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Maiduguri Under Siege As Three Bomb Explosion Rock Borno

Maiduguri, the Borno state capital is under siege as suspected Boko Haram members are attacking the northern Nigerian city; shooting and explosions heard by residents.

The town is in turmoil as there is heavy fighting between soldiers and Boko Haram fighters for the control of the capital city.
Reports reaching us say three large explosions suspected to be a major bomb attack has just been detonated in the city of Maiduguri.

Only Yesterday, the Nigerian Army authorities issued statements that it is winning the war against terrorism and some of the captured Islamist are confessing.

From eyewitness accounts, the early Friday attacks tells otherwise, as the insurgents are shooting bullets sporadically, some residents have seen stray bullets in their homes due to intense gunfight in the area.

Sources say the three explosions were heard across different parts of the city.

Eyewitness say suspected insurgents have laid siege on the Army barracks command located at the GRA area of Borno State, in an attempt to bomb and take over the major military base known as “Giwa Barracks” in Maiduguri.

Residents are said to be presently scampering for their lives, students are being hurriedly picked from schools and workers are returning homes.

The streets are reported to gradually becoming desolate except the presence of the warring parties.
Details of the casualty will be made known but as at the time of filing this report.

Chido Onumah: Will Nigeria Disintegrate?

Nigeria’s president, Goodluck Jonathan, will on Monday, March 17, 2014, inaugurate the 492-member National Conference whose task is to redefine “the way forward for our nation”. The initial antipathy to the conference, it seems, has given way to cautious optimism.
Of course, there are still people who do not see the opportunity this conference offers. And on the other side, those opposed to the conference because it was convoked by the Jonathan administration. Their grouse is two-pronged: they do not “trust” President Jonathan; and then there is the other matter of a presidential election due early next year.
I understand the concern about the general elections of 2015. If we dismiss those hankering after election because of selfish reasons, the reality is that – for those who genuinely believe in changing Nigeria – nobody can “fix” Nigeria the way it is presently structured.
Our concern, therefore, should go deeper. We can’t, for example, be fixated on an election – knowing that President Jonathan appointed the chairman of the Independent National Electoral Commission, INEC – and at the same time dismiss the “Jonathan National Conference”.
For those who can’t see the forest for the trees, this conference can’t be about President Goodluck Jonathan. Whether called by President Jonathan or not, a national conference to negotiate Nigeria has always been a historical imperative. Luckily, we are going to sit down to talk not because the country has descended into a full-blown civil war.
Make no mistake, this conference is not the cure-all for our problems; just as a Sovereign National Conference is not a silver bullet. Of course, nobody (not even the organisers) can say for certain how this conference is going to end. Nobody goes into a conference of this nature – with a surfeit of tension, anger and bitterness – knowing for certain how it is going to turn out. It may well signal the beginning of the end of what is today known as Nigeria.
Personally, I think in the year of our centenary, when the crisis of identity and nationhood is at its zenith, nothing can be more comforting, even rewarding, than a “peaceful” gathering of the “nationalities” and other stakeholders in Nigeria. It seems the logical thing to do when a country finds itself on the brink.
This conference offers us a great opportunity. Perhaps, it will help us come to the realization that “Nation-building,” as Chidi Odinkalu noted in the preface to the book, Nigeria is Negotiable, “is not a project for the faint-hearted or for those with a short memory.” It may also show that Nigeria was not meant to be.
Not many countries have a second, much less a third or fourth chance to get it right. After 100 years, it is time we stopped seeing ourselves as Yorubas, Igbos, Hausas, Ijaws, Efiks, Ibibios, Fulanis, Tivs and everything in between. It is time we began seeing ourselves as Nigerians.
Nigeria has been run as a unitary state since 1966. Clearly, it has had its debilitating effect; but it has also served, to a great extent, in blurring the country’s ethnic fault line while exacerbating the contradiction between social classes. What we have seen is the emergence of “civic nationalities” in places where “ethnic nationalities” once thrived. For example, in the last four decades, the wealth of the Niger Delta has been used to “develop” different parts of the country and has also enriched individuals stupendously across the length and breadth of the country.
I am a Nigerian first and foremost. My birth in this geo-political space should confer on me that identity. I am a Nigerian – unless that geo-political identity changes tomorrow – before I am Igbo or a Christian. My parents are from Imo State in south-east Nigeria. I wasn’t born there. I didn’t grow up there. I live and work in Abuja and I am married to a lovely woman from Ogun State in south-west Nigeria.
Yet, I have to “claim” Imo State because in the crazy world of Nigeria your “state of origin” confers on you certain privileges and opportunities depending on what you are looking for and where you find yourself. I am sure there are millions of Nigerians who share my unease; millions like me who want, to paraphrase Martin Luther King, Jr., to live in a Nigeria where citizens will not be judged by their ethnicity, “state of origin” or what religion they profess, but by the content of their character.
That is why we should go to this conference leaving behind our ethno-religious baggage. Agreed that the “building blocks” of Nigeria in 1914 were “ethnic nationalities”, Nigeria of 2014 is no longer the sum total of its “ethnic nationalities”. If we were having this conversation at independence in 1960 perhaps it would have made some sense.
Undoubtedly, ethnic oppression exits in Nigeria. After 100 years of amalgamation, almost 54 years after independence, 44 years after an internecine civil war that cost more than three million lives to “keep Nigeria one”, it is time to break that oppression and forge a new, united and prosperous nation.
The National Conference, therefore, should not be a forum for the ventilation of narrow-minded religious, ethnic or tribal agenda. The social and economic realities make such an agenda futile. On the contrary, it should be an opportunity to focus on why with billions of Naira accruing to the federal government every year, millions of our people live in extreme poverty, why millions can’t enjoy basic health service, why millions of school age children are not in school and those fortunate to be in school are victims of murderous fiends.
Of course, there is the troubling issue of those coming to the conference with the notion that Nigeria – or better still, parts of it – is there for the taking; and on the opposite side, those who think the country is just perfect the way it is and, therefore, does not require fundamental restructuring. If we isolate these fringe groups, clearly there seems to be a general understanding, if not agreement, that we want to live together as one country. The issue then is how to define the terms of our living together. That definition is central to any plan to reshape or redefine the new Nigeria we envisage.
One thing is certain: the so-called ethnic homogeneity in Nigeria today is a ruse. Our thieving and utterly hopeless ruling class, whether from the east, west, north or south, who are united by their greed and corruption have shown us that it is possible to put behind us our so-called ethnic and religious differences and forge a common identity; a nation united, not by greed and corruption but by justice, equity and egalitarianism.

