last four or five years (2009 – 2014) continue to spiral out of control, up till this moment, no single person has either been fingered or arrested on account of being the sponsor of this brazen terrorism against our fatherland. The other day, a former governor of one of the states in the Northeast was allegedly arrested in Cameroun by a Camerounian security officer who said he was convinced that the former governor is one of the financiers of the Boko Haram insurgency. The former governor was arrested on his way to see the governor of Northern Cameroun.
Although the former governor in question was later released by an order from the Vice-President of Cameroun, after he quickly reached out to people, he is strongly suspected to have played a role in the rise of Boko Haram in the first instance and so, it will be difficult to isolate him from the unrelenting assault of the criminal gangs on the country. There is also this belief that this former governor may not be a Nigerian as he is said to hail from neighbouring Chad Republic, where he currently operates an airline and maintains a mansion. After his tenure as governor many years back, it was to Chad that he went to cool off and observe developments in Nigeria from the sideline until his recent visit to the country which sparked off a wave of violence in his native state.
By now, I believe the security agencies should have the list of suspects who are collaborating with these terrorists in one way or another to wreak havoc on unsuspecting Nigerians, but, perhaps, because of political expediency, nobody wants to touch them. That is why some people think that if the President announces today that he will not be contesting the 2015 presidential election, the whole Boko Haram brouhaha will die a natural death. Since the President has an inalienable right to contest as President a second time as enshrined in the 1999 Constitution in use in the country, if he wishes, the onus is on the security agencies to do their work properly and contain this avoidable carnage that has continued to cast a dark spot on the image of the country. The only way out of this quagmire in which the country has been enmeshed all this while is the urgent need for the President to form a war cabinet.
In the first instance, the troops which were deployed to the theatre of war in the Northeast went there purely for peacekeeping operation. Now the whole scenario has snowballed into a real war situation. Therefore, the strategy must change. A senior cabinet minister must coordinate the ‘war’. As things are now, it may be impossible for the National Security Adviser, NSA, the only person who probably performs the role of coordinating the military interventions in the Northeast, to summon any of the head of the services to a meeting – I mean summoning someone like the Chief of Army Staff or the Chief of Air Staff that are both involved in managing the crisis to a meeting – not to talk of the Chief of Defence Staff. They will just ignore him because the NSA is more or less a Staff Officer to the President. That is why there is need to quickly put a war cabinet in place.
The war cabinet, as envisaged, will consist of seasoned Generals, both serving and retired, as well as some respectable and responsible civilians, whose duty will be to take care of the political angle to this festering crisis. It is time to end this genocide!
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PHOTO: Massacre in Yobe college
Gov. Ibrahim Gaidam with Speaker Yobe House of Assembly, Adamu Dala Dogo ICT centre of the college burnt down ICT centre of the college burnt down Burnt boys hostel -

Breaking News: 29 college students killed in Yobe
It was yet another day of blood bath in Yobe as Boko Haram insurgents killed about 29 students at Federal Government College Buni Yadi.
Yobe State police commissioner, Sanusi Rufai, confirmed that the figure, saying the attackers came on Monday night and killed 29 students and burnt down 24 staff quarters including the college’s adminisstrative block.
“Some of the students were burnt to ashes by the insurgents. From the information I got, no female students was killed by the Boko Haram. Only male students were killed,” Rufai informed journalists.
Spokesman of 3 Div Special Operation Battalion, cptn. Lazarus Eli, also confirmed the attack.
“We don’t have details yet but back our men have been deployed to the area in pursuit of the attackers,” Capt. Eli said.
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APC sweeps Yobe LG polls
The All Progressive Congress (APC) has won all the 17 chairmanship seats in the Local Government Elections in Yobe state conducted last Saturday.
The party also won the 178 councilors’ seats conceding non to any political party.
Potiskum Local Government witnessed the highest turn-out with 122, 824 while Tarmuwa, Machina, and Bursari witnessed the lowest turn-out of voters with less than 40,000 voters according to the results released by the state independent electoral commission.
Declaring the results of the election, chairman of the Yobe State Independent Electoral Commission (YBSIEC) Mohammed Jauro Abdu announced that all the candidates of the APC for the position of the chairman of the 17 local government areas in the state had the highest number of votes and returned elected.
The YBSIEC chairman also revealed that out of the 1.2 million registered voters in the state, 999, 700 voted representing about 78.99% of the total votes.
He praised the media, security agents, electoral officials, observers and Non-Governmental Organizations for their various roles towards the smooth conduct of the election.
The YSIEC boss debunked claims that the state is unsafe to hold any election.
“For those who think that Yobe is Afghanistan or Somali or Sudan, you have come and seen. Our elections went on smoothly without any case of violence or breach of peace. This is a pointer and a signal for the government at the center that the state is safe to hold election even in 2015 Isha Allah”.
The Nation recalls that the All Progressive Grand Alliance (APGA) won one councilor seat in Gujba Local in the last LG election in 2009.
It was gathered that the elected chairmen would be sworn-in on Monday in Damaturu the state capital.
