Chairman of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Secondary Education Board, Alhaji Yahaya Musa Muhammed has said that despite the negative situation Coronavirus has brought to health across the world, it came to open the eyes of education managers to the technology in learning. Speaking today in Abuja at an interview with our Editor-In-Chief, Alhaji Yahaya Musa said that so far, since the outbreak of the pandemic last year, the Board had been able to introduce and expand e-learning in most of the senior secondary schools. He said that most of the Senior secondary schools in the capital city now have Central Circuit Television (CCTV) now, in addition to virtual learning that looked impossible in the past. The board chairman stressed that the various technologies being developed and applied now are meant to be useful in all kinds of circumstances, including any similar pandemic in the future. “Covid 19 has brought with it, a lot of health challenges to the world and Nigeria and also some advantages. It challenges education planners on innovations never thought of before.” Alhaji Yahaya Musa said that since assuming office as chairman of the board, no fewer than 63 new Senior Secondary Schools have sprang up, adding that the minister of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Muhammad Musa Bello has approved the establishment of 10 more of such school. According to him, over 228 teaching staff have also been recruited, even as perimeter fences have been erected in most of the schools for the purpose of security in them. Alhaji Yahaya Musa said that some mega schools, including the ones at Bwari and Tunga Maje have been established to cater for students with special ability. According to him, 98 percent of abandoned projects by contractors have been completed since his coming in.
The Oba of Lagos, Rilwan Akiolu, has opened up since the end of EndSARS protests in Lagos, during which suspected hoodlums invaded his palace located in the Iga Idugaran area of Lagos Island, forcing him to flee.
Oba Akiolu, who spoke today, March 3, at the commissioning of the Glover Hall Memorial in Lagos, said that the hoodlums, mostly youths, made away with $2 million and N17 million from his palace.
The monarch decried the extent of destruction in Lagos and appealed to the Federal Government to assist the state to recover from the incident.
“I will support anything that will move Lagos forward. I have appealed to the Federal Government to assist Lagos with what we have suffered. The EndSARS incident that happened here from October 20 to 23 is so saddening.
“The destruction we suffered in Lagos is so enormous than in any other part of the country.
“Many buildings were burnt, including vehicles used to generate income during the #ENDSARS protests. I can now say publicly that they stole away from my palace $2 million and N17 million.
“Those who committed the offence would not have done that if they knew the implications. But as a father, I won’t place any curse on them.”
The hoodlums had on October 21, attacked the palace and other properties in the state, plundering the monarch’s palace for two days and went away with his staff of office.
Price of one of the Nigerian staple food, maize, has plummeted from N200,000.00 per metric tonnes to about N180,000.00 per metric tonnes with the release by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) of 50,000 metric tonnes of the item into the Nigerian market.
The Bank’s release of Maize which is said to be in fulfillment of its pledge to reduce the price of the commodity, was done through the Anchor Borrowers’ Programme (ABP) to major poultry feed producers and poultry producers in the country.
According to a statement from the apex bank, the release of the 50,000 metric tonnes of Maize in the second week of February, has made an impact as the Maize Market has recorded a reduction in price from N200,000.00 per metric tonnes to about N180,000.00 per metric tonnes.
The statement which expressed hope that it is still anticipated that the current price will further reduce, named the major beneficiaries of the maize as Premier Flour Mills, Crown – Olam, Grand Cereals, Animal Care, Amobyn and Hybrid Feeds. Others include Zartech, Wacot, Sayeed Farms, PandagriNovum and Premium Farms as well as the South West, South-South, North West and North Central chapters of the Poultry Association of Nigeria (PAN).
It said that the benefiting companies represent the major players in the poultry value chain in the country.
The statement recalled that the Central Bank of Nigeria had in January this year, announced its plan to release 300,000 metric tonnes of Maize into the Nigerian Maize Market aimed at bridging the shortfall in production and augment local production of the commodity.