Will Nigeria survive? It depends on who you ask. Of course, the world will not come to an end if Nigeria disintegrates. Do we need to re-examine the way we live? In other words, is Nigeria negotiable? The answer, of course, is yes. The future of Nigeria depends ultimately on what Nigerians want!
What the national conference should focus on basically is the erection of federalism in its genuine sense as a contradistinction to its parody that exists today. Of course, the natural off-shoot of this evolvement is the decentralization of power. Furthermore, the conference should look at how we generate and distribute wealth and redefine the meaning of citizenship.
Let constituent states manage their internal affairs, control their resources and generate their own wealth; let them decide the internal structure of governance – how many local government areas they want – and operate their own police alongside the federal police. Let every Nigerian be free to reside in and “claim” any state they want as long as they fulfill citizenship obligations.
While we may not have a common “origin”, we can still build a common future. While Nigeria was “forced” on us, we can emerge from the shackles and build a new nation with new national ethos. But it all depends on whether we are willing to do the right thing.
Nigeria is not the only country that was “created” by the British for economic and imperialistic reasons. Ghana, in West Africa, and Canada, in North America, are two examples. But both countries, the challenges of diverse ethnicities and multiculturalism notwithstanding, are functional states. We can attest to what Kwame Nkrumah, the first prime minister of Ghana, did to unify the country from 1957 when it gained independence.
In the case of Canada, according to Mary Vipond, the country “was created (by the British) in 1867 as a political and economic entity for pragmatic and imperial rather than nationalist reasons. Only after the formation of the Canadian state out of several different colonies was the attempt to create a Canadian nation begun. One of the principal means by which national unity was promoted was by the construction of networks of communication, beginning with the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR).”
Today, we have the choice and opportunity to begin the process of building the Nigerian nation. We may be 54, or even 100 years late, but we can make it happen.
I hope those who will represent various “nationalities” and interest groups in Nigeria at the National Conference will be open-minded, conscious of the fact that too many of our compatriots – including the 60 students murdered in their hostel in Yobe State a few weeks ago – have paid the ultimate sacrifice in the process of nation-building.
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[email protected]; Follow me on Twitter @conumah

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Nigerian Stock Exchange: Investors Stake N1.8bn On 367m Shares

Investors on Thursday staked N1.82 billion on 367.193 million shares in 4,002 deals on the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE), the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports.

