Katsina State

Matso-Matso Jibia and their unfair treatment

By Prof. Abdussamad Umar Jibia

It is now one and a half months since the Nigerian Telecommunication Commission (NCC) issued an order to all telecommunication companies to shut down their telecommunication sites in Zamfara state. According to the information released by Nigeria’s telecommunication regulator, it did so at the instance of the Zamfara State Government. The shutdown, according to the NCC boss was necessary to “enable relevant security agencies to carry out the required activities towards addressing the security challenge in the state”.

Soon after, a number of local governments in Katsina state, including mine, were shut down at the request of the Katsina State Government.

Although I had my reservations about the order, I kept my comments to myself and remained hopeful. This is for two reasons. One. I decided to believe that the decision was taken in good faith after due consultations and brainstorming among Government and security officials on the ground. In civilized societies such collective decisions are respected not necessarily because they are the best but because of the blessings associated with numbers.

My other reason was to avoid being misunderstood. Since banditry started in Jibia/Batsari area it has affected many of my near and distant relations. But despite that and the fact that all of us, including most of the direct victims, supported and voted in this Government, many people believe that we have no reason to criticize the present Government even if constructively. If you are kidnapped, killed, raped or injured the person you should blame is yourself or your Governor but not the central Government. I know the kind of negative reactions I receive from such people just for narrating that a bandits’ operation has taken place in my local government. That has not prevented me from saying my mind anyway.

It is almost two months now and so far, as far as I know, none of the known bandits’ kingpins has been killed or arrested. Is that because their locations are unknown? I don’t think so. When Government was looking for them to sign a peace accord, they were easily located. In fact, if Government sources are anything to go by, the Governors have their telephone numbers and they were always in touch.

“Since the bandits are isolated inside the forest, is it not easier to bombard them?” I am only repeating a question a journalist asked one of the Governors. The answer, please don’t laugh was, “They hide inside caves”.

Like that journalist, I also thought that the security agents had already identified the bandits’ locations and all that remained was to launch rains of attacks within the two weeks they requested. Alas! Here we are. Tens have just been killed in Sokoto state. In other states like mine, the stories are not different. However, the news does not travel quickly because of the telecommunications shutdown. I heard someone insinuate that to be the reason the Government asked for telecommunications cut.

Of course, some of the Governors like Aminu Masari are vividly helpless. We saw how he went around begging service chiefs to come and help him deal with bandits. In the end, when the kind of help he was looking for was not forthcoming, he started telling the people to acquire arms and defend themselves. Do you blame him?
Yes. I blame him for not buying the weapons and distributing them to the people. Most of the victims of banditry are villagers who are struggling to eat. Where does my Governor expect them to get the money to buy AK47 rifles?

But if I may ask, whose policy is it to burn the houses of suspected bandits but not to kill or arrest them? Again, how do you identify a bandit in order to arrest, kill or burn their houses? I wrote severally that the bandits living in communities should be identified and summarily tackled and I have no regret for saying it.

However, some of the activities of local vigilantes and security forces in the Jibia/Batsari axis leave much to be desired. Over the past month, many houses in selected villages were burnt to ashes and personal effects were taken away by local vigilantes backed by regular security forces. To my dismay, no bandit was said to be arrested or killed in the operations. In fact, as far as I know, no bandit was identified and declared wanted. This raises concern about the sincerity of those who carried out the attacks. Are they actually fighting banditry or is it banditry with another face?

I am particularly worried about one of the villages whose story I know very well. Matso-Matso is a small settlement about two kilometres from Zandam in Jibia local government. Matso-Matso villagers are some of the early victims of banditry. Their resistance to banditry is what led to the assassination of their Imam in 2016. The Imam, who doubles as my maternal uncle, had the habit of gathering people every Thursday to recite the complete Qur’an and pray against bandits’ activities. This led to his attack by a group of bandits on August 7, 2016. The following week, I led a delegation of the villagers to meet the Emir of Katsina and the Commissioner of Police. If PC Usman Abdullahi or the head of his CID are reading this they will bear witness that they promised to launch a raid to arrest the five key suspects identified by the villagers. On their part, the villagers promised to arrest Jatau (not real name) the principal suspect and hand him over to the police dead or alive whenever they set eyes on him.

Neither the police raided nor did the villagers set eyes on Jatau before the infamous peace agreement Governor Masari sealed with the criminals in November of that year. To their disappointment, Jatau came to their village with a full Police escort and they were told that they had no option but to accept him since the Governor had forgiven him and signed a peace agreement with him. After all, they were told, he was their “brother” from a neighbouring village in the Batsari Local Government Area.

With Government in it, the villagers had no choice. They were totally demoralized. They realized their limited power and had to submit. Many times the bandits would come with their cattle and devour their farm produce but they had nowhere to report. The village was attacked several times but calling the regular security forces was a waste of time. The only choice Matso-Matso villagers had was to be paying Jatau, the killer of their Imam to be protecting them against other gangs. And it has been working very well.

Matso-Matso also falls on a major bandits’ route from the forest to the eastern part of Jibia LGA. The armed bandits thus made it a habit to branch and rest in the village and the villagers had no power to repel them.
That is the village in which no less than 28 houses were burnt down by local vigilante and their military backers because “all the people there are bandits”. Meanwhile, Jatau, the leader of bandits in Jibia and Batsari LGA has not been arrested.

