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Breaking: Chidari is new Speaker, Kano House of Assembly

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By Ismail Auwal 

Honourable Hamisu Ibrahim Chidari, member representing Makoda constituency, has emerged as the Speaker, Kano State House of Assembly, following the resignation of Hon. Abdulaziz Garba Gafasa.

Honourable Zabairu Hamza Masu was also elected as the Deputy Speaker of the House.

Masu is a member representing Sumaila Constituency in the House.

The former Speaker of the House AbdulAziz Garba Gafasa Voluntarily resigned on Tuesday.

Breaking: Former Kano State House of Assembly Speaker, 13 APC members to join PDP

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By Ismail Auwal

Former Kano State House of Assembly Speaker, Abdulaziz Gafasa, and 13 other APC House members may defect to the opposition People Democratic Party ( PDP) in the state.

This is coming shortly after the speaker voluntarily resigned from his position on Monday.

Sahelian Times gathered that, Governor Ganduje had allegedly plotted the removal of the former speaker, forcing him to swiftly write a resignation letter on Tuesday.

Just in: Gov El-Rufai’s wife, son, daughter in-law test positive for COVID-19

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By Ismail Auwal 

On of the wives of Kaduna State Governor, Haj. Ummi El- Rufai, and his son, Bashir El- Rufai, have tested positive for COVID-19.

Sahelian gathered that Bashir and his wife were on their way out of the country, as newlywed couples, for honeymoon when test results showed that they are positive for COVID-19.

The wife of the governor, Ummi, who also tested positive, has been traced to have had contact with five other people, including a popular interior designer in Abuja.

A source close to the governor’s family told Sahelian Times that four out of those who had contact with the governor’s wife have also tested positive, while the test result of the popular interior designer showed negative on Monday.

Nasir El-Rufai had earlier gone into self-isolation, on Sunday, after an undisclosed senior government official and family members tested positive for COVID-19.

NCC receives international Public Relations association award

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  •  Wins SAEMA 2020’s Emergency and Security Management Prize

The contributions of the Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) to the fight against insecurity in the country has received global endorsement with the Commission bagging two prestigious international awards at the weekend.

Leading the pack is the International Public Relations Association (IPRA) Golden World Awards (GWA) 2020 won by the Commission for its harmonized emergency number, 112 and the construction of Emergency Communications Centers (ECCs) in 36 states of the Federation and the FCT with 19 states already operational and additional 5 ready for activation.

The presentation of the IPRA Golden Global Awards (GGA) 2020 to the Commission had been scheduled to hold earlier this year in Germany but could not hold because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The NCC also received the African Public Relations Association’s (APRA) Certificate of Excellence for its efforts in “leveraging the emergency communication centres for national security.”

 

However, at the Security and Emergency Management Award (SAEMA) 2020, where the President of the Nigerian Institute of Public Relations (NIPR), Malam Mukhtar Sirajo, handed over the coveted trophies to the Director, Public Affairs of the Commission, Dr. Ikechukwu, the NCC was declared Winner of ‘Emergency Management Security and Emergency Management Award.

The NIPR President commended the NCC for a culture of professionalism in the management of its corporate communications and public relations, noting that ‘this has been largely responsible its enviable corporate image and the many awards it had attracted over the years.’

In the same vein, the NCC was also presented with a Certificate of Excellence for ‘Outstanding Accomplishments in Category of Emergency Management’ at the award.

Speaking at the event, Malam Yusheu Shuaibu of Image Merchants Promotion Limited, lauded the NCC for launching an impressive campaign on its emergency communications project.
“The ECCs were activated as a one-stop shop for receiving distress calls from the public and dispatching same to appropriate Emergency Response Agencies (ERAs) for timely response and resolution of the distress.

“The ECC project had been in limbo until a new management under the leadership of Danbatta, embarked on the construction and operationalisation of the ECCs across states of Nigeria and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) till date,” he explained.
At the maiden edition in 2019, the Executive Vice Chairm

an and the Chief Executive Officer, Prof Umar Garba Danbatta was recognised as ‘Nigeria’s Goodwill Ambassador for Security and Emergency Management in Nigeria’ while the NCC, as a corporate organisation, was given with the ‘Corporate Social responsibility Award in Security and Emergency Management in the country.’

GSS Kankara: Boko Haram claims responsibility for abduction

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By Ismail Auwal

Boko Haram has released an audio message where it claimed that it is responsible for the abduction of students of Government Secondary School Kankara in Katsina State.

The 4:30 long clip, released by Abubakar Shekau, leader of Boko Haram, came three days after about 500 students were abducted, a situation that caused a nationwide uproar.

This is coming at a time when Katsina state government , northern Nigeria, says the abductors of the students of Science Secondary School, Kankara have contacted authorities and discussion on the safety and safe return of the students has commenced.