This was in contrast to the 281.637 million shares worth N3.12 billion traded in 4,506 deals on Wednesday.

The All-Share Index, however, depreciated by 646.65 points or 1.65 per cent to close at 38,503.65 from the 39,150.30 recorded on Wednesday.

Similarly, the market capitalisation, which opened at N12.575 trillion, declined by N38 billion or 1.65 per cent to close at N12.367 trillion.

Guinness led the price losers’ chart by N6.40 to close at N166.75 per share.

It was followed by Dangote Cement with a loss of N3.98 to close at N235, while Nigerian Breweries lost N2.55 to close at N145.50 per share.

Mobil depreciated by N1.10 to close at N120.90, while Presco dipped by N1 to close at N43 per share.

On the other hand, Eterna topped the gainers’ chart by 15k to close at N3.70 per share.

Fidson gained 8k to close at N3.11, while Aglevent grew by 7k to close at N1.47 per share.

NPFMCRFBK appreciated by 3k to close at 78k.

NAN reports that Afrinsure emerged investors’ delight as it traded 150 million shares valued at N75 million in four deals.

Transcorp followed with 41.55 million shares worth N170.23 million traded in 243 deals, while Multitrex sold 19.50 million shares worth N9.75 million in four deals.

FG Announces Adjustment On Confab Delegates’ List, APGA Reps Withdrawn

Dr Kunle Olajide from Ekiti State has been named to replace Chief Afe Babalola on the request of the elder statesmen as delegate to the National Conference.

This is contained in a statement signed by Sen. Anyim Pius Anyim, Secretary to the Government of the Federation, in Abuja on Thursday.

Similarly, Alhaji Ibrahim Yaro, the Etsu of Bwari, replaces Alhaji Ismail Mohammed, Sarki of Karshi, on the request of the National Council of Traditional Rulers of Nigeria.

The statement adds that Mrs Millicent Okoronkwo replaces Mrs Love Ezema, based on the request by the National Council of Women’s Societies of Nigeria.

“The nomination of Chief Chris Uche and Dr Sagir Maidoya to represent APGA is withdrawn to allow the party to resolve the issue of its nominees.

“In the Socio-Political, Cultural and Ethnic Nationality Groups­, Prince Rabiu Oluwa replaces Supo Sonibare while Oba Kehinde Olugbenle replaces Mr Niyi Akintola whose name is retained in the Oyo State delegates list.

“Prof Layi Erinosho is nominated by the Academy of Social Sciences to fill the one slot allocated to the academy.

“The Governors’ Forum nominated Alhaji Mohammadu Goni from Borno to fill the slot for the North East Geo-Political Zone.

“The Delta Government submitted the name of Chief Isaac Jemide, while the Edo Government nominated Prof. Eddy Erhagbe to fill the vacant slot in their respective states.’’

The statement said that Mrs Onikepo Akande had been nominated to represent Oyo State, Chief Sampson Agbaru to represent Rivers and Mr Abubakar Galadima to represent Yobe, respectively.

According to the statement, former Presidents and Heads of State, the Leadership of Political Parties, the members of the National Assembly have been invited to attend the inauguration.

It also said that Governors, members of the judiciary, members of the Federal Executive Council, members of the Diplomatic Corps, religious leaders and traditional rulers would be in attendance.

The inauguration will hold on Monday, March 17 at the National Judicial Institute, Abuja.

Delegates and guests are expected to be seated by 4 p.m.

Peter Obi Donates N1million Each To Anambra First Class Graduates

Peter Obi of Anambra on Thursday presented N1 million each to 160 first class graduates of the state to enable them to be established in their chosen careers.

Addressing the graduates in Awka on Thursday, Obi said the gesture was a way of encouraging hard work among students and youths in the state.

The governor also used the occasion to distribute 55 school buses to 55 secondary schools, saying it was part of the final push in the education sector.

He further inaugurated the distribution of more than 200 transformers to various communities as well as two fire trucks to the state fire service.

Obi assured that his successor, Mr Willie Obiano, would sustain the gesture and called on the people of the state to support the in-coming administration.

