sábado, 27 de fevereiro de 2021

Deputado PAIGC Hussein Farhat inaugura avenida que o próprio custeou

Por Ditadura de Consenso sábado, 27 de fevereiro de 2021

Deputado PAIGC Hussein Farhat inaugura avenida que o próprio custeou

Na presença do secretário nacional do PAIGC, Ali Hijazi, do deputado Almami Cassamá entre outros dirigentes do partido

Os deputados do circulo 24 prometem fazer oportunamente entregas e lançaments de  obras de reabilitação de algumas vias de acesso aos utentes em geral e aos eleitores do círculo 24 em particular. 

P A  I G C i solusson pa desenvolvimento de Guiné-Bissau ???

Ditadura de Consenso - o blog

Cerimónia de entrega de nove ambulâncias para apoio no combate à pandemia, doado pela União Europeia e o Banco Mundial ao Alto Comissariado.

Presidente da República da Guiné-Bissau Umaro Sissoco Embaló

Nigeria: Many Villages Deserted As Bandits Kill Residents In Sokoto

By Abubakar Auwal dailytrust.com  Sat Feb 27 2021

Suspected bandits have raided some communities in the eastern part of Sokoto state, killing four persons and rustled several livestock.

Colonel Garba Moyi (Rtd), the state Commissioner for Carrier and Security Matters, confirmed the attacks, saying three persons were killed at Bargaja village in Isa local government area while one was killed in a community under Sabon Birni local government.

Daily Trust learnt that the attackers invaded Bargaja around 2pm on Thursday, shooting sporadically.

A resident said six persons were shot in the village, but only three died while the remaining three are currently receiving treatment in the hospitals.

A resident of Isa who identified himself as Surajo, told Daily Trust that inhabitants of Bargaja, Tozai, Turba and Danzanke have all relocated to Isa town following series of attacks on their villages.

“They don’t sleep in their places any more. Only some of their men who have farmlands nearer to the village go back every morning to work on them and rush back to Isa town before sun set,” he said.

Another resident, who sought for anonymity, said one person was killed on Friday at Adamawa village.

Took hostages at Sabon Birni

A resident identified as Malam Sanusi Gatawa told Daily Trust that Gatawa in Sabon Birni local government is now flooded with refugees from neighbouring villages.

The villages include, Makera, Dankura, Burkusuma, Kumaro, Garin Tunkiya, Zangon Malam and Asha Banza among others.

He stated that one Malam Bilya Idris otherwise known as Idi Gago was killed at Dankura village and Malam Abdulmajid Abdurrahman, Muhammadu Hatimu and Yazzid Sa’idu lost their lives during Zangon Malam’s attack some weeks ago.

However, the commissioner explained that the attacks were made by the splinter groups of those gangs that already embraced peace with the government and they were meant to rustled animals not to kill the villagers.

Vigilante operatives, others killed

He explained that most of the people killed were either members of the vigilante group or those who lost their animals and decided to pursue the bandits.

“That is why we don’t encourage the villagers to engage them because we have our own ways of recovering whatever they have stolen.

“We use their brothers who embraced peace to recover the animals and even their weapons as well as secure release of kidnapped victims,” he said.

He added that over 20 weapons had been recovered from the bandits while many captives have been freed.

When contacted the Spokesman of the Sokoto state Police Command, ASP Sunusi Abubakar, promised to get all the information about the attacks and get back to our reporter.

Meanwhile, the Command has confirmed the abduction of PDP chairman in Gwadabawa local government area of the state.

Read Also:

How Boko Haram ruined mission to restore electricity to Maiduguri

PHOTOS: Life Returns To Normal In Community Where Zamfara Schoolgirls Were Abducted

Scarcity: Fuel Queues Return In Abuja


By Zakariyya Adaramola dailytrust.com  Sat Feb 27 2021

Queues on Saturday surfaced at some petrol filling stations in Abuja and its environs as marketers refused to load from depots due “to uncertainty in fuel price regime.”

Daily Trust observed apart from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) retail stations and some major marketers, many of the independent marketers did not open.

Because of this, there were long queues at the few petrol stations selling to customers.