It said that the current shortfall in the quantity of maize available in the market, that CBN is working on mitigating, is attributed to activities of banditry, drought in some parts of the country last year, activities of hoarders and middlemen as well as insecurity around the major maize producing belt of Niger, Kaduna, Katsina, Zamfara and part of Kano states.
“As part of the Bank’s financing framework, the CBN facilitates the funding of maize farmers and processors through the Anchor Borrowers’ Programme (ABP) Commodity Association, Private/Prime Anchors, State Governments, Maize Aggregation Scheme (MAS), and the Commercial Agricultural Credit Scheme (CACS).”
The Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), a government agency, has written a petition, complaining of how the oil giant, Shell BP has unlawfully converted and wrongfully appropriated over 16 million barrels of crude oil from the Bonny Oil Terminal through the use of a manipulated and unapproved metering system.
DPR also accused Shell of understating the volume of crude oil which was pumped to the Bonny terminal.
The letters also alleged that Shell Petroleum Development Company Limited admitted and committed to refunding about 2.1 million barrels of crude to some local oil companies including Belema Oil, Newcross, AITEO and Eroton.
The disclosures were part of efforts by a group, Ethnic Youth Leaders (EYL) to have the Dutch owned Oil Company nationalized over actions inimical to national interest and national security.
The group is also escalating advocacy for government to nationalize SHELL sister companies in Nigeria.
In an Originating Summons filed in the Federal High Court by an affiliate group, Patriotic Youth Organization of Nigeria against the Federal Government and all the sister Shell Companies, the summon prayed the Court to order the federal government to expropriate, nationalize and take over all assets, investments and interests of Shell found anywhere or traceable within the Federal Republic of Nigeria.
“In the oil sector, government has over the years tried its best to increase local content by encouraging indigenous companies to enable them play significant roles particularly in the upstream sector which was hitherto totally controlled by International Oil Companies. The absence of Nigerian players in this sector meant that there was likelihood that Nigeria will be ripped off by some of the international oil companies for their own benefits or even those of their parent countries,” the group said.
“As you are aware, Shell is the operator of the Bonny and Forcados crude oil export terminals which has the capacity of 5.7 million barrels and 6.3 million barrels respectively. This has made Shell the largest exporter of Nigeria’s crude oil. Shell was also the owner and operator of the OML 29 and the Nembe Creek Trunk Line (NCTL) which it later sold sometime in 2015 to an indigenous company known as AITEO Eastern E & P Company Limited. This Company upon their acquisition of the Nembe Creek Trunk Line had an agreement with Shell, which as the operators of the Bonny Oil Terminal were to be the handlers of the crude oil injected into the Trunk Line by AITEO and other local oil companies that transport their oil to the terminal through NCTL.
“In our crude oil handling, there are allocations made for water and oil theft which are calculated and then deducted from the total volume of crude supplied by the various companies. The methodology for calculating the water and crude theft allocations are determined by the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR) on behalf of the Federal Government of Nigeria. This approved methodology is reviewed periodically in line with the Petroleum Act and issued as Guidelines by the DPR. In 2016, the DPR approved methodology was to be conducted with a metering system known as Leased Automatic Custody Transfer (LACT) and not any other system.
“However, following several complaints from Local Oil Companies (LOC’s) operating particularly on the Nembe Creek Trunk Line, the DPR conducted investigations and discovered that instead of using the approved metering system, Shell acting through its officers and agents, deployed a manipulated and unapproved metering system, known as the Coriolis Flow Meter. This unapproved metering system is intentionally used by Shell to under-report and divert the exact volume of crude oil which passed to the terminal, controlled by it, thereby shortchanging the Local Oil Companies and ultimately denying the country of scarce revenue.
“DPR carried investigation into the matter after which it informed Shell that the Coriolis Flow Metering system which it installed does not have any approval. This is in addition to other indictments against Shell by DPR. The DPR went ahead to sanction Shell and imposed a penalty of only Two Hundred and Fifty Thousand Naira (N250, 000:00) for violations of the Petroleum Act and Mineral Oil Safety Regulation.”