In the same vein, Governor Masari of Katsina state, has viited Daura, to brief the President on the effort being made to locate the abducted schoolboys.

The governor has equally informed the President that security agencies have located where the abducted schoolboys are kept by the abductors.

What do experts say?

Barrister Bulama Bakarti, a researcher on terrorist jihadists groups in West Africa, told BBC Hausa that, it is will not be a surprise if the Boko Haram’s claim turns out to be true considering the fact that Boko Haram has recently announced that its members have infiltrated the northwestern Nigeria.

The barrister said, “members of Boko Haram, some few months back, claimed they have indoctrinated and assimilated gunmen where they work together “

In what situation are the parents of the students?

The parents of the abducted students have continued to appeal to authorities to do all they can to secure the release of their children, whose whereabouts and conditions remains unknown.

A father of two of the abducted students informed us that they have been in distress since incident occurred, “because it is distressing to have a child that has gone missing, it is less concerning to have him dead.”

He said the mother of the boys has been in a very difficult condition, however, they have submitted all their affairs to Allah.

In a related development, parents of the abducted schoolboys, who gathered at the school, were dispersed, using teargas, by law enforcement agents, a situation that drew condemnation from Nigerians including the opposition PDP which said the action is condemnable. “The state apparatus of power is being used to inflict further pain on the helpless victims.”

Katsina state governor, Aminu Bello Masari, who visited the school Saturday, has ordered the closure of all boarding secondary school in the state.

He equally said policemen, military and state security service operatives have already swung into action to locate and free the students.

Who will save the north?

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By Abdullahi Sadiq Mohammed

Northern Nigeria comprises of 19 states that is geopolitically subdivided into Northwest, Northeast and Northcentral Nigeria. Politically, the region produced the one and the only Prime Minister in the country in the person of Sir Abubakar Tabawa Balewa, three democratically elected presidents and four military heads of state. Agriculture and commerce are the major economic activities in the region. Before the discovery of oil, infrastructural development in the region was financed through revenue that had accrued from agriculture. It was so peaceful a region that became a melting pot of different cultures.

The hitherto peaceful region is currently embroiled in a wave of insurgency and banditry which are seriously taking toll on the economic, political and educational development of the area. The security challenge in Northern Nigeria didn’t start overnight. Boko Haram that started in 2002 as ragtag organization has morphed into an international terror group capable of attacking military barrack and formations. Similarly, the banditry started as cattle rustling with the criminals attacking villages and stealing cows of their fellow fulanis in some part of Sokoto and Zamfara State. Today, they have acquired enough experience in their heinous act and transformed into recalcitrant kidnapping syndicate that operate across all the states in the Northwest.  Failure of government and community leaders to nip the problem in the bud resulted in the current monster threatening to consume us all.

The activities of kidnappers and insurgents have negatively affected the economy of the region. Farmers have been coerced to abandon their farmlands in various parts of Zamfara, Katsina, Kaduna and Borno state due to fear of being kidnapped or killed. In some places, the farmers have to pay as high as 800,000 to 900,000 naira as tax to bandits in order to access their farms.  The payment of the tax was never a guarantee for freedom as the bandits can renege on their promise and whisk away their victim.

Additionally, insurgency in Northeast has brought agricultural activities to its knees in Borno state and it environs. Recently, 101 farmers working in rice field were murdered by Boko haram fighters.  Farming is not only a source of food to the people of the rural areas affected by insecurity but also a means of livelihood. Therefore, the decline in agricultural produce translates into less revenue accruing to the affected households which ultimately push more people to live below poverty line.

Rice, maize, millet and sorghum grains that constitute the bulk of food Nigerians eat come from the north. The region also supplies tomatoes, onion, as well as cows to other parts of the country. Agricultural output has direct effect on poultry farming which depends to a large extend on the local farmers for supply of raw materials needed to make chicken feeds. With insecurity tightening its grip on the jugular veins of Northern Nigeria, we need no rocket science to know that the country is heading toward food crisis unless the tide has been changed.

People are abducted on the road, at home and in schools. University professor was abducted in his home at Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria. The worst of all activities of the bandits is the abduction of 333 students who were herded away unchallenged like goats. This is the boldest activity of the group on steroid. This happened in the President’s home state at the time he is on personal vacation in the state.

The governor in a reactive response ordered closure of other secondary schools across the state. The reality is that whether schools are closed or not only a few parents in the state will allow their children to go back to boarding school again. States in Northern Nigeria already have one of the worst statistical indices in health, education and economy when compared with their counterparts in southern Nigeria. The insecurity in the region certainly will compound the problems thereby widening the educational chasm between the southern and northern Nigeria.

There are other unnoticed impacts of this insecurity in the north. For instance, in 2017, while attending conference in Helsinki Finland, I had an opportunity of having discussion with a British Professor of Ophthalmology who was interested in pro bono services in Nigeria.