Earlier, the state Commissioner for Education, Dr Uju Okeke, commended the governor for the transformation so far witnessed in the education sector.

She said that Obi’s administration had so far distributed about N2.8 billion to the Catholic mission schools and about N2 billion to Anglican mission schools.

Okeke said that the money was released as grants for rehabilitation, renovation or construction of new structures in the schools.

She noted that the administration had distributed more than 420 generating sets, 22, 500 laptops and 1, 400 colour printers.

Okeke said that N2 million was given to each school for provision of laboratory equipment and for library development.

“We are ending strongly with the recruitment of 2,000 secondary school teachers and 3,000 primary school teachers in the state,” the commissioner said.

The Chairman, Post Primary School Service Commission, Mrs Joy Ulasi, urged the first class graduates to utilise the funds donated to them by the governor, describing Obi’s gesture as unprecedented.

Ulasi assured the governor that the school principals would ensure optimal utilisation of the buses in bringing about the desired goal in the education sector.

Senate Gives PPPRA 2 Weeks To Submit Kerosene, Fuel Subsidy Details

The Senate Committee on Finance has given the Petroleum Product Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) two weeks to submit certification details of subsidy for kerosene and petrol from July 2013 to December 2013.

The committee is investigating the alleged non-remittance of 20 billion dollars to the Federation Account by the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

The PPPRA management had earlier requested for three weeks to enable it collate all details on the certification of subsidy for kerosene and fuel for six months.

The committee, however, turned down the request and granted the agency only two weeks to furnish it with the necessary documents to enhance its probe into the allegations.

The Chairman of the committee, Sen. Ahmed Makarfi, said the committee was expecting the report of the independent consultants it appointed to conduct forensic examination and audit of expenses incurred by NNPC.

Makarfi said that the Auditor-General of the Federation had written to the committee confirming he had commenced forensic checks on the alleged unremitted funds.

He said the Auditor-General had also assured the committee that the result of the forensic check, expected to cover all areas of concerns, would be made available to the committee.

“We want to lay to rest the issue of unremitted revenue or unaccounted for revenue without further delay. So, we want to stand down on other issues that have to do with the other mandate of the committee.

“We believe all submissions have been made except one, the report we are expecting from the PPPRA on certification of subsidy from July 2013 to December 2013 both for kerosene and PMS.

“The report will enable the committee establish how much really were the total expenditure on subsidy for the two years running.

“We have given them (PPPRA) up to the end of next week. They requested three weeks but we gave them only two weeks and two weeks would expire next week.

“The other report we are expecting is that the committee appointed independent consultants to do forensic examination and audit on the volume of expenses you incurred.

“We expect their report by the end of next week.

“Their independent report is what will make us form an opinion on the expenses and losses totalling about 2.1 billion dollars based on your submission accounting for that money.

Makarfi said the auditor-general had also written to the committee confirming that he would conduct forensic checks.

He added that the auditor-general assured the committee that the forensic check would be comprehensive and would cover all the areas of concern.

The chairman quoted the auditor-general as saying that the report of the forensic check would be sent to the committee.

He said that the committee would conclude its work and present its report to the Senate after it received the reports of the independent forensic auditors and the final certification from PPPRA.

President Jonathan Inaugurates N8bn Katsina Govt House

President Goodluck Jonathan on Thursday inaugurated the N8 billion Katsina Government House with a promise to keep supporting the state government to deliver democracy dividends.

The inauguration ceremony was part of the activities lined up for the two-day official visit of the President to the state.

The President said that the completion of the edifice about a year to the end of Gov. Shehu Shema’s eight years’s administration was a demonstration of selfless service and committed leadership.

Jonathan, who said he was impressed with the quality of work, also commended Shema for leaving indelible blue print behind him.

He specifically hailed the governor’s efforts in the areas of educational and development of infrastrucuture in the state.

Earlier, Shema had said that the concept behind the project was that politics should be about service to humanity and not about self aggradisement or personal interest.

He said the concept was in line with the transformation agenda of the President.

Shema urged the President to continue with the positive programmes at the centre and should not be distracted by the challenges facing the nation.

“Mr. President, you have offered yourself to the service of this country and you are doing the best in human capacity development.

“In human endeavour, there must be some challenges so yours is not peculiar and Nigeria is facing its own challenges like the other nations of the world.

