Killings: Reps urge for joint security intervention at Taraba, Plateau borders
By Uzair Adam Imam
The House of Representatives decried the incessant security challenge in communities bordering Taraba and Plateau states, urging the Chief of Defence Staff, Gen. Leo Irabor, to begin joint security operations in the areas.
This reportedly followed the adoption of a motion by a member from Taraba State, Abdulsalam Mubarak.
Mubarak raised an urgent need to mitigate the security challenge of banditry and kidnapping in the areas.
He lamented that banditry in the areas had skyrocketed with several reported cases of killings, rape and kidnappings.
However, the House also pleaded with the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs, Disaster Management and Social Development and the North East Development Commission to assess the damage cost by banditry and provide palliative to the victims.
Insecurity is one of the menacing challenges that militate against peace in communities bordering Taraba and Plateau and the entire northeastern and northwestern parts of the country.
Several hundreds of people were reported dead due to the insecurity, with many others kidnapped, raped or displaced.
Boat capsizes, 26 die in Sokoto
By Muhammad Sabiu
Following a boat tragedy on the Shagari River in the Shagari local government area of Sokoto state, 26 people have been confirmed deceased, with the search continuing.
Aliyu Dantani, Chairman of Shagari Council Area, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Sokoto on Wednesday that the accident happened on Tuesday evening.
Dantani added that 21 of the 26 bodies retrieved were women, while five were children, and that a search and rescue attempt was still underway.
On the other hand, the chairman stated that the exact number of passengers on the boat could not be determined right away.
He said that local divers were currently in the river, trying to figure out how to recover dead or save lives.
Northern elders ask Buhari to resign over incessant security challenge
By Uzair Adam Imam
The Northern Elders Forum (NEF) has demanded the immediate resignation of President Muhammadu Buhari over the incessant security challenge bedevilling the northwestern part of the country.
The Director, Publicity and Advocacy of NEF, Dr. Hakeem Baba-Ahmed, made the call on Tuesday saying that Nigerians cannot continue to live and die under the dictates of bandits.
Baba-Ahmed lamented that Nigerians had shed enough tears and blood without an appropriate response from those with responsibilities to protect us.
He added that President Buhari’s administration does not appear to have answers to the challenges of security to which Nigerians are exposed.
He stated that “We cannot continue to live and die under the dictates of killers, kidnappers, rapists and sundry criminal groups that have deprived us of our rights to live in peace and security.
“Our constitution has provisions for leaders to voluntarily step down if they are challenged by personal reasons, or they prove incapable of leading.
“It is now time for President Buhari to seriously consider that option since his leadership has proved spectacularly incapable of providing security over Nigerians.
“Our Forum is aware of the weight of this advice, and it is also aware that we cannot continue to live under these conditions until 2023, when President Buhari’s term ends,” Baba-Ahmed said.
Bandits storm mosque in Taraba, kill district head
By Uzair Adam Imam
Bandits have invaded a mosque at Maisamari town in Sardauna Local Government Area of Taraba State and killed Alhaji Abdulkadir Maisamari, a district head.
A source disclosed that Maisamari was shot dead during Ishai prayers on Monday night.
The bandits were reported to have opened fire shortly as they roamed the prayer ground.
However, residents reportedly confronted the gunmen, forcing them to run for their lives.
The bandits were also said to have fled into a mountain close to the town.
The Taraba State Police Command spokesperson, DSP Usman Abdullahi, confirmed the incident to journalists.
BREAKING: Recruitment of Constables: Police to conduct CBT for shortlisted candidates next week
By Ishaka Mohammed
The Nigeria Police Force has shortlisted qualified candidates for the next stage of its 2021 recruitment of constables.
In a statement signed by the force’s acting public relations officer, CSP Olumuyiwa Adejobi, applicants who attended the physical screening exercise are to check their application status on http://www.policerecruitment.gov.ng.
Qualified candidates are urged to print their slips for the Computer-Based Test (CBT) scheduled to hold on April 20 and 21, 2022, at designated centres nationwide.
On his part, the Inspector-General of Police, IGP Usman Alkali Baba, maintains that “the recruitment is absolutely free”, adding that applicants should be wary of criminal elements who might want to dupe them. He urges candidates to channel their complaints through 08100004507 or support@policerecruitment.gov.ng.
Kaduna: Nigerian military eliminate terrorists, intercept ransom payment, salvage kidnap victims
By Muhammad Sabiu
Nigerian soldiers have captured a large sum of money intended to pay for the release of several captives held by armed bandits in Kaduna State.
Some of the ransom payment couriers are alleged to be security personnel, according to media reports.
Kidnapped victims, including women and children, were also rescued by troops participating in intelligence-driven military operations.