My call on Governor Masari, Chief of … (sorry, I don’t even know who to call upon now). Okay, whosoever is in charge should find a more scientific way of identifying bandits living in rural communities and neutralizing them. The advice given by the Chairman, Jibia People’s Forum, which I agree to, is to launch an unexpected house to house search for weapons and the like in the villages. As for the townships, I believe they have by now heeded the advice of the Governor and acquired sufficient rifles.

Anarchy….. Allah Ya kyauta!

Professor Abdussamad Jibia can be contacted via aujibia@gmail.com.

Police arrest health worker helping bandits

By Muhammad Sabiu

 

Men of the Nigeria Police Force have successfully apprehended a health worker who was alleged to have been providing medical assistance to bandits in the Danmusa Local Area of Katsina State.

 

The 34-year-old health worker, identified as Murtala Umar, owns a patent medicine shop in the LGA.

 

A report by the Daily Post newspaper has indicated that Murtala had been working for the bandits operating in that area, and they always came to him whenever they needed any medical attention.

 

SP Isah Gambo, the Katsina State Police Command spokesman, who paraded Murtala at their headquarters on Monday, said the suspect had confessed to offering assistance to bandits. 

 

Confessing the allegations made against him, Murtala was quoted as saying, “I studied at the College of Health and Technology in Kankia, and I manage a chemist at Tashar Yar Alewa. The bandits, from time to time, come to my shop carrying guns to seek my help concerning the health of their members, and they pay me in return.

 

“I used to oblige them for fear of being attacked, but I am regretting my actions now.”

Police nab 5 for supplying fuel, bread to bandits in Katsina

By Muhammad Sabiu

In what would be tagged as a great success in the fight against terrorism in the northwestern part of Nigeria, the police in Katsina State have successfully apprehended four persons for allegedly supplying fuel and one other for supplying bread to terrorists; also referred to as “bandits.”

Gambo Isa, Katsina State police spokesperson, told the press that the bread supplier, arrested on Saturday, was a national of Niger Republic.

The other suspects supplying fuel have been identified as Shafi’u Haruna, 25, of Anguwan Nakaba village in Sabuwa LGA; Sani Lawal, 28, of Magamar Jibia for transporting fuel in a Volkswagen Passat car with registration No. KMC 198 XB; and Abdulrashid Garba, 50, of Daddara village, Jibia LGA, for conveying fuel in his Volkswagen Golf III wagon with registration No. AR 719 KTN.

Mr Isa added, “Also arrested was Tigal Haruna, 57, of Kofar Guga Quarters, Katsina, conveying fuel in his Passat motor vehicle with registration number FC 977 LKJ. Nemesis caught up with the suspects when they were arrested long Katsina – Jibia road while going into the forest.

“In the course of investigation, suspects confessed to be selling the fuel at fringes of the forest, contrary to Executive order and other extant laws of the Federation. The investigation is ongoing,”

Recall that the Katsina State Government has issued an executive order banning some activities in the state in an effort to curtail the killings and kidnappings that have, over the years, beset the state.

KTSG’s Public Opprobrium: English is not the problem

By Ahmad Ganga

The recent executive order signed by Katsina State Government (KTSG) is filled with grammatical and typographical errors that critics can never overlook, even though English is not the problem. Instead, the problem lies in constituting members of the executive council tasked with governance delivery. Virtually, almost every politician in the North despises having competent people within their domain who can question their decision and ask for clarification for every policy made. That’s why lowbrows make a list of cabinet members: SAs, EAs, PAs, Secs, etc.

Being His Excellency, Governor of Katsina State, a former Speaker House of Representatives and an experienced administrator, the errors wouldn’t have happened —if the politicians in this State didn’t present their puppeteers while constituting cabinet. Competency and skills should be a yardstick in the process, instead of connection. The Executive Governor is not alone in this. Secretary to State Government, Dr Mustapha Inuwa, was in academia for long before he set his feet into politics. Tell me why critics would not descend on KTSG for committing such public opprobrium?!

Let me tell you a story. When the news of my Principal’s house stormed media, I came across a post he made himself wherein he showcased the house on the internet. I asked him why he did it, and he told me that his guard said to him that some people, assumed to be journalists, came snapping the house and asking people about the person of Honourable Member who’s President Buhari’s nephew. So, instead of letting the journalists break the news and twist it the way it suits them, he broke the news himself. 

Let me go back to the initial topic. Suppose the elected and appointed officials gave room for competency, like asking for inputs from their aides and secretaries on every policy before releasing them to the public. In that case, they could avoid such errors. As I say in the headline, English is not the problem. Every one of the elected and appointed politicians is looking for someone who always says YES to whatever.

Considering the consequences that followed this executive order, I suggest that His Excellency give room for competency to reign in his cabinet to control the damage done so far since he was sworn in as the Executive Governor of Katsina State.

Ahmad Ganga can be contacted via ahmadganga66@gmail.com.

Protest against insecurity in Katsina towns

A traveller, Sadiq Tijjani Inuwa Bakori, wrote on his Facebook page that angry youths in Yantumaki town of Katsina State had blocked Kankara – Dutsinma federal highway in protest against insecurity in their areas.


Mr Bakori added that they tried to go back, but the next village also blocked the road. “We can’t proceed, and we can’t go back.”


Reports show that some of the irate youths have set tires on fire. Plumes of smoke could be seen from a distance.


According to Mr Bakori, military personnel and police have arrived at the chaotic scene, but they couldn’t do anything. Commuters were stranded.

There have been several kidnapping and bandit activities in the towns and villages of Katsina and other neighbouring states in the region. However, government and security personnel claim to have been doing their best to restore peace.