hehehehe............There was palpable tension in the North
on Friday as Igbo living in the region feared there could be reprisals
against them by northerners over alleged attacks on northerners in the
South-East and parts of Rivers State in the South-South.
Our correspondents in Adamawa, Kano,
Kaduna, Bauchi, Nasarawa, Sokoto, Katsina and Plateau states observed as
men of the Nigerian Army, the police, the Department of State Services,
the Nigerian Airforce and the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps
were patrolling several areas in the states on Friday.
For instance, in Katsina, Katsina State
capital, one of our correspondents observed as men of the police, the
Nigerian Army, NAF, DSS and the NSCDC were patrolling the streets in
Hilux trucks.
Some were seen stationed at the popular Kofar Kaoran Roundabout.
Some residents, who spoke with one of
our correspondents, said the situation was unusual, adding that it was
one they had not witnessed in a long time.
A resident, Musa Ibrahim, said,
“Everyone is panicking. The security situation is tight. The way
security operatives are patrolling the city is very unusual. I think the
security agencies are trying to preempt any attack.”
There was also the heavy presence of
security officers in many flashpoints in the Jos metropolis, Plateau
State capital, particularly at the Hill Station Junction, Old Bukuru
Park and Ahmadu Bello Way.
The spokesperson for the Plateau State
Police Command, Matthias Tyopev, told one of our correspondents that the
command had deployed 488 police officers in all the flashpoints in Jos.
The Commissioner of Police, Kaduna State
Police Command, Agyole Abe, on Friday also said more men had been
deployed to monitor various areas in the state.
Across the North, several shops
belonging to the Igbo were closed while those who opened for business
only did so hours after the Jumat prayers.
Some Igbo who spoke to us
said their experiences during periods of religious or ethnic crisis in
the past showed that Northerners usually attacked them after returning
from Jumat prayers.
We also gathered that some Igbo had started fleeing the North for fear of reprisals.
On Tuesday, some members of the
Indigenous People of Biafra had reportedly clashed with the Hausa
community in Oyibo Local Government Area of Rivers State, allegedly
killing a northerner.
The incident had led to clashes between
the two ethnic groups in the community, leaving several persons injured.
The clashes were said to be connected to the Operation Python Dance II
currently going on in the South-East by the military to curtail the
activities of IPOB.
During the week, a video had emerged
showing armed IPOB fighters searching for Hausas in buses in the
South-East, apparently to attack them.
On Thursday, the Public Relations
Officer, Abia State Police Command, Geoffrey Ogbona, confirmed that the
Hausa community in the state was being targeted by IPOB fighters, but
assured that normalcy would be restored.
However, one of our correspondents
observed that in Katsina, Katsina State capital, on Friday, many
non-indigenes, particularly those from the South-East, did not open
their shops for business.
In the busiest parts of the city,
especially Kofar Kaoran, Sabon Line, Yahaya Madaki Way, IBB Way and
Sabon Station, several shops were locked. An Igbo, who owns a bookshop
at Kofar Kaoran, Mr. Theophilus Testimony, said he had directed all his
shop attendants not to come to work on Friday.
“The state government has assured us of
safety, but I’m not ready to take chances. My prayer is that the whole
issue will be resolved soon. After all, Nigeria belongs to all of us and
poverty does not know any ethnicity,” he said.
Another Igbo who owns a chemist, Andrew Eze, said he was scared there might be reprisals against them.
Most shops operated by Igbo traders on
Bishop Street, Jimeta, Adamawa State, were also locked up when one of
our correspondents visited the area on Friday.
A store owner, identified simply as Chinedu, said the development arose after a meeting held by their association on Thursday.
“We might be targeted in retaliation for
the attacks on Hausas by IPOB members in the South-East, so we decided
we should close our shops while we observe the situation,” he said.
In Sokoto State, an Igbo motorcycle
spare parts dealer, Uchendu Anene, said he would send his family back to
his state, Imo State, on Sunday.
He said, “I don’t want my family to be
caught up in any crisis here. I will still try and wait to see what
happens here because of my business. Woe betides any Igbo man caught in
the North when Hausa people decide to retaliate!
“We have lived among them for 15 years
and I know what they can do. In times past, before you knew what was
going on, they would have killed several non-indigenes and burnt several
shops.”
Some Igbo traders along the ever busy
Ahmadu Bello Way in Kaduna, Kaduna State capital, also locked their
shops despite police and government assurances to protect their lives
and property.