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Emergency Rule: Mix reactions trail Jonathan’s call for extension
The proposed extension of State of Emergency in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states by President Goodluck Jonathan was on Thursday greeted with mixed feeling by the people of Adamawa.President Goodluck Jonathan on Nov. 6 wrote to the National Assembly seeking its approval to extend the emergency rule imposed on the three states experiencing the activities of insurgents.The letter followed the expiration of the six months emergency rule earlier declared in the states in May.Buba Ardo, a resident of Mubi told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that he was happy with the return of peace to the area.He, however, said he would want to see the emergency rule lifted for so that people, particularly the border communities, could go about their daily activities.“I am not happy with the proposed extension of state of emergency, it should be removed while the army should remain to patrol the area,” Ardo said.Also speaking, the Adamawa Secretary of Jamatul Nasril Islam (JNI) , Alhaji Gambo Jika, said he was delighted that peace had returned to the state.“As far as we are concerned in Adamawa, things have normalised except if there are certain things the security agencies see that we cannot see,” Jika said.Also speaking in the same vein, Mallam Abdullahi Damare, Coordinator of North East Interfaith Mediation Centre, said it was high time the emergency rule was lifted.He said the security situation in the state had improved to the extent that the emergency rule was no longer necessary.The Adamawa Chairman of Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Rev. Moses Taparki, also lauded the return of peace and normalcy in the state.He, however, said it was the duty of the security agencies to decide if things were normal enough to lift the emergency rule.“If they (security) feel the situation has improve to warrant the removal of the state of emergency they should go ahead to do it but if they feel otherwise so be it”, Taparki said.Meanwhile, the Director Press Affairs to Gov. Murtala Nyako, Mallam Ahmed Sajoh, has said the Adamawa government was not in support of the extension of the emergency rule.He said rather than a blanket extension, the security agencies should consider the security situation on state-by-state basis.He said the security situation in every state involved in the emergency rule regime would determine suitability of lifting the rule in that state.“We want the National Assembly to treat the case of each state based on merit. They should look at the situation in each state before taking their decision,” Sajoh said -
Jonathan seeks extension of emergency rule in Borno, Yobe, Adamawa
President Goodluck Jonathan yesterday sought the approval of the National Assembly to extend the state of emergency in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states for another six months.
The state of emergency, which was imposed by the Federal Government on May 14 following rising insecurity in the affected states, will elapse on November 12.
Jonathan’s request was contained in a November 5 letter, titled: Re-Extension of the Period for the Proclamation of a State of Emergency.
It was read yesterday at plenary by Senate President David Mark.
The President noted that security agencies, with the support of the residents, had “achieved considerable success in containing the activities of the terrorist elements.”
The letter reads: “May I respectfully draw your attention to the State of Emergency Proclamation 2013, in respect of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states, which was approved by the National Assembly.
“By virtue of the provisions of Section 305(6) (c) of the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999, the Proclamation aforementioned will elapse after a period of six months from the date of approval, except the period is extended by the National Assembly.
“As a result of the laudable efforts of our security agencies and the support of the citizens in the affected areas, we have achieved considerable success in containing the activities of the terrorist elements. However, some security challenges still exist in a few parts.
“Consequently, it has become pertinent to request the approval of the Senate for an extension of the state of emergency for a further period of six months, during which time it is expected that normalcy would have been restored.
“In view of the foregoing, I most respectfully request the Senate to consider and approve by resolution the extension of the Proclamation of the State of Emergency by a period of six months, with effect from November 12.”
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24-hour curfew imposed in Yobe
A 24-hour curfew has been imposed across Yobe state.
The curfew was announced by the spokesman of the 3 Division Special Operation Battalion, Damaturu on Thursday night.
Captain Eli Lazarus, Spokesman of the Division in a press statement urged law abiding citizens to remain calm as the Battalion steps up its operation to rid the state of insurgents.
The Nation learnt that the imposition of the curfew followed the invasion of the state capital by insurgents on Thursday night.
The insurgents reportedly attacked mega petrol stations and and were engaged in a shoot out with men of the Joint Military task force.
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…Yobe governor begs fleeing donor agencies to return
Yobe State governor, Ibrahim Gaidam, yesterday requested donor agencies that relocated out of Damaturu, the state capital, to return and continue with their work with the return of peace in the state.
Gov. Gaidam made the plea on the occasion of the donation of medical equipment worth over N288 million to the state government by the Partnership for Reviving Routine Immunization in Northern Nigeria and Maternal Newborn and Child Health (PRRINN-MNCH) in Damaturu.
The governor, who appreciated the efforts of the PRRINN-MNCH in improving maternal child health in the state, called on international and donor agencies, especially the DFID, to return back to the state and ensure the full take off of the the Support to National Malaria Programme (SUNMAP).
He also regretted the relocation of the State Accountability and Voice Initiative (SAVI) from Yobe State.
Receiving the equipment, Governor Gaidam expressed appreciation to the donors for complementing government’s efforts in improving the quality of health among women and children in the state.
He gave an immediate approval for the procurement and distribution of the 13 United Nation lifesaving commodities.