At an NNPC retail outlet at Central Area in the nation’s capital, motorists were seen struggling to buy the product which sold at N162 per litre.

The situation was the same at A.A. Rano at Jabi where the premium motor spirit went for N163 per litre.

The president of Independent Petroleum Marketers Association of Nigeria (IPMAN), Chinedu Okonkwo, declined to comment on the cause of scarcity, but an executive member of the association attributed the situation to anxiety over price of fuel.

Down stream deregulation

The executive, who pleaded anonymity, said IPMAN refused to load at the depots because they wanted the NNPC to come clean on deregulation.

The deregulation of petroleum downstream and pump price increase have generated conflict between the Government and Labor for close to two decades.

Since 2004 when the Federal Government started the policy of selling the crude oil earmarked for local refining/consumption at international price, the landing price of petroleum products has been higher than the regulated pump price of petroleum products.

The old system where crude oil earmarked for local refining/consumption was sold to the NNPC at a subsidized rate is able to take care of price differential between landing cost and regulated pump price.

With the new policy, a system of subsidy payment was introduced to take care of the price differential.

But over time, the subsidy system became cumbersome and government found it unsustainable.

Northerners Begin Diversion Of Food Items To Niger And Cameroon As South-west Refuses To Pay N450Billion Compensation

By Native Reporters

Foodstuff and cattle dealers across the Northern part of the country have started diverting their goods and all consumables to the neigbouring countries of Niger Republic and Cameroon.

They have also begun blocking trade routes to the South by stopping food item-laden trucks from going south.

Truckloads of food items from the northern part of the country were on Friday stopped by northerners from entering Kwara State and neighbouring states in the South West.

Earlier Fulani group demanded N450Billion as compensation for their loss.

Covid-19: COMISSÃO PERMANENTE PEDE AO PRESIDENTE DA ANP QUE DESCONVOQUE A SESSÃO ORDINÁRIA

27/02/2021 / Jornal Odemocrata 

Os membros da comissão permanente da Assembleia Nacional Popular (ANP) recomendaram ao presidente, Cipriano Cassamá, que desconvoque a sessão ordinária de fevereiro, com fundamento na “situação crítica” da pandemia do novo coronavírus (Covid-19) na Guiné- Bissau e também pelo facto de o início da mesma ter coincidido com a sessão evocativa em memória do deputado João Seidiba Sané.

A recomendação consta da deliberação n° 09/2021 da comissão permanente, na posse de O Democrata.

Na reunião realizada na sexta-feira, 26 de fevereiro de 2021, 13 dos 15 membros da comissão permanente analisaram a pertinência da realização da sessão plenária ordinária que havia sido marcada para 25 de fevereiro a 8 de abril e o pedido de autorização para audição do deputado José Carlos Monteiro Macedo.

Lê-se no documento que a comissão permanente aconselhou o presidente Cassamá que convoque uma sessão extraordinária entre os dias 11 de março a 21 de abril, condicionando a sua efectiva realização à evolução da situação da covid-19.

Neste sentido, os membros da comissão recomendaram à administração da ANP que assegure a “obrigatoriedade” de realização de teste de covid-19 a todos os deputados, funcionários e entidades que prestam serviços na ANP, antes da realização da sessão extraordinária.

Sobre o pedido de autorização da audição do deputado José Carlos Monteiro Macedo pelo ministério público, a comissão permanente remeteu o assunto à comissão da ética parlamentar para efeito de emissão “do competente parecer”.

Por: Tiago Seide

Boletim Diário n. 34 - 6 novos casos de COVID-19

 
Boletim Diário n. 34

_  6 novos casos de COVID-19

_  4 recuperados

_ 592 casos ativos

#somos2milhõesdecomportamentos

Alto Comissariado para o Covid-19

Celebração simbólica de 12 meses, do primeiro mandato da sua Excelência Sr. Presidente Umaro Sissoco Embaló.