The operations, which were carried out concurrently by Nigerian Army ground soldiers and special forces from the Nigerian Air Force, NAF, resulted in eliminating several bandit terrorists.
According to an intelligence officer, troops from the synchronised operations from the 271 NAF Detachment in Birnin Gwari and the Nigerian Army FOB in Gwaska rescued dozens of kidnapped victims.
“The sum of N60,000,000 in cash, petroleum products and sophisticated weapons were recovered during the operations.
“Other items recovered by the troops from the suspects include vehicles, AK-47 rifles, magazines, various kinds of ammunition and mobile phones.
“Meanwhile, we will refer the case of the arrested couriers who mostly have identifications with security agencies to the Department of State Service (DSS) and Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA) for further investigation,” the intelligence officer was quoted as saying.
IPOB and Southeast insecurity: Soludo to the rescue
By Mukhtar Ya’u Madobi
“The current trajectory is a road to desolation. Let us get around the table and talk. Let the elite in the closet come out and let’s debate our future and forge a consensus. The elite conspiracy of silence and some community leaders should end.” – Governor Charles Chukuma Soludo
The above quote was made by the Anambra State Governor, Professor Charles Chukuma Soludo at a low key but a colourful inaugural ceremony to mark the beginning of his tenure in office on Thursday, March 17, 2022.
It is not surprising for the Governor to have solicited the support of stakeholders and other community leaders in the state in order to surmount the challenges currently being faced by the state and the entire eastern region in general.
When Soludo was announced as the winner of the last November gubernatorial election in Anambra, he clearly knows that one of the most contending issues that people might look up to him to proffer solution is nothing but the rising insecurity that has engulfed the state and the entire Igbo nation.
It is no longer news that the eastern region of the country has, over the years, become a hub for maiming, killings and wanton destruction of citizens’ properties, occasioned by the activities of some miscreants tagged as ‘unknown gunmen.’ But truth be told, the origin of these so-called “unknown” or “faceless” gunmen can be traced to the military wing of the members of the outlawed Indigenous People of Biafra, IPOB group, known as Eastern Security Network, ESN.
The group, under the leadership of Nnamdi Kanu, who is currently languishing inside the Department of State Service, DSS dungeon after being rearrested in Kenya, last June and flown back to Nigeria, after he previously fled the country, upon breaking the bail conditions.
The IPOB group has over the years been actively clamouring for the creation of an independent Biafra nation from Nigeria.
According to them, the eastern region and Igbos have been marginalized and treated as second class citizens in the country in terms of appointment into political offices, resource sharing and allocation, and governance, among a host of other allegations. But alas, instead of the outlawed group adopting a legitimate manner of registering their grievances, they subscribed and resorted to violence.
The notorious group has carried out several attacks on government facilities including security outfits, Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC Offices, markets, and prisons among other strategic locations. It can be recalled that the ‘unknown gunmen’ in March 2021 unleashed terror on Owerri, the capital city of Imo State, in a night raid. Reports indicated that the guns-wielding men attacked Owerri Correctional Center, thereby releasing not less than 2,000 inmates and subsequently burning some sections of the facility.
Again, they also went ahead and attacked Imo State Police Headquarters, killed some security personnel, looted the armoury and eventually set ablaze security patrol vans that were packed at the premises. Since then, their activities have become more pronounced as they intensified their attacks at will, killing various personnel of the security forces of Nigeria including the Police, Military, DSS Operatives, Prison Warders, Road Traffic Officers just to mention but a few.
It is also on record that IPOB militants have been enforcing sit-at-home order every Monday across the entire five states of the eastern region since when Kanu was re-arrested. According to the group, this is to serve as a means of solidarity and to force the government to capitulate to their demand for his unconditional release.
However, this order has been crippling the economic situation of the region thereby dragging it to the cross. A lot of people who live from hand to mouth are denied such opportunities on a weekly basis as markets remain closed as well as schools, banks, government agencies etc. In fact, this lingering terror activity of the group is like a cankerworm that has been eating deep into the flesh of the entire eastern region people.
Reports indicated that there are some incidents where a lot of people are killed and their business places destroyed by the proscribed IPOB group members under the pretext that they have flouted the sit-at-home order.
Not only that, a number of elites in the Igbo region cutting across traditional rulers, politicians, public servants and business moguls were murdered by these blood-sucking demons. The unfortunate murder of Ahmed Gulak and that of the husband of the Late Dora Akunyele in their own pools of blood by the IPOB militants were, to say the least of their heinous acts.
Their nefarious activities are just too numerous to be outlined in this piece. Thus, let’s just leave it as a story for another day.