I suggested Kano or Kaduna as potential state that she might consider. She instantly rejected my proposal on the ground of insecurity. At the end of the same year, Commonwealth scholars from Kaduna state were exempted from post-fellowship mentorship program by the Commonwealth Eye Health Consortium. Our colleagues in Enugu and Ebonyi state benefitted from the same program.

The security situation in northern Nigeria is getting out of control at the time when the occupants of the highest echelons in the country’ security organizations are northerners. The president is also a northerner. The big question now is who will save the north?

Coronavirus: El-Rufai shutdown Private, public schools in Kaduna

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By Ismail Auwal 

Kaduna State government has directed all public and private schools to close on Wednesday 16th December, 2020.

In a statement signed by Kaduna State Commissioner of Education, Shehu Usman Muhammad, the government stated that it is closing the schools in an effort to contain the surge of Covid-19 In the state.

According to the Commissioner, “Physical classes in the Universities, and other Higher institutions of learning will not hold during the closure.”

He added that schools can, “provide online resources for students or online lessons where schools are equipped to do so.”

The commissioner also urged the general public to continue to comply with the Covid-19 safety regulations.

He noted that new resumption date will be announced later.

Coronavirus:  El-Rufai shutdown Private, public schools in Kaduna

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By Ismail Auwal

Kaduna State government has directed all public and private schools to close on Wednesday 16th December, 2020.

In a statement signed by Kaduna State Commissioner of Education, Shehu Usman Muhammad, the government stated that it is closing the schools in an effort to contain the surge of Covid-19 In the state.

According to the Commissioner, “Physical classes in the Universities, and other Higher institutions of learning will not hold during the closure.”

He added that schools can, “provide online resources for students or online lessons where schools are equipped to do so.”

The commissioner also urged the general public to continue to comply with the Covid-19 safety regulations.

He noted that new resumption date will be announced later.

Masari opens negotiation with schoolboy’s kidnappers

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By Ismail Auwal

The Katsina State Governor, Aminu Masari, on Monday said that his government has opened discussions with the kidnappers who invaded Government Science Secondary School Kankara on Friday and abducted hundreds of students.

The report is coming out just a few hours after the Nigerian Defence Minister has promised to rescue all the boys from kidnappers in a few hours.

The governor made this revelation when he visited President Muhammadu Buhari to brief him about the situation of the kidnapped schoolboys.

During the meeting at the President’s private house in Daura, Governor Masari stated that the kidnappers had made contact and discussions are ongoing pertaining to the safe return of the students to their homes.

This was contained in a statement issued by the Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Mal. Garba Shehu.

The statement read, “President Muhammadu Buhari Monday in Daura, Katsina State, received a briefing on children kidnapped from Government Science Secondary School, Kankara, with an assurance from Governor Aminu Bello Masari of steady progress to bring them out unharmed.

“Governor Masari also noted that security agencies had located the position of the children.

“The governor said the President was fully committed to the rescue of the school children, adding that it was only appropriate to visit the President and give him more details of rescue efforts.”

President Muhammadu Buhari who is currently in Daura, is yet to visit the affected community three days after the unfortunate incident. However, Federal Government delegation led by the National Security Adviser, Retired Maj Gen Munguno, has visited the town.

Services chiefs should be replaced now- Kashim Shettima

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By Ismail Auwal

The former Governor of Borno State and a serving Senator, Kashim Shettima, has said that common sense dictates that service chiefs should go now.

Shettima said that while calling for removal of the overstaying service chiefs.

Shettima is one of the leaders from Northeast who have repeatedly called for sacking the unperforming service chiefs. He has severally argued on the floor of the senate for Nigerian President to sack the service chiefs. He is also of the belief that no one is indispensable, hence the need for the current service chiefs to be replaced with people who have new ideas and fresh perspectives on how to tackle the security issues in the country.

Shettima said, “Why I was agitating for the removal of the security chiefs has to do with the fact that they have given their best but their best is no longer good enough. Shehu Shagari had three service chiefs in his four years of stewardship.

“Obasanjo in his second coming started with Victor Malu, he had Alex Ogbemudia, and subsequently he had Martin Luther Agwai before he had Azazi as his Chief of Army Staff.

“Jonathan and Yar’Adua started with General Yusuf. Subsequently, they had Abdulrahman Bello Dambazzau, then Azubuike Ihejirika and then Kenneth Minimah. In eight years, they had four service chiefs.

“The current Chief of Defence Staff is course 25. He is in his 41st year of service. Is he so indispensable? The current Chief of Army Staff is course 26. The current Major Generals did not meet them in the NDA. Are they so indispensable?

“Nobody is indispensable. And the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. We believe that morale is high; there is the need for an injection of people with new ideas, with fresher perspectives to come and address the issues.

“By June next year, Course 35 is going without reaching the pinnacle of their careers. So justice, equity, fairness and even commonsense demands that these service chiefs should go.”