A cold war is ongoing between Yobe State Governor
Alhaji Ibrahim Gaidam and his Niger State counterpart, who is
also chairman of the Northern Governors Forum, Governor Mua’azu
Babangida Aliyu over the latter’s comment on Monday that commissioners
and parliamentarians have fled Yobe State.
Governor Aliyu made
the comments during the Sardauna Memorial Lecture in Abuja,
lamenting that he was not very happy when he read in the newspapers that
in Yobe state, legislators and commissioners were responding to the
insecurity by moving to Jigawa State.
“That means we are already
giving up, because if the governmental institutions moved, it means
those who are after us have defeated us and have taken over,” he said,
asking, “What is the best way out? How do we arrest the situation
because if governmental institutions in Yobe moved, then it means
gradually we will begin
to move?”
Yobe’s Governor Geidam took out
an advertorial in the newspapers in which he expressed surprise that
Governor Aliyu relied “on a speculative, unattributed report from one
newspaper,” for his devastating conclusion that governmental
institutions in Yobe State are, in effect, collapsing.
The public
statement said: “There is no question that insecurity has had and
continues to have devastating consequences and all of us in the north
and across the country must do whatever it takes to address and resolve
the situation. As one of the states most affected by a mindless
insurgency and the bloodthirsty activities of criminal gangs, Yobe had
seen first-hand what effects a breach of the peace and breakdown of law
and order could have.”
“But the Yobe State Government has always
risen to the challenges. Working with the Joint Task Force (JTF) and
other security agencies and the good people of the state who have never
relented in seeking for divine intervention – who have never relented in
seeking for divine intervention – the government is able to restore the
peace and ensure a return to normalcy. Most residents who fled at the
height of the crisis have returned to their homes and social and
economic activities have resumed fully. Significantly, the Gaidam
administration remains faithful to its mandate, and continues undaunted
to deliver on its target to transform the state.”
It further said
that if Governor Aliyu felt strongly about the newspaper report, his
first response ought to have been to contact his colleague in Yobe to
find out if it was true that his commissioners and lawmakers in the
state were moving to Jigawa.
Even if Governor Aliyu were unable
to contact Governor Gaidam for whatever reason, the Yobe government
said, he should have shown circumspection about using a newspaper report
to make such weighty comments.
“In Yobe State- and we know this
is to be true for most of the country- we don’t use newspaper reports as
necessary and sufficient cause for coming to conclusions on issues that
require reflection, intersection and restraint,” the statement said.
“We
therefore state categorically that no government official had relocated
to Kano or Jigawa nor has anyone given up in Yobe State or anywhere in
the country.
“As Muslims and Christians, we believe in the
scriptural encouragement that ease will follow every hardship. This is
even more so with the hard work of our security agencies and
the vigilance of who suffer most the devastating effects of insecurity
are at the forefront of the fight against mindless violence.
“We
also believe that what will ultimately make the difference in the
ongoing fight to ensure peace and security are the sacrifices that we
make as individuals and collectives and what we actually do (not just
say) as leaders and people in positions of authority.”
Of the
inaugural Sardauna Memorial Lecture which was boycotted by many
prominent Northerners such as the Vice-President, Namadi Sambo and 17 of
the region’s governors, Gaidam included, the Yobe State governor said:
“Governor Aliyu spoke well about the late Sardauna of Sokoto and Premier
of the Northern Region, Sir Ahmadu Bello, and we fully share in his
belief that a return to the values for which the late Sardauna lived
will instantiate a socio-economic and political rebirth not just of the
north but of the entire country as well.”
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