The group added that “there is the urgent need for us to bring to the attention of the relevant institutions of State to intervene and recover from Shell the full value of all the stolen crude oil which it deliberately diverted through the use of the unapproved and fraudulent metering system; which it used to deliberately understate the exact volume of crude oil injected into the Bonny Oil Terminal.”
Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has flagged-off the 2020 wet season harvest aggregation and 2020 dry season input distribution in Zauro, Kebbi State.
The season which was flagged-off today, March 2, is under the CBN-Rice Farmers’ Association of Nigeria (RIFAN) Anchor Borrowers’ Programme, as part of the fifth anniversary of the Anchor Borrowers’ Programme (ABP).
Flagging-off the scheme, the apex bank’s Governor, Godwin Emefiele said that the Anchor Borrowers’ Programme of the Bank has emphasised the need for all stakeholders to sustain current efforts championed to galvanize agricultural production towards meeting the requirements of Nigeria’s growing population.
Emefiele said that Nigeria is naturally blessed to meet its food requirement and that it had no reason to continually repeat mistakes of the past of neglecting agriculture.
“The rhetoric around neglect of previous years will remain part of our history and the best time to correct those mistakes is now and every stakeholder must contribute their quota to guarantee the realization of these national targets.
“Covid-19 and the associated lockdowns globally have shown that nations only export out of their reserves. Let us start building our own reserves now.”
The flag-off, which came barely three months after the CBN showcased sky-high pyramids in Minna, Niger State, to highlight its intervention in the maize value chain, also featured the display of pyramids, which were rice harvests brought in by farmers in the state.
The CBN boss noted that the ABP, which is an essential part of President Muhammadu Buhari’s drive for economic diversification, had improved the fortunes of rural farmers, transforming agriculture into a potential for economic growth.
According to Emefiele, the ABP, in the past five years, had been characterized by successes, learning points and challenges, adding that a total of 2,923,937 farmers cultivating 3,647,643 hectares across 21 commodities through 23 participating Financial Institutions had been financed in the 36 States of the Federation and the Federal Capital Territory from inception till date.
He disclosed that the Bank, under the 2020 wet season CBN-RIFAN partnership, financed 221,450 farmers for the cultivation of 221,450 hectares in 32 States.
“The North-West zone with 85,261 farmers that cultivated 120,218 hectares represented 38.5% in total number of farmers and 54.3% in total number of hectares financed”
According to Emefiele, the massive pyramids being launched in Kebbi are harvests from various fields across Kebbi State and a confirmation of the positive outlook of the Anchor Borrowers’ Programme.
He said the partnership between the CBN and the Kebbi State Government and RIFAN aimed at strategically complementing the Economic Sustainability Plan of the Buhari Administration.
He said that following the President’s approval of the resuscitation of the Nigeria Commodity Exchange (NCX) and the commitment of N50b by the CBN and other Stakeholders, a vibrant commodity exchange would enhance post-harvest handling, guarantee effective pricing for farmers, minimize the adverse effect of middle men and ultimately transfer the gains from primary production to other nodes of the value chain.
He acknowledged the importance of loan repayment to the sustainability of the programme, stressing that the CBN is constantly engaging the farmers to enhance their trust in the system, provide a competitive price arrangement and facilitate effective market linkages for their outputs.
To further create value and transfer these gains along the value chain, he said the CBN has also mapped miller to off-take the paddies and track the release of outputs to the market as the Bank strives to manage inflation and grow the rice value chain in Nigeria.
The CBN Governor expressed optimism about Nigeria’s capacity to achieve food self-sufficiency within the shortest time possible, adding that the CBN and RIFAN both target cultivation of 1million hectares of rice farms; which is over 350% increase from the 221,450 cultivated in 2020. He said the Bank and RIFAN equally nursed an ambitious two cycles of production in the dry season, which will trigger a continuous drop in price of rice in the country.
