...Gov llaments Borno people's suffering
Borno State Governor, Prof. Babagana Umara, has
taken his commissioner and top aides to the Boko Haram enclave in the northern
part of the state for a retreat.
Most areas in the northern part of the state are
believed to be partially or wholly controlled by the insurgents, who are said
to be occupying islands in the Lake Chad Basin.
A statement issued by the spokesman to the Governor,
Mallam Isa Gusau, on Sunday said the governor was currently leading his administration
first retreat “for commissioners, special advisers and some senior government
officials like the secretary to the state government (SSG), Head of Service and
Chief of Staff in Damasak, the headquarters of Mobbar Local Government Area in
northern part of Borno State.
He said the town has “remained a shadow of itself
since it was occupied by Boko Haram as a caliphate.”
Gusau recalled that “Damasak, hitherto a major
agricultural community in the fringes of the Lake Chad basin, less than 10
kilometres away from Diffa in Niger Republic, was occupied and administered by
Boko Haram members from November 2014 to 2016 before it was recovered by
multinational security forces.
“Damasak had come under repeated attacks, including
early this year. Thousands of citizens who live there mostly depend on food
aids and skeletal businesses.”
Gusau said the governor told his commissioners in
the opening remarks last Saturday evening that the choice of Damasak was to
bring top government officials "face to face with the realities" on
ground and to remind them that their appointments were not opportunities for
luxury but for the serious task ahead of them.
He quoted the governor to have told the top
government functionaries that “by tradition, retreats are held in the most
serene and oftentimes, luxurious environments. However, holding retreats in
serene atmosphere is reserved for those who live and operate under normal
circumstances. Fellow members of the state executive council, I will like to
remind us very strongly that our circumstances in Borno State are not normal.
If we decide to hold our retreat in Maiduguri, Abuja or perhaps at Obudu Cattle
ranch in Cross Rivers State, we may not totally be true to ourselves and
sensitive to the plight of our people.
“The wisdom of convening this retreat in Damasak,
headquarters of Mobbar LGA, in the most troubled northern part of the state, is
to bring all of us face to face with the realities of our challenges in the
state. Driving from Maiduguri to this place, we have passed major towns like
Gubio and Kareto which have become almost ghost towns far from what they used
to be. We have seen villages that are without human occupation. We have seen on
the road soldiers at different points, clearly indicating that all is not
normal with Borno State.”
The governor aide added that “Damasak, where we are
today, used to be one of Borno's agro-economic centres. Damasak used to be a
large scale producer and exporter of farm produce like tomatoes, pepper and
other vegetables. Thousands of wealthy farmers and transporters, other fellow
citizens have been killed; displaced to Niger Republic and forced to become
beggars. We are here to remind ourselves that the oath of offices we
differently took in May, June, August and September 2019 is not for luxury.
Borno State has serious challenges and we have individually sworn with the Holy
Qur’an and the Holy Bible to do whatever we can in trying to address the
challenges facing the state.”
The governor also tasked the commissioners,
advisers and other participants to see Damasak as an example that tells the
realities of the 27 local government areas in the state.
He informed them that timelines were going to be
created for the attainment of goals determined at the retreat.
Umara said: “At this retreat, ladies and gentlemen,
we shall not only come up with ideas that are achievable but by God’s grace, we
shall be setting for ourselves timelines within which we are to achieve every
goal we aim. We are here to spend only few days in Damasak, but there are
thousands of our fellow brothers and sisters, fathers and mothers, who live
here on a permanent basis. We are here to feel their stay and t remind ourselves
of their needs for continued safety, shelter, medical care, water, schools, and
the need for means of livelihoods.
“When we drove into this lodge, we saw hundreds of
our young sons and daughters welcoming us happily. We saw wives, sisters,
mothers and fathers joining them to welcome us. Whereas they all wore happy
faces, we know that majority of them are in distress. We should therefore
regard Damasak as an example of the realities facing all of our 27 local
government areas, particularly those in northern part of the state.”
Earlier, the Secretary to the State Government (SSG),
Usman Jidda, had told them the objectives of the retreat, while commending the
governor for his ingenious choice of location.
He said the retreat was meant for top government
officials to cross fertilise ideas towards better service delivery in line with
the governor’s vision and approach to governance.
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