Presidente da República da Guiné-Bissau Umaro Sissoco Embaló - Balanço do I° Ano de Mandato como Presidente da República


GUINÉ-BISSAU: Inauguração da Rua reabilitada pelo Deputado Hussein Farah, reconstruiu a rua com o nome do Professor Areolino Cruz, o troço que dá acesso aos principais liceus públicos

MOPHU/27.02.2021 (sábado)

O ministério das Obras Públicas Habitação e Urbanismo procedeu hoje a inauguração da Rua do Professor Areolino Lopes da Cruz.
A obra foi financiada pelo Deputado da Nação Hussein Faraht.


A cerimônia contou com a honrosas presenças da sua Ex. General Umaro Sissoco Embalo, Presidente da República da Guiné Bissau, sua Ex. Fidélis forbs, Ministro das Obras Públicas Habitação e Urbanismo.

No acto também estiveram o Deputado da Nação Hussein Faraht, Diretor Geral das estradas e pontes Braima Djassi.

Durante a cerimônia registaram-se as intervenções de: Deputado da Nação Hussein Faraht, Ministro das obras Públicas sr. Fidélis forbs, e por último da sua ex. Presidente da República.



Vídeo by: Mustafa Cassamá

Cerimonia de investidura do novo Presidente da República da Guiné-Bissau General Umaro Sissoco Embaló 03... 27 de fevereiro de 2020

Vídeo by: Rogerio Dias

Guiné-Bissau: Covid-19: União Europeia e Banco Mundial doam nove ambulâncias à Guiné-Bissau

A União Europeia (UE) e o Banco Mundial entregaram hoje ao Alto Comissariado para a Covid-19 da Guiné-Bissau nove ambulâncias para apoio no combate à pandemia provocada pelo novo coronavírus

“Esta iniciativa é um exemplo do muito que podemos fazer de mãos dadas com a República da Guiné-Bissau se todos estivermos concertados e formos fiéis aos valores essenciais da cooperação entre os povos”, disse a embaixadora da União Europeia em Bissau, Sónia Neto.

A embaixadora falava na cerimónia de entrega das ambulâncias, que decorreu na sede do Alto Comissariado para a Covid-19, em Bissau, e que contou com a presença do Presidente da República da Guiné-Bissau, Umaro Sissoco Embaló, que completa hoje o seu primeiro ano de mandato.

“Queremos reforçar o nosso papel enquanto parceiros da República da Guiné-Bissau naquilo que consideramos ser áreas cruciais para o desenvolvimento sustentável, nas quais está incluída a saúde”, afirmou a diplomata da UE, de nacionalidade portuguesa.

Segundo Sónia Neto, os desafios da covid-19 são “complexos e transfronteiriços” e “requerem abordagens integradas e inclusivas”.

A embaixadora da UE salientou que a iniciativa Covax, de acesso a vacinas e da qual a Guiné-Bissau é beneficiária, “mostra como a cooperação multilateral” pode ajudar a combater a pandemia provocada pelo novo coronavírus.

O representante do Banco Mundial, Amadou Ba, pediu às autoridades guineenses para estabelecerem um “sistema de gestão profissional, transparente e eficaz das ambulâncias”.

Umaro Sissoco Embaló afirmou, no final da cerimónia, que os parceiros de desenvolvimento da Guiné-Bissau têm vindo a “cooperar consideravelmente” na luta contra o flagelo da pandemia no país.

“Por isso, esta aquisição de ambulâncias financiadas pelo Banco Mundial e a União Europeia representa uma valiosa contribuição aos esforços do Governo da Guiné-Bissau na luta contra a pandemia de covid-19”, acrescentou o Presidente da República guineense.

Desde que foram detetados os primeiros casos de covid-19 no país, em março de 2020, a Guiné-Bissau já registou 48 vítimas mortais e tem um total acumulado de 3.241 casos de infeção.

No âmbito do combate à pandemia, o Presidente da República guineense decretou, na quarta-feira, o prolongamento do estado de calamidade até 25 de março, incluindo o encerramento de locais de culto, nomeadamente igrejas e mesquitas.

RadioBantaba /Lusa

Guiné-Bissau: Inauguração da avenida reabilita pelo deputado Hussain Farah.