The National Security Council (NSC) has directed the new service chiefs to go out there and reclaim areas that are being dominated now by bandits, kidnappers and other criminals.
Rising from a meeting presided over by President Muhammadu Buhari, today, March 2, at the Presidential villa, Abuja, the Council, mandated the Minister of Defence, to move men and offers towards reclaiming “all areas that have been dominated by bandits, by kidnappers and other scoundrels of scallywags.
Briefing new men after the meeting, the National Security Adviser, retired Major General Babagana Monguno said that the Council directed all the intelligence agencies to collapse all their efforts onto one platform, so that with the convergence of efforts, they would be able to give the required intelligence to the operational elements of government.
The Council, he said, looked at the issue of freedom of citizens to reside wherever they wish to reside as stipulated in the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, adding that while the the government endorsed that anybody who is a criminal, who acts on his own outside the law, should be brought to book wherever he is, it would not allow a situation where citizens pitch themselves against one other.
“Therefore, Mr. President has charged each and every one to be mindful of this situation because once we start to profile ourselves along ethnic or religious lines, then there’ll be no end to it. “We’ve seen what has happened in so many countries around the globe, and we do not want Nigeria to fall into that type of situation.
The Council emphasized that no sovereign nation would allow a group of non state actors to bring it down to its knees and render the state in state of panic, apprehension, mistrust, disorder, and so on and so forth.
“Therefore, both the defence and intelligence organizations have been charged that while we look forward to having a peaceful, non-kinetic resolution, we will not allow this country to drift into state failure and from today, the intelligence agencies have been directed to place under surveillance, all non state actors that have been causing problems for the innocent peoples, not just in Zamfara State or the Northwest zone, but also the Northeast and other parts of the country. We have had a lot of reports coming in about collusion with people from all walks of life.”
He said that while the federal government is not averse to the application of non-kinetic means, to resolve this problem, “I need to make it very clear that the federal government will not hesitate to apply to the fullest its kinetic means to restore normalcy to the country. I’m sure you’re all aware of the fact that no country will tolerate a group of non-state actors.”
Security operatives have finally gotten a presidential order to trail and flush out all the “big people” who consider themselves untouchable, that have been promoting and heightening insecurity in Nigeria and who have been on the security watch list.
“Already, the President has given directives to the military and intelligence organizations to trail and flush out all the people that have been on our watch list and I can assure you that there are quite a handful of people on our watch list.
“They will be trailed, they will be routed out and they’ll be brought to book. They’ll be prosecuted and they’ll be made an example of, and anybody who wants to use this situation to blackmail the government should also think.”
These positions of the federal government were unveiled today, March 2, by the National Security Adviser (NSA), retired Major General Babagana Monguno, at a news briefing after the meeting of the National Security Council (NSC) at the Presidential Villa, Abuja. The meeting was presided over by President Muhammadu Buhari.
General Monguno told newsmen that the Council acknowledged that the security situation is getting worse every day, but that it was resolved that the nation had had enough of violence, enough of chaos and enough of anarchy.
“I want to stress once more that any individual or group that thinks it can take it upon itself to cause disunity, disharmony and push the country to the brink should have a rethink. Any individual who thinks he has any support, who thinks he can undermine this government, anybody, any human being, as long as he’s a citizen of this country, any one person who thinks he’s the cat’s whiskers, or he can be rocky on the perch and lead us into a situation of unhappiness, will have himself to blame at the end of the day.
“Now, I need to stress also that there are individuals in this country who have assumed a status that is beyond what they should be. The intelligence from our own sources, the intelligence at my disposal and the disposal of the other intelligence hence, reveals that we have certain entities, certain individuals who are making capital out of insecurity, especially kidnapping.
“This is a situation that has to be brought to an end and I’m sending a warning to anybody who is hiding beneath a veneer of some status, whether official, in terms of an official capacity or traditional or religious, to stoke the flames of disorder will have himself to blame.”