The President, Igbo Community Welfare
Association in Kaduna, Mr. Chris Nnoli, said he wasn’t happy that his
kinsmen couldn’t go about their business.
Northern govs place security on red alert, assures safety
Meanwhile, governors of the 19 states in
the North on Friday said security had been placed on red alert in all
parts of the region to checkmate any retaliatory move from the people
against the alleged attack of Hausa and their property in the
South-East.
The Borno State Governor and Chairman of
the Northern States Governors Forum, Alhaji Kashim Shettima, in a
statement also called on northerners not to attack any Igbo or other
non-indigenes living in the region.
According to the governor’s Adviser on
Communications and Strategy, Malam Isa Gusau, Shettima added that
northerners must be commended for being “non-violent” in the face of
clashes between IPOB members and soldiers in Abia State, which
endangered the lives of some northerners there.
The governor called on residents across
the 19 northern states to permanently sustain peace, saying no
law-abiding Nigerian deserved to be punished for the “mere” fact that
they chose to live in any part of the country.
Shettima also said governors in the
region were aware of attacks by IPOB members in Jos, Plateau State, but
were also aware of the step taken by their colleague in the state, Simon
Lalong, who had immediately declared a dusk-to-dawn curfew.
The governors, however, noted that
despite the “patriotism” displayed by northern residents, their
administrations had since placed security forces on alert to tackle any
unforeseen attempt to cause breach of security.
Meanwhile, in separate statements on
Friday, governors across the North assured Igbo and other non-indigenes
of safety in the region, saying they shouldn’t be afraid of carrying out
their business activities.
Katsina State Governor, Aminu Masari,
through his Senior Special Assistant, Media, Abdu Labaran, said the
state was safe for every resident regardless of their religious, ethnic
or regional background.
The Bauchi State Governor, Mohammed
Abubakar, in a statement he personally signed, also appealed to all
Nigerians to desist from fanning the embers of disunity by spreading
hate and falsehood.
Other governors who called for caution
and assured Igbo of their safety were the Plateau State Governor, Simon
Lalong; Nasarawa State Governor, Tanko Al-Makura; Adamawa State
Governor, Mohammed Bindow; Kano State Governor, Dr. Abdullahi Ganduje;
and Niger State Governor, Abubakar Bello.
In a related development, Rivers State
Governor, Chief Nyesom Wike, warned IPOB members against attacking
Nigerians from other parts of the country in the state.
Nothing that the state belonged to all,
the governor said in a state-wide broadcast on Friday that his
administration would not tolerate any attack by any group on other
Nigerians living in the state.
Fayose alleges ethnic cleansing, criticises Buhari
Meanwhile, the Ekiti State Governor,
Ayodele Fayose has described as ethnic cleansing the alleged
maltreatment and killings of IPOB members by the military in the
South-East, saying that he had forewarned that President Muhammadu
Buhari’s second coming would be like the dark days of the military
government in 1984, when the nation quaked under heavy militarisation.
He said, “I have said it before now that
it is only God that can help the Igbo people. What I see going on is
ethnic cleansing. When you see the video clips of the occupation and the
behaviour of the soldiers, it leaves much to be desired, but they
couldn’t act like that without a whistle-blower, somebody is behind them
telling them go and cleanse the people.
“That is recklessness; human rights
violation in Nigeria today is second to none. And I hope the
international community would not be quiet on this. It is unfortunate.”
Sultan urges Muslim clerics to preach peace
Following heightened tension across the
country, the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji Mohammed Sa’ad Abubakar 111, on
Friday sued for peace.
The Sultan, who is also the
President-General of the Jaamatul Nasril, called on Islamic preachers
across the country to preach peace in order to douse the tension in the
country.
Addressing a press conference in Kaduna
on Friday, the Sultan, who spoke through the JNI’s Secretary General,
Dr. Khalid Abubakar Aliyu, noted that what Nigeria needed at this time
was for the citizens to rise above ethnic and religious affinities and
join hands in assisting the government to tackle the socio-economic
challenges confronting the country.
He also called on the Federal Government
to rise up to its responsibility of protecting lives and property in
the country, while urging parents to call their children to order to
ensure peace and stability.
“We call on the government to rise up to
its responsibility by ensuring the safety of Nigerians nationwide.
Nobody should be seen to be above the law,” the Sultan said.
Similarly, the JNI, Plateau State
Chapter, in a statement signed by its Director of Publicity, Sani Mudi,
on Friday, appealed to Muslims in the state to shun acts capable of
disrupting peace in the state.
