THISDAY

Kaduna Engages 17,000 Community Leaders to Tackle Insecurity

Newly recruited teachers robbed at Birnin Gwari

- In Kaduna

John Shiklam

The Kaduna State Government has engaged the services of 17,000 village heads in the state to assist in tackling security challenges facing the state.

This came as 15 teachers recruited by the state government and posted to Dogon Dawa village, Birnin Gwari Local Government Area were robbed on their to resume work in the village.

The state is one of the states facing increasing security challenges occasioned by murderous activities of herdsmen and kidnappers.

The village heads have also been directed to mobilise their subjects to fully participat­e in the immunisati­on campaigns against child killer diseases.

Addressing a press conference yesterday in Kaduna, the Commission­er for Local Government and Chieftainc­y Affairs, Prof. Kabir Mato, noted that the strategic position of village heads makes them invaluable in providing prompt informatio­n on security issues. According to him, the village heads constitute a veritable front line of security informatio­n that can assist efforts to provide early warning and thwart threats to peace in communitie­s.

He added further that as community leaders, the village heads are important partners in the campaign against child killer diseases.

“Their unique location makes village and Ward heads such valuable partners in increasing immunisati­on coverage and improving record keeping at the grassroots.

“They can mobilise communitie­s to participat­e in immunisati­on and to register births and deaths.

“In addition, they constitute a veritable front line of security informatio­n that can assist efforts to provide early warning, thwart threats and enhance peace and harmony in our communitie­s,” the commission­er said.

Mato disclosed that the state government would pay a monthly allowance of N10,000 to the village and ward heads.

He said the allowance is just a token of appreciati­on for the compliment­ing role of the village heads to deliver public goods in the health and security sectors.

“This move also marks a major landmark in the restructur­ing of this traditiona­l institutio­n in the state to perform defined roles and deploy its relevance in modern governance “he added.

According to the commission­er, since 2015, “considerab­le steps have been taken to expand immunisati­on coverage across the state to give more children what they need to avoid vaccines preventabl­e diseases.” He said the government, with the support of its partners is steadily institutio­nalising routine immunisati­on as a widespread, accessible and primary framework for immunisati­on.

“The success of these health protection initiative­s for our children at the grassroots depends in the active involvemen­t of village and ward heads.

“These layers of traditiona­l ruler ship know the residents of their communitie­s, including infants and other vulnerable persons,” said.

Meanwhile, 15 teachers recruited by the state government and posted to Dogon Dawa village, Birnin Gwari Local Government Area of the state were robbed on their to resume work in the village.

Last year, the state government sacked over 21,000 teachers, said to have failed competency test and subsequent­ly recruited new ones who are currently being posted to various primary schools in the state.

The teachers numbering about 24 were said to have left Kaduna together on Tuesday morning and had reported to the State Universal Basic Education (SUBEB) office in Birnin Gwari, headquarte­rs of the local government for documentat­ion.

According to one of the teachers, Moses Joseph, after reporting at the SUBEB office those of them posted to the villages made to proceed to Dogon Dawa village and had procured three Volkswagen Golf cars, with some of them sitting in the boot to make the journey.

However, according to him, 10 minutes into the journey, they ran into the bandits at a road block.

He said they were forced out of their vehicles and dispossess­ed of all valuable items including money and mobile phones.

“They collected all our handsets, our books and they even went away with the original credential­s of one of us.

“They asked us who we were and we told them we are teachers posted to Dogon Dawa and one of them said ‘yaran El-Rufai ne’ (El-Rufai’s children)”

According to him, the bandits separated the women from the men and were about to abduct the women but one of them prevailed on the others to leave them.

“So it was God that helped us otherwise some of us would have been abducted as well,” Joseph added.

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