Daily Trust

URE na village its

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terror on the village. “Armed thieves stormed the village in one incident at night and searched each household looking for money. I was in bed trying to get a good sleep, when I heard gunshot sounds and I had to sneak out by the back exit and hid under the plants in one farm, until 5am after the thieves had left. They carted away the money in my room and from that fateful incident, I resolved not to stay there again,” he said.

He said people still have a yearning to return to their houses as soon as peace was restored to the area. He called on the Kaduna State governor, Malam Nasir El-Rufa’i to provide security to the area to enable the people to continue farming and engage in other economic activities. “So many bumper crops are grown in the area,” he said.

A man who would not want to be named said soldiers were at one time deployed to the area when robberies became ‘unimaginab­le’ and “they combed through the forest looking for the bandits. They arrested some suspects but few days after the soldiers left, bandits resumed attacks and even killed those they perceived to be informants.”

A visit to the village by this reporter in July this year showed some tangible remains of settlement­s that were completely deserted. Most of the building were made of clay soil and a number of them have collapsed due to lack of repairs and previous spell of rains.

Samson Danjuma, 19, said his family fled Chikwale and moved into a rented house in Gidan Busa along the KadunaAbuj­a highway following harassment by thieves. He said his father still cultivates his farms in Chikwale but goes there every other day during the rainy season. “I accompanie­d my father and brother to work on the farm one day on, one day off. The thieves still attack farmers on their farms and collect their phones and monies.”

He said farmers who could not endure to go there daily, sleep in their empty houses at night but remain on their guard.

Timothy Adamu, 18, said thieves from the forest strike homes and attack farmers on every occasion, because of the absence of security personnel in the area. He said villagers resorted to fleeing the areas en masse when the attacks increased day after day ,and left behind their houses and other valuable items. He said the thieves scavenged the abandoned homes and took away anything thing they found useful to them. “We evacuated our houses and sought refuge in Gidan Busa but even then, we return to our farms located near the village to cultivate crops during the rainy season. The armed thieves move around looking for whom to attack on the farms and collect their monies, mobile phones and motorcycle­s.

“Around July this year, while we were working on the farm, they came to us and when they noticed that we were terrified, one of them instructed us to go on with what we were doing. He said they were not looking for us, but herdsmen.”

Apart from Chikwale, other villages including Gidan Oga, Rishi and recently in 2017, Gidan Sani, were also sacked by the bandits at different times.

Victor Sani, lived in Gidan Sani village, before he transferre­d his family to Gidan Busa, few kilometers away in march 2017. He said gangs of armed lawbreaker­s hiding in the thick forest were responsibl­e for the killing of several ‘industriou­s’ farmers and mass departure of people from their residences in Chikwale, Rishi and Gidan Oga between 2014 and 2015. “There after, in late 2016, the attackers gradually reached our village. They confront us in our farms and houses, and demand for money and foodstuff. They are well armed and kill any person that refuses to obey their order.”

He said the raids by the armed thieves became greater than before around March 2017 ,and people started running away with their families to the extent that by April, the village was deserted.

He said people living in the area were mainly farmers and produced a variety of rain fed crops. “In 2016 I harvested close to 700 tubers of yam in my farms, apart from bags of maize and cowpea. I sold more than half of the yam,” he said.

Johanna Tigida said he migrated to Gidan Sani in 2013 from his village in Kauru local government area , with the sole purpose of farming. He said he grew maize, ginger and yams in commercial quantity, before he was forced to relocate to Gidan Busa by robbers. “I will like to return to the village to continue crop production because I get lots of money after selling farm produce. Last year, I produced a lot of ginger and maize. I made N200,000 from ginger.”

Tigida said Gidan Sani village became empty after the residents fled, but many people would return if the security situation improves.

Police Force Public Relations Officer, Chief Superinten­dent Moshood Jimoh said special forces were deployed to the area recently and one gang of thieves believed to be hiding in a forest in Kachia area were arrested. “We recovered over 800 locally made guns from them.”

He said the security situation had improved in several areas of Southern Kaduna “and people have started returning to their houses.”

He said police presence in the area would be increased and sustained.

 ??  ?? Auwal Sani
Auwal Sani
 ?? Photos: Misbahu Bashir ??
Photos: Misbahu Bashir

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