“There is no part of the world today that can claim that it is 100 per cent in peace and harmony,” he said.

Shema said that the N8 billion used in constructing the edifice was sourced neither from federal allocation nor internally generated revenue, but from interest accruing from bank savings of the state.

He said the proceed from the interest was also used in constructing the N400 million government house in Abuja.

Beside the edifice, Shema said his administration had constructed 200 secondary schools, 38 new primary schools while education from primary to secondary schools is free in the state.

He said his administration had also sent 600 students to study specialised courses like medicine, engineering, environmental sciences in universities abroad.

In the area of agriculture, Shema said the state had provided tractors, irrigation equipment, fertilizer and seedling to farmers.

The governor added that the state built 2000 houses which were sold to indigenes at 50 per cent discounted rate with 15 years instalmental payment.

NAN reports that the Government House complex included, Governor’s Office, Governor’s lodge, office complex for the governor’s wife and additional offices for principal staff of the governor.

The edifice also included, a presidential lodge and chalets for presidential aides, 200 capacity banquet hall and an indoor games and fitness centre.

Fuel Subsidy Reimbursements, FG Pays N41bn To 27 Oil Marketers

The Federal Government on Thursday paid N41billion to 27 oil marketers whose claims had been verified for fuel subsidy reimbursements.

This is contained in a statement issued by Mr Paul Nwabuikwu, the Special Adviser on Media to the Minister of Finance, Dr Ngozi Okonjo-iweala, in Abuja.

The marketers are A-Z Petroleum Product, ACORN Petroleum, AITEO Energy Resources, ASCON Oil and Gas Company, AVIDOR Oil and Gas Company, Dee Jones Petroleum Gas and CONOIL.

Others are Dozzy Oil and Gas, Folawiyo Energy, Gulf Treasures, Hudson Petroleum, Hyde Energy, Ibafon Oil, Master Energy Oil and Gas and Matrix Energy.

Others are Mobil Oil Nigeria, MRS Oil and Gas Company, NEPAL Oil and Gas Service, and NIPCO, Northwest Petroleum and Gas, and OANDO.

The others are OBAT Oil and Gas Services, Rainoil, Shorelink Oil and Gas Services, Techo Oil, Tempogate Oil and Energy Company and Total Nigeria.

The statement further stated that the amount was the latest payment made on verified claims from the marketers.

“The marketers identified received a total of N41, 07 billion

“The information is provided in continuation of the ministry’s focus on transparency and accountability in the management of the subsidy regime,’’ it said.

To Enhance Economic Activities, Nigeria Promises To Link State Capitals By Rail

NAN

The Federal Government on Thursday assured that it would extend rail lines to all state capitals to enhance economic activities in the country.

President Goodluck Jonathan gave the assurance in Katsina when he visited the Emir of Katsina, Alhaji Abdulmumini Kabir, in his palace.

Jonathan, who was responding to a request by the Emir, said: “I assure you that the federal government will include this project even if it was not in our projection.’’

“We believe that for the government to provide mass transit to over 170 million Nigerians, it needs to extend rail network linking all the major cities, including Katsina,’’ he said, adding that it had plans to reach all state capitals by rail.

He said that rail service would help reduce the cost of transporting petroleum products to Nigerians and enhance socio-economic development of the country.

Jonathan also assured that the government would develop the Zobe Water Project to provide drinking water to the people and enhance agricultural activities in the area.

He said that agriculture was an area the government had earmarked to create wealth for the people.

On the Windmill Power Project at Lambar-rimi, the president said that the project was not directly under federal government supervision.

He assured that government would ensure that the project was completed within a short time.

Earlier, the Emir lauded the federal and Katsina State governments for the numerous projects being executed in the state, adding that they had direct bearing on the poor.

Kabair commended Jonathan for the visit, and urged Nigerians to continue to pray for peace in the country.

Three To Die By Hanging For Rape & Murder In Ekiti

NAN

An Ado-Ekiti High Court on Thursday in Ado-Ekiti sentenced three persons to death by hanging for robbery, murder and rape.

The judge, Justice Olusegun Ogunyemi, gave the verdict at the conclusion of trial.

The convicts are Kolade Fowosere, a medical student; Blessing Owhorisi, also a student and Ojo Ogundare, a vulcaniser operating in Ado-Ekiti.