Meanwhile, it is gratifying to learn that presently, Governor Soludo of Anambra has stepped up an effort to stem the rising tides of insecurities haunting the state and the region at large.
Soludo, while featuring in an interview with the Channels Television, promised to grant amnesty to IPOB members who agree to call it a quit by laying down their arms. Though his plan has been countered by the Ohanaeze Ndigbo, emphasizing that the vicious group have been causing violence to the entire Igbo nation all under the pretext of actualizing the Biafra nation, they however welcomed the idea of rehabilitating the aggrieved Igbo youth in order to have everlasting peace in the region.
To that effect, the Governor has just appointed and unveiled a 15-member Truth, Justice and Peace Commission to stop the activities of the indigenous people of Biafra (IPOB). The committee is headed by the human rights activist, Prof Chidi Odinkalu with Ambassador Bianca Ojukwu as Secretary.
With these recent unfolding developments mapped out by the Governor, it is hoped that the IPOB members will lay down their weapons and embrace peace so as harmony and normalcy could finally return to the Igbo nation.
Mukhtar, a public commentator, writes from Kano via ymukhtar944@gmail.com.
Is the Buhari-led government on holiday?
By Shafi’i Sheikh Jr.
I tried to resist the temptation to speak on matters that fringe around governance and government policies. This is because there are things that an observer can only see if he resists the temptation to jump into the fray and become an actor himself. But recent happenings have reawakened my enthusiasm to march to the stake like the man my mom had always desired me to be and take the bullet in the chest should the need arise.
In 2015, we supported APC with our sweat and money chanting “change” wherever we found ourselves so much that it caught every household’s mood. Why? Because we thought a Buhari-led government would have no trouble handling the heaps of problems bedevilling our mettlesome Nigeria.
Now, let’s get down to the nitty-gritty of why we-the masses brought Buhari to power in the first place.
First of all, Nigeria, Africa’s biggest oil-producing country, was rapidly growing its economy, but the wealth had not been shared appropriately. Half of Nigeria’s population was living below the poverty line. The corruption that was partly to blame was eating into every fabric of Nigeria’s being.
Secondly, the menace of Boko Haram was spreading wider than it started and had already claimed over 20,000 people and forced out some 3 million others from their homes. We accused the previous Goodluck E. Jonathan-led administration of not taking the menace seriously and posited that Buhari, who’s from the region, would do better if given the opportunity.
We, therefore, came out en masse to vote Buhari into power. The 2015 election was and still is of massive significance in Nigeria’s turbulent history because, for the first time in Nigeria’s history, an opposition candidate won a presidential election free and fair.
The president-elect (as he then was) told his supporters that “We have proven to the world that we are people who have embraced democracy. We have put the one-party state behind us.”
“You, Nigerians, have won. The people have shown their love for this nation and their belief in democracy,” He mentioned.
It was the beginning of a new era. Nigeria and Nigerians refurbished a new hope. But these hopes were soon quashed by his incompetence to constitute a cabinet after 100 days in office. It was opined that a leader who couldn’t form a cabinet for that long is ill-prepared for the most important job in the country.
Albeit hinging his voter appeal on waging war against corruption, fighting terrorism, and revamping the economy, the Buhari-led government had nothing to show except a plethora of controversies that embroiled his first 100 days in office.
Today, the government only succeeded in pulling us from the shackles of Boko Haram into a dungeon full of kidnappers, IPOB and the so-called Unknown Gunmen.
Ours is a country where lives are no longer sacred. Education has been exiled, social amenities are declared “extinct”, and food! Well, you’ll have to take a bank loan if you want to eat healthily. These terrorists attack and operate in broad daylight.
Even after the president’s declaration in 2019 that Nigeria has “technically won the war” against Boko Haram, the country is still ravaged by insurgencies ranging from kidnappings to coordinated attacks on security forces and population centres.
The recent attack on the Abuja-Kaduna train is a clear example that Nigerians will not forget for a very long time.
If holiday refers to that time of the year when one usually takes time away from home, work, or business to travel and relax, then this so-called government has betrayed Nigerians and gone on a holiday!
Shafi’i Sheikh Jr. is a student of the Nigerian Law School, Kano Campus. He writes from Jos and can be reached via talk2sheikh.esq@gmail.com.
Katsina: Villagers neutralise armed bandits while collecting ‘tax’
By Uzair Adam Imam
Citizens in Kahiyal in Bugaje word of Jibia, Katsina State, have bravely stood up to bandits who invaded the village to collect tax from the innocent people.
The Daily Reality gathered that two armed bandits came into the village in broad daylight, asking people to give them money.