The NSA said that the President asked the security chiefs to put their heads together to try as much as possible to work on a whole of government basis, in conjunction with a whole of scientific basis to achieve a whole of nation result.
“When I say whole of government, I’m not saying whole of executive. I’m saying the whole of executive, legislature and judiciary.
“That is what the partnership is and this partnership will work with people outside the federal establishment: those that are working with the state governments, working with traditional and religious organizations and local community leaders, while at the same time trying to enhance community policing.”
He stressed that the government is very serious about addressing the security challenges once and for all, saying that the nation cannot be allowed to drift into a situation that it would continue to lose lives.
“We are not going to be blackmailed, we’re going to use whatever is at our disposal, while operating within the confines of legitimacy, within the confines of legality, but the government has a responsibility to assert its will, using the instruments at its disposal to keep the state moving, alive, happy in prosperity. This will not be compromised.”
Uncertainties and confusion have taken over the supply of petrol in most parts of Abuja, the Nigeria’s Federal Capital Territory (FCT). Our reporters who went round today, March 2 to assess the scarcity of fuel and the attendants at a few that are selling the product, said that while some have increased the price per litre, justling and fighting have broke out in other. Report has it that a filling station in Gwagwalada, on Kuje road, is selling the fuel at 175 per litre. It was gathered that in the same fuel station, N500 is being charged on every N2,000 a customer buys, apart from paying N500 each to gatemen before opening the day barricade. In Kuje, on Gwagwalada road, physical fight ensued between an attendant and motorcyclists because the sales girl did not attend to them.
It was gathered that the young lady was forced by the unruly behaviours of the prospective buyers, to shut down the business. The situation of panic buying and unruly behaviour of buyers in other fuel stations is the same, despite the assurance by the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) that there is no price increase now and that there’s no need for panic buying.
No region in Nigeria is a self-sufficient archipelago. None is more fortunate in human and material assets than the other. Each region has its unique quality and contributes a consequential substance to Nigeria. None is greater than the other. We are like geopolitical sextuplets sharing one umbilical cord – nourished and oxygenated by mother Nigeria.
It is delusive to assume any of the regions solely underpins the Nigeria infrastructure. The north feeds the nation, and the south contributes in commerce and revenue generation. We are one concentric circle, holding each other at delicate arcs. Nigeria has a unified entity can stand as an island because its component parts are already flourishing archipelagos.
We should not take this ‘’symbiosis’’ for granted. Our interdependence makes us a viable concern. It is asinine to keep latching on the trope that the ‘’north produces nothing’’. This bromide is a fallacy. The north is Nigeria’s food hamper. The insecurity in the region which has affected farming, and the concomitant increase in food prices should make us reflect on the pivotal place of the north – beyond politics.
When there is a crisis (natural and otherwise) in the north, food production is affected, and the prices of foodstuff hit the stratosphere. The flooding of 2020 which affected rice farms and drove the price of the commodity further is noteworthy. Every region brings something to the table. All the regions are equal shareholders – in asset and liability – in the Nigerian partnership.
But I am afraid to say that a menacing spectacle is being enacted by those who do not take the shared interest of Nigeria with gravitas. The prices of foodstuff are said to be soaring to the heavens in some states in the south. Rivers, Imo, Ekiti, Ogun, Ondo, Edo, and Akwa Ibom are reported to be among the worst hit.
The reason for this contrived price hike? The food blockade of the south by some groups in the north. A group, the Amalgamated Union of Food and Cattle Dealers of Nigeria (AUFCDN) is demanding N4.7 billion from the government as compensation for its loss in the Shasha market crisis in Oyo and in the #EndSARS violence.
Also, the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association has threatened to sustain the food besiegement until the safety of its members in the south is guaranteed. According to Aliyu Mohammed, coordinator of the Kwara state chapter of Miyetti Allah, the beleaguerment is a ‘’warning shot’’ to safeguard their business interest.
