The Guardian (Nigeria)

Insecurity in Niger State requires FG’S urgent interventi­on, says Idris

We don’t want special status like Lagos, but special considerat­ion

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Mohammed Sani Idris, Niger State Commission­er for Informatio­n, in this interview with LEO SOBECHI and AHMED IDRIS, narrates the security and challenges confrontin­g the state. He maintains that the Federal Government should accord the state special considerat­ion given its landmass.

INiger State has become ha ven for insurgents. Do y ou think the F ederal Government is doing enough? N Niger State, we are facing competing challenges in the midst of meager resources. The first major challenge is the issue of security, but a lot of things gave rise to the challenge of security.

First, our land mass is turning almost into a curse, because it is supposed to be a blessing to the state. We have over 76,000 square kilometres of land making up the landmass of about five, six or even seven states. As a result of this huge landmass, we have large expanse of forests and bushes, which provide hideout for the bandits to perform their nefarious activities.

Aside the issue of banditry, sometime ago we were faced with the issue of bad roads that we are still contending with. People from outside the state may not really understand what is happening in Niger State. If you leave the Abuja axis and say y ou want to tra vel to an area like “Ongu” that means you are embarking on a journey farther than Abuja to Kano in distance, while in some states, when the state governor constructs about 100 or 200km of road, you will see them as achievemen­t.

For instance, the boundar y we share with Kebbi and Zamfara States is a large expanse of bushes that begins from inside Niger and reaches the border. This makes it easy for bandits to perform their nefarious activities in Niger State and when you pursue them, they escape into another state. We have cried out several times and our governor has visited the Presidency on several occasions to weep.

We are not saying that the FG or the security outfits are not doing enough, but we expect that because of our peculiar situation in Niger State, they should do much more than they are doing in other states. Going by the fact that Niger State has made lots of sacrifices for this nation; for instance, about 70 to 80 percent of the FCT was obtained from Niger State. The name Abuja was donated to the Federal Capital from a place in Suleja

Local Government headquarte­rs in Niger State.

Our state has done so much, but we have got so little from the Federal Government, because we are being seen as any other state without due considerat­ion to the immense contributi­ons of our state to the wellbeing and unity of Nigeria as a nation. Y ou will realise that even in the deployment of security personnel to states, the number of security personnel we ha ve in Niger State today is nothing to write home about.

This is why the government under the leadership of the governor, His Excellency, Sanni Bello, has decided to be proactive. Not that we are not relying on the central security outfit we have in the nation, but we decided to come up with a strateg y by ensuring that we recruit our vigilantes, provide logistics for them and continuous­ly empower them. This is to complement the police and the army in the fight against bandits. But, as we know, putting an end to this menace may not come at once as people expect, but gradually. We know we are succeeding, though every now and then, we hear about attacks here and there.

Many people, especially from the Southern part wonder how with such big names as Gen. Ibrahim Babangida, Abdusalami Abubakar and other former top military leaders, Niger State is hit by insecurity. Why?

We know that even the military are sometimes incapacita­ted, but they are still doing their best to assist us. That I can categorica­lly tell, because I know we are able to succeed because of the deployment of heavy military presence in some areas towards Kotangora axis and to some parts of Mariga. There are areas where we ha ve been able to push the bandits out of the forests. Definitely, the military is doing its best, but because of the situation we are in, the best is actually not good enough. W e have also deplo yed some other strategies. Just as you have mentioned, when you have large expanse of land that is virgin and not used for anything agricultur­al or so , you provide a haven for terrorists to start some things that may also reduce this virgin land. For instance, we have large expanse of land, we have the Igbobi grazing reserve, today it is being occupied by the multina - tional companies like WAMCO.

Our government is tr ying to ensure it invests heavily in livestock. We are currently pursuing six grazing reserves that are about to be carved out. By so doing you will have lots of activities in those bushes and there are loads of activities going on to reduce these areas, where bandits use as their fortress. In the long run, it will complement what the security are doing in fighting these bandits and by the time we have a combinatio­n of the two then we think we will see the end of the menace.

During the kidnap of the students at Kagara, there were issues about Gumi’s negotiatio­n and controvers­y over whether money was given to the kidnappers…?

Let me not interrupt you, but let me categorica­lly say that our governor came out to state that we are completely averse to the payment of ransom to kidnappers or bandits, because by paying ransom, you are strengthen­ing them. So, as a government, we are averse to the payment of ransom. But, where there was confusion was that we are not averse to discussing if we look at them and realise they are genuine, but to pay ransom, our state government is completely averse to paying ransom.

A lot of people intervened in talking to those people. You will fuel vehicles, but not taking money to pay ransom before those captives were released. Aside from the security personnel that are working, we are also thinking. For instance, there is the claim that a large number of the bandits are herders and that is why in Niger State we have developed a plan to engage herders in the Anchor Borrower’s scheme.

We are not saying that anybody has the right to take up arms against fellow Nigerians, but there is a fundamenta­l problem. The fundamenta­l problem is that you have policies right from the central government that take care of the farmers and hardly any policy that caters for others, because if you do this, we know that we can now put them in a place and make them feel that we are also thinking about their welfare.

Unlike in the Northeast, IDP camps here in Niger State are not provided for. How do you go beyond keeping them in camps to fending for them?

The government is trying. A lot of resources is being sunk in there. Of recent, we have decided to come up with a strategy to assist the government. It started from us in the Commission­ers’ Forum. We came together and said, let us start something that will draw the attention of others in assisting the government, because we were facing an additional challenge with the IDPS.

When schools are in session, you will find women with kids that will be lingering around. So, we came up with the idea of having transit camps for the IDP. Each of us made a contributi­on as commission­ers and agreed for instance, to contribute individual­ly by erecting one structure that can convenient­ly provide shelter for a family of four.

We started with that and got people that have now shown interest coming to assist. We are spreading our tentacles to ensure that we reach out to multinatio­nals, aside from what the government is doing, because it is trying to create independen­t camps. We are pushing that vigorously.

Talking about infrastruc­ture, the failure rate of roads here is high and when students in Kagara were abducted Nigerians saw the nature of the school. Why are roads so bad here?

It is unfortunat­e that the incident happened in Kagara before our programme reached that school, but I want to tell you that we are doing things systematic­ally.

Let me start from the area of education, over time, you have successive government­s come in and intervene in schools, but in parts, may be renovating a structure or construct additional structure, but we realised that such things do not last. So, when this government came on board, we came in with the whole school developmen­t approach, where everything about the school, from the road network within schools to the fencing, to physical structures like classrooms, offices, laboratori­es and what have you.

It includes furniture and even facilities required to make learning conducive like provision of water and for those in the urban centres, electricit­y. Our idea is that governance is a continuous process. By the time we face a school squarely, we are able to rebuild the entire school, because government’s coming may take a very long time without any interventi­on in that school. As a result, attention might be diverted to other critical issues. We have selected three big schools in each of the zones and these nine schools have been completely transforme­d.

We are doing this systematic­ally and in doing so, we also take care of other competing demands, such as roads. Sometimes people just look at the urban settings, we have gone beyond that, but what we are doing is to open up areas in the hinterland so that people can feel that there is government. So, we are deploying lots of resources into such areas and we are doing well in such areas.

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Idris

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