Northerners in Owerri seek refuge in military barrack
Meanwhile, some Northerners in Imo State have been fleeing the state following the recent attacks on them by IPOB members.
One of our correspondents who visited
Ama Hausa, a popular area where Hausa people live in the state, was told
that they had become targets of attacks.
One of them, who identified himself as
Musa, said, “The attacks on our people are becoming unbearable. The day
Owerri market was demolished, the people used that opportunity to break
our shops, looted both goods and money and demolished the shops of our
brothers.
“At the World Bank area, where our
people also do petty businesses, some IPOB members have been attacking
our brothers, stealing their money.
“In the Mbaise area, where our people
sell cows, they have invaded the place. It is only through Allah’s grace
and the help of one traditional ruler in the area that we are still
living.”
Another Hausa man, Mallam Usman Ahmed, said that some of his kinsmen had fled.
He said, “Those who were victims of the
recent Owerri crisis have fled to 34 Artillery Brigade in Obinze, Owerri
West Local Government Area. They are there for their dear lives instead
of being killed in the crisis.”
When we visited a
mosque in the area at around 2pm, it was observed that the worship
centre was not filled to the brim as many Hausa had fled other parts of
Owerri for Obinze area because of the military barrack there.
IG deploys more personnel, helicopters in S’East
Following the violent clashes in the
South-East, the Inspector-General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, has placed
the Nigeria Police Force on red alert.
He has also deployed some riot personnel in the region to tackle IPOB agitators in the region.
we learnt that the
police leadership had also posted more personnel in other parts of the
country to prevent any spillover of the crisis in the South-East.
In only Aba, Abia State’s commercial
nerve centre, it was gathered that over 500 mobile policemen were
deployed to restore peace in the troubled city.
The Force Public Relations Officer,
Jimoh Moshood, told one of our correspondents on Friday that helicopters
and other surveillance equipment had also been mobilised to the zone to
protect all the residents.
He explained that with the Force on red alert, no policeman would be allowed to go on leave.
Moshood said, “The IG has directed all
Assistant Inspectors-General of Police and Command Commissioners of
Police to be on red alert and we have carried out massive deployment of
mobile policemen in the South-East and helicopters for surveillance and
aerial patrol.”
He added, “The same level of deployment
done in Anambra State ahead of the governorship poll has been
recommended for other states in the South-East with more concentration
on Abia State.
“More deployments were done in the last
24 hours to calm the situation, but we are closely monitoring
development. We are also deploying (officers) in the South-South and
South-West to protect both the indigenes and non-indigenes.”
Moshood disclosed that “stop and search” operation had also been introduced to comb for hidden arms and other dangerous weapons.
“Stop and search patrol has been
introduced in areas where we didn’t have them before, and we are raiding
all dark spots and other areas where certain groups are terrorising the
citizens in Abia and in other parts of the South-East,” he said.
Ikpeazu extends curfew, schools’ resumption
As peace has yet to be fully restored in
Aba, Governor Okezie Ikpeazu has extended the curfew in the town to
Sunday, September 17.
In statement by the governor’s Chief
Press Secretary, Enyinnaya Appolos, Ikpeazu said after a profound review
of the security situation across the state, he was compelled to extend
the current curfew imposed on Aba to enable the state to consolidate the
peace and normalcy that was gradually returning to the city.
He said, “The government is, therefore,
seeking your (Aba residents’) continuous support and understanding for
the further extension of the dusk-to-dawn (6pm to 6am) curfew at Aba to
Sunday, September 17, 2017.
“Furthermore, in order to ensure the
safety of our children and who are billed to resume school on September
18, 2017, we hereby direct that the resumption be postponed till
September 25, 2017 across the state.”
NLC urges FG to address insecurity
The Nigeria Labour Congress on Friday
urged the Federal Government to urgently arrest the worsening
inter-ethnic crisis in the country.
The NLC President, Mr. Ayuba Wabba, said
in a statement that the Federal Government must handle the ongoing
agitations and the attendant inter-ethnic violence recorded in Jos, Port
Harcourt and Umuahia (Abia State) with efficiency in the interest of
the country.
Wabba, who commended the efforts of the
government to secure people’s lives and property, urged the security
agencies, including the military, to avoid acting in ways that could
strengthen the cause of those behind ethnic division in the society.
Wabba also condemned the attacks on
journalists by troops of the Nigerian Army at the premises of the
Nigeria Union of Journalists, Umuahia chapter, during the week.
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