RadioBantaba 

MEMÓRIAS DO PASSADO RECENTE : COMUNICADO DO CONSELHO DE MINISTROS ... 27 de fevereiro de 2020

MEMÓRIAS DO PASSADO RECENTE - 27 de fevereiro de 2020👇👇👇
FALADEPAPAGAIO : COMUNICADO DO CONSELHO DE MINISTROS:



Cerimonia de investidura do novo Presidente da República da Guiné-Bissau General Umaro Sissoco Embaló... 27 de fevereiro de 2020



FALADEPAPAGAIO : Cerimonia de investidura do novo Presidente da República da Guiné-Bissau General Umaro Sissoco Embaló... 27 de fevereiro de 2020

MEMÓRIAS DO PASSADO RECENTE - 27 de fevereiro de 2020👇👇👇
FALADEPAPAGAIO : Cerimonia de investidura do novo Presidente da Rep...



Mensagem de Felicitações do Chefe do Governo

Eng.º Nuno Gomes Nabiam pela ocasião do I° Ano de Mandato do Presidente da República

“Senhor Presidente e Caro Irmão,

Apraz-me endereçar a Vossa Excelência, em nome do Governo que dirijo e em meu nome pessoal, as minhas sinceras e calorosas felicitações pela concretização de um ano do seu mandato, que trouxe ao nosso País, Paz Institucional, Reafirmação da nossa Soberania, Justiça, Combate Contra o Tráfico de droga, mais Bem-Estar Social e ainda uma política incisiva de combate a corrupção que grassava no Aparelho de Estado e nosso País em Geral. 

Gostaria, igualmente, de formular os meus votos de saúde e de felicidades a Vossa Excelência e Sua Família, assim como desejar-lhe a continuação de um mandato visando o Progresso, Paz e Prosperidade, para o Povo da Guiné-Bissau.

Termino, reiterando a minha disponibilidade para continuar a trabalhar com Vossa Excelência na procura de uma maior aproximação e estreitamento das relações entre os nossos Órgão de Soberania.  

Queira aceitar, Senhor Presidente Caro Irmão, os protestos da minha mais elevada consideração. 

Nuno Gomes Nabiam

Primeiro-Ministro 

Fim do texto

 Presidente da República da Guiné-Bissau Umaro Sissoco Embaló



9 Forests ‘Governed’ By Bandits, B/Haram

Forests ‘governed’ by bandits

By dailytrust.com Reporters Sat Feb 27 2021

Nine forests linking almost the entire northern part of Nigeria and some neighbouring countries are being governed by bandits, thus worsening the insecurity challenges bedevilling the region, Daily Trust report.

Ismail Mudashir, Idowu Isamotu (Abuja); Lami Sadiq (Kaduna); Shehu Umar (Gusau); Habibu Umar Aminu (Kano) & Misbahu Bashir (Maiduguri)

Bandits, terrorists and kidnappers have taken over many forests from where they are reportedly launching attacks and subsequently keep kidnapped victims hostage. While civilians see the forests as ‘dead zones’, such places have remained mysterious for security personnel.

The nine forests include Sambisa, Alagarno, Kamuku, Kuduru, Kuyambana, Burwaye, Ajja, Dajin Rugu and Sububu have become the hotbeds of insurgency and banditry, and therefore a no-go area.

Analysts told the Daily Trust that unless the forests are ransacked, reclaimed and properly guarded, authorities would never get it right in terms of securing the people.

Kamuku, Kuduru: Birnin Gwari’s deadly forests

What started as local criminality and cattle rustling around communities surrounding large forests in Kaduna’s Birnin Gwari and Giwa local government areas have over the years snowballed into full banditry and terrorism that have led to the killing of hundreds of villagers while thousands have been displaced. Criminals in Kaduna’s Birnin Gwari and Giwa LGAs have over the years found shield  within the Kamuku and Kuduru forests.

For residents of the affected communities, Kuduru and Kamuku forests have come to be identified as the two deadliest bandit enclaves that have become a nightmare for residents around the area. The Kamuku National Park criss-crosses five northern states of Kaduna, Katsina, Niger, Zamfara and Kebbi states even though a large portion of the forest is situated within Kaduna’s Birnin Gwari LGA. With a total land area of about 1,121 square kilometres, Kamuku is said to extend to Chikun, Kajuru and Giwa LGA within Kaduna State.