Delivering his judgment, Ogunyemi said the evidence before the court was direct and unequivocal.

He said the accused were convicted based on the confessional statements they made during investigation.

Ogunyemi said he found them guilty as charged, saying “the three accused persons should be hanged till life is out of them.”

The prosecuting State Counsel, Mr Gbenga Daramola, said the accused committed the offence on July 4, 2011 at Omisanjana quarters in Ado-Ekiti.

According to him, the offence contravens Section 319, 1 (2) (a) of the Robbery and Firearms (Special Provision) Act, cap RII, Vol. 14, Laws of the Federation of Nigeria 2014.

Daramola called seven witnesses to prove his case, and the defence counsel, Mr Chris Omokhafe, called four witnesses.

The state counsel urged the court to resolve the case in favour of the State, based on the confessional statements made by the convicts in the course of investigation.

He said the accused were said to have robbed at Ido-Ekiti, Omisanjana and Moferere in Ado-Ekiti.

He told the court that they also killed a police officer, Olusegun Olufowobi, popularly called “of London”, during their operation at Moferere on July 20, 2011.

He said the accused also raped a lady in the course of their operation.

The defence counsel, however, urged the court to resolve all doubts in the prosecution witnesses in favour of his clients.
He said the evidences given by the prosecution were mere hearsay, and that his clients should be discharged and acquitted.

Another Attempt At The First Family, JTF Foils Kidnap On Jonathan’s Cousin

It seems, close and extended family members of President Goodluck Jonathan in Ogbia Local Government Area, Bayelsa State, have become endangered species to kidnappers.

The Nation Newspaper reports that but for timely intervention of Joint Task Force (JTF), Operation Pulo Shield, another cousin of President Jonathan, Madam Patience Agbani would have been abducted.

Agbani is said to be related to the mother of President Jonathan.

She was reportedly trailed by her assailants at Akimpli, Ogbia local government area at about 11pm on Wednesday.

She was said to be returning from her business when the hoodlums numbering six accosted her.

Sighting them from a distance, the woman was said to have taken to her heels while the bandits pursued her.

The Media Coordinator, JTF, Col. Onyema Nwachukwu, who confirmed the incident, said Agbani ran into an uncompleted building and called an operative of JTF in the area.

He said: “We foiled the kidnap attempt on the woman at Akimpli at about 11pm. She was returning from her business at about 11:30 pm. But she was being trailed by a group of men numbering about six.

“They gave her a hot chase but good enough she had the number of one of our men deployed at SETRACO in Ogbia. Our patrol team responded swiftly and they were able to prevent the kidnap,” he said.

He said JTF was able to rescue the woman because the woman called the outfit and provided it with useful information about her location.

“We were able to foil the attempt from the would-be victim because of the quality of information we got. People should assist JTF with useful information,” he said.

Agbani, it was learnt, was taken to the Headquarters of the JTF in Yenagoa for debriefing.

Gabriel Suswam Says Benue Attackers Not Just Herdsmen But Terrorists

The Benue State Governor, Gabriel Suswam, has said that the people responsible for the killing of five people in Uikpian, a community in Guma Local Government Area of the State, are not just herdsmen but terrorists.

Governor Gabriel Suswam was at the village to see the carnage, where he also met with some of the villagers.

Speaking later, he said that the manner of operation showed that the assailants were well trained.

The Governor, whose convoy was attacked by the gunmen when he arrived at the scene where the assailants were burning down another village, also said that by virtue of the attack on his convoy, they could not be ordinary herdsmen.

The Governor’s views appeared corroborated when some of the displaced persons also revealed that the attackers came in large numbers and were carrying different weapons.

Another threatening dimension to the crisis was the alleged use of chemical weapon by the herdsmen, as one of the survivors, who is also a Vigilante Chief, Emmanuel Ifam and the Commissioner of Police, Adams Audu, gave accounts of the suffocating effect of the alleged chemical weapon.

Accordingly, the Benue State Government has ordered an autopsy on the corpses recovered from villages that were invaded by the Fulani herdsmen for verification of the allegation.

Governor Suswam, speaking on the borderline security arrangement with Nasarawa State, complained that Nasarawa remains a transit route for the attackers, but his Nasarawa counterpart, Tanko Al-Makura insisted that both states have a common problem with the Fulani herdsmen who remain a challenge to the region.

Credit: Channels Television