The villagers feigned to oblige but only for one of them to quickly grab the bandit’s rifle while dropping the money. Other locals, who also had their weapons, helped him.
A citizen, Professor Abdussamad Umar Jibia, narrated the incident on his Facebook wall.
He said the bandits “stayed in one place and asked the villagers to contribute money and bring it to them.
“The villagers did that. However, unfortunately for the criminals, the person who brought the money dropped it and quickly grasped the boy holding the rifle.
“Other villagers who were ready with their local weapons rushed on the criminals and finished them off as it should be,” he said.
Insecurity and banditry are the major security issues bedevilling the northwestern part of the country, leading to thousands of deaths while numerous others are forced to migrate.
The criminals impose unlawful taxes on countless farmers and others living in the affected areas.
Nigeria Jubilee Fellows Programme: Advice to three applicant categories
Ishaka Mohamed
According to a New York Times bestselling author, Joyce Meyer, patience is not simply the ability to wait — it’s how we behave while we’re waiting.
Many Nigerian youths have been eager for the outcome of their applications for the Nigeria Jubilee Fellows Programme (NJFP). Well, the waiting period is almost over because forty days from now, successful Fellows will have been deployed to their host organisations. This is according to the mail sent to many applicants, a version of which has also been posted on Facebook by the official page of the scheme: Nigeria Jubilee Fellows Programme.
That said, I write this purposely to advise all the applicants. I have categorised them into three.
The first group are those who have been pushed by impatience into using rude comments on posts by two Facebook pages: UNDP in Nigeria and Nigeria Jubilee Fellows Programme. I presume they’re really fresh graduates who, probably, haven’t been following recruitment processes in Nigeria. I’ll outline only three out of the countless cases of delay in the country for them.
The Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) started a recruitment process in 2019 but failed to complete it until 2022.
N-Power Batch C application started in June 2020, but the deployment of beneficiaries never happened until after 15 months.
The Kaduna State Teachers’ Service Board (KSTSB) started a recruitment exercise in 2018 but managed to employ 7,000 secondary school teachers in July 2022. In fact, as of the time of writing this article, that’s nine months after their employment, none of these teachers has been posted to a school, let alone being paid a salary.
Therefore, there isn’t any need to feel too disappointed over something that is highly expected. It’s worth stressing, however, that it’s OK to clamour for a positive change in whatever concerns us, but decorum is highly recommended, at least for a young graduate and job seeker. So, rude comments should be done away with.
The second group are the over 340,000 applicants who won’t be selected. Yes, a total of 365,679 people applied for the scheme that needs only 20,000 Fellows per annum.
With or without cogent evidence, there’ll be lamentations from almost every angle when successful applicants are eventually picked. Many will blame favouritism and the like. A good number might lose interest in applying for other jobs, claiming that it’s by whom one knows. I urge all unsuccessful applicants (yet to know, though) to avoid losing momentum because of this; it’s simply part of life.
Now, to the third group, the privileged few, I advise that you think twice before leaving your ‘small’ job for the programme. Although it’s said that Fellows will be fully paid as graduates, being deployed doesn’t guarantee prompt payments. You must be realistic to yourself by keeping an alternative means of livelihood.
Of all of the schemes I’ve observed in Nigeria, only NYSC is somehow consistent in the payment of allowances. I’ll mention three others that have significantly failed in this regard.
One, as of January 2022, many of the past N-Power volunteers were still owed stipends. That was after 18 months of exiting the programme. And even while in the scheme, a significant number of these youth often received overdue allowances.
Two, the Special Public Works Programme for 774,000 unskilled labourers ended in March 2021, but a good number of the beneficiaries weren’t paid their N60,000 stipends until after nine months (end of December 2021).
Three, some Nigerian youth were placed on a three-month paid internship called the Work Experience Programme (WEP) from August to October 2021.
The Federal Ministry of Youth and Sports Development promised each intern a monthly allowance of N30,000 within the period of their engagement.
But such never happened, as the payment commenced in November 2021 and continued, inconsistently, through February 2022.
Some may think that NJFP will be different; I pray so, too. However, the scheme has already shared a pattern with its predecessors. In August 2021, it was promised that the first batch would be inducted in about two months’ time (October), only for the statement to be changed after seven months.
Based on the above instances, I reiterate that you keep an alternative source of livelihood before engaging in the programme. This is especially important for those who’d be posted to states other than their current settlements.
On a final note, if you’re privileged to be deployed to a private organisation, make sure to sell yourself. Much as many organisations usually aim to rightsize their employee base, none will be willing to lose a diligent young graduate if you really present yourself well.
Ishaka Mohammed writes from Kaduna. He can be reached via ishakamohammed39@gmail.com.