“Except those who may decide to take other routes to get to the state or those who may act in defiance to the directive, the traders would not come from the north and those who come may be stopped or sanctioned,” Mohammed was reported to have said.
In addition, media reports at the weekend said the north is diverting food items to Niger Republic and Cameroon, and that trade routes to the south have been besieged. Trucks containing food items were occluded from moving south at Jebba in Niger state by some irate youths though the Nigerian Defence Headquarters said the military intervened and cleared the path.
For the sake of clarity, here are the words of Abdullahi Aliu, national president of the Northern Consensus Movement, confirming the diversion of food items from the north to neighbouring countries as reported by The Nigerian Tribune.
“As I speak to you, my people are already shipping their goods, onions, tomatoes and what have you to Niger (Republic), Cameroon, and other neighbouring countries through Illela border. Already, we have diversified. Our people have already found a way of not wasting their goods. They will not be wasted. They will be sold just like the way they were being moved to the south-west, south-east or south-south. So, my people will end up not losing anything.’’
What does this portend for Nigeria? Citizens diverting food items needed by fellow citizens to foreign countries? Are foreigners from Niger Republic and Cameroon now substitutes to Nigerians? This is sadism. And it is really troubling.
What if some groups, who have threatened to obstruct oil supply to the north, put action to their threat? Where does that leave all of us? We should not cut off our nose to spite our face. Nobody wins in this friction of attrition.
To break the ice, I think the government (federal and state) needs to step up to soothe frayed nerves. Investments and lives were lost in the crisis effectuated by the activities of some criminal herders in the south. Northern traders have also been victims of targeted attacks – losing much of their investments. It will be apropos for the government to attenuate the impact of these losses – on both sides – particularly in the case of the Shasha market clash. The government must deliberately intervene before the situation snowballs into an inter-regional tit-for-tat.
The civil authorities must go beyond platitudes and commit themselves to keeping the peace by ensuring victims of violence (farmer-herder crisis and sundry clashes) are compensated and criminals punished. Why there are often reprisal attacks is because justice is not done to the victims. A cycle of violence continues when justice is undone.
Vice President Yemi Osinbajo has charged policy makers in Nigeria to stop the usual beautiful talks on government projects and evolve practical results.
Professor Osinbajo, who was inaugurating the Senior Executive Course 43 of the National Institute for Policy and Strategic Studies (NIPSS) today, March 1, tasked participants in Course 43 to unlock the mystery of failed or poorly implemented policies and projects, but promote a practical, nitty-gritty guide to implementing projects and policies.
Speaking on the theme of the Course 43 programme titled: “Getting Things Done: Strategies for the Implementation of Policies and Programmes in Nigeria”, the Vice President said: “this year’s theme goes to the heart of what is generally considered the bane of development in Nigeria, poor implementation.
“The proverbial gap between intention and results; between policy and stated outcomes; delivering on campaign promises or even just doing what the well-articulated policy papers say. For many serious-minded policymakers, the frustration is the same, yes we know all about think-tanks what we need now are do-tanks.“
Osinbajo acknowledged that NIPSS had contributed immensely to critical national issues through policy briefs, policy advice and other strategic interventions, even as he assured staff, participants and management of the Federal Government’s continued support to the institution especially in the upgrade of facilities but tasked the NIPSS management to be innovative in addressing its problems.
“While Government will continue to do its best to support the National Institute, I should stress that budgetary provisions alone will always be limited given competing needs and responsibilities of government. It is therefore imperative for NIPSS to be even more pro-active and creative in seeking alternative sources of funding.”
He commiserated with the management and staff of NIPSS on the demise of its Director-General, the late Prof. Habu Galadima, recalling the late DG’s hard work and dedication, particularly to the growth of the institute.
Participants of Senior Executive Course 43 are drawn from the private sector, the public service, including paramilitary organizations and the armed forces.
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Food Blockade By North To South Not In Nigeria’s Best Interest, By Fredrick Nwabufo
It is delusive to assume any of the regions solely underpins the Nigeria infrastructure. The north feeds the nation, and the south contributes in commerce and revenue generation. We are one concentric circle, holding each other at delicate arcs. Nigeria has a unified entity can stand as an island because its component parts are already flourishing archipelagos.
We should not take this ‘’symbiosis’’ for granted. Our interdependence makes us a viable concern. It is asinine to keep latching on the trope that the ‘’north produces nothing’’. This bromide is a fallacy. The north is Nigeria’s food hamper. The insecurity in the region which has affected farming, and the concomitant increase in food prices should make us reflect on the pivotal place of the north – beyond politics.
When there is a crisis (natural and otherwise) in the north, food production is affected, and the prices of foodstuff hit the stratosphere. The flooding of 2020 which affected rice farms and drove the price of the commodity further is noteworthy. Every region brings something to the table. All the regions are equal shareholders – in asset and liability – in the Nigerian partnership.
But I am afraid to say that a menacing spectacle is being enacted by those who do not take the shared interest of Nigeria with gravitas. The prices of foodstuff are said to be soaring to the heavens in some states in the south. Rivers, Imo, Ekiti, Ogun, Ondo, Edo, and Akwa Ibom are reported to be among the worst hit.
The reason for this contrived price hike? The food blockade of the south by some groups in the north. A group, the Amalgamated Union of Food and Cattle Dealers of Nigeria (AUFCDN) is demanding N4.7 billion from the government as compensation for its loss in the Shasha market crisis in Oyo and in the #EndSARS violence.
Also, the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association has threatened to sustain the food besiegement until the safety of its members in the south is guaranteed. According to Aliyu Mohammed, coordinator of the Kwara state chapter of Miyetti Allah, the beleaguerment is a ‘’warning shot’’ to safeguard their business interest.
“Except those who may decide to take other routes to get to the state or those who may act in defiance to the directive, the traders would not come from the north and those who come may be stopped or sanctioned,” Mohammed was reported to have said.
In addition, media reports at the weekend said the north is diverting food items to Niger Republic and Cameroon, and that trade routes to the south have been besieged. Trucks containing food items were occluded from moving south at Jebba in Niger state by some irate youths though the Nigerian Defence Headquarters said the military intervened and cleared the path.
For the sake of clarity, here are the words of Abdullahi Aliu, national president of the Northern Consensus Movement, confirming the diversion of food items from the north to neighbouring countries as reported by The Nigerian Tribune.
“As I speak to you, my people are already shipping their goods, onions, tomatoes and what have you to Niger (Republic), Cameroon, and other neighbouring countries through Illela border. Already, we have diversified. Our people have already found a way of not wasting their goods. They will not be wasted. They will be sold just like the way they were being moved to the south-west, south-east or south-south. So, my people will end up not losing anything.’’
What does this portend for Nigeria? Citizens diverting food items needed by fellow citizens to foreign countries? Are foreigners from Niger Republic and Cameroon now substitutes to Nigerians? This is sadism. And it is really troubling.
What if some groups, who have threatened to obstruct oil supply to the north, put action to their threat? Where does that leave all of us? We should not cut off our nose to spite our face. Nobody wins in this friction of attrition.
To break the ice, I think the government (federal and state) needs to step up to soothe frayed nerves. Investments and lives were lost in the crisis effectuated by the activities of some criminal herders in the south. Northern traders have also been victims of targeted attacks – losing much of their investments. It will be apropos for the government to attenuate the impact of these losses – on both sides – particularly in the case of the Shasha market clash. The government must deliberately intervene before the situation snowballs into an inter-regional tit-for-tat.
The civil authorities must go beyond platitudes and commit themselves to keeping the peace by ensuring victims of violence (farmer-herder crisis and sundry clashes) are compensated and criminals punished. Why there are often reprisal attacks is because justice is not done to the victims. A cycle of violence continues when justice is undone.
Let wisdom prevail.
Fredrick Nwabufo is a writer and journalist.
Twitter @FredrickNwabufo