With Kuduru forests also situated west of Birnin Gwari LGA, communities have over the years faced some of the most gruesome attacks.

Ariel view of Sambisa forest

Residents’ harrowing tales

Our correspondent reports that the banditry activities have largely ravaged dozens of villages in Giwa LGA with at least 30 villages becoming ‘danger zones’ with bandits operating freely.

“Bandits come from Kuduru forest, transact their business activities fully armed in Girya, Goburawa, Karshi, Garke, and Uguwan Idi villages and many others unchallenged,” said Ishaq Tanimu from Giwa.

Shehu Ibrahim who lives around Dogon Dawa in Birnin Gwari said presently, dozens of communities including big ones such as Damari and Saulawa have been vacated due to activities of bandits linked to Kamuku forest.

“They travel on motorcycles, hundreds of them sometimes, two or three on motorcycles and heavily armed, they attack our communities, steal our farm produce and animals, kill the men and abduct the women and children,” he said.

He added that major towns such as Birnin Gwari town and Dogon Dawa are today heavily fortified with security teams at all locations while residents have taken up to vigilante teams to defend their communities.”

Our correspondent reports that Kamuku as a park was established in 1936 as the Native Authority Forest Reserve Birnin Gwari under the Northern Nigerian Government. It was later upgraded from a state game reserve to a national park before it was closed down due to increasing cattle rustling and banditry.

In 2015, the governors of the affected states which share boundary with Kamuku had collaborated in a joint operation involving the army, air force, mobile police and other security agencies to launch an operation that will exterminate and arrest suspected terrorists and bandits within the forest. This, however, has not resulted in the expected dislodgment of bandits.

Inside Zamfara’s Kuyambana, Burwaye, Ajja, Sububu forests

Zamfara State has suffered a series of deadly raids by armed bandits and cattle rustlers in the past 10 years. Hundreds of residents have been killed, and thousands of cattle stolen across the 14 local government areas of the state.

The state has large forests that have become safe haven for criminals. The armed men use the forests straddling many states as cover, thus, making it possible for them to carry out their activities with ease. Forest such as Kuyambana, Burwaye and Ajja have become hiding places for the bandits.

The armed bandits have made Kuyambana forest their abode. They launch major attacks on hapless rural communities from there.

The deadly Kuyambana forest in Maru LGA extends to Birnin Gwari in Kaduna and Kebbi states.

Our correspondent reports that the bandits from the forest move to neighbouring villages on motorbikes with guns unchallenged.

A resident, Malam Sani Yar’galadima, said Kuyambana is the most dangerous forest after Sambisa.

“The reason why I told you this is that no one dares to inch towards his farm without him or her getting killed, kidnapped or at least have his or her money or property robbed. It has happened to many of us here,” he said.

Another deadly forest in Zamfara is Burwaye forest in Anka and Bukkuyum LGAs of the state.

The forest has also become a hiding place for armed men who have been terrorising residents of rural communities in the area for quite a long time.

“There is nothing mystical about these forests except they have been allowed to become lodges for criminals. Before these forests became what they are today, we used to go deep in to get logs for wood and clear lands for farming, but now all these are practically impossible,” said a resident, Aliyu Kawaye.

In Birnin Magaji and Zurmi LGAs of the state also lies an expansive dangerous Ajja forest. It extends to Batsari and Safana LGAs of Katsina State.

Then another forest called Sububu lies between Shinkafi and Maradun LGAs of Zamfara State and Isa and Sabon Birnin LGAs of Sokoto State.

Armed bandits had carried out several deadly attacks on herding and farming communities of the local governments using the forest as an operation camp.

 Sambisa, Alagarno as BH enclave

The notorious Sambisa Forest used to be a game reserve where wild animals such as elephants strayed in from other countries, but constant hunting and other human activities drove most of the wild animals away.

The forest is located at the northeastern tip of the west Sudanian Savanna and the southern boundary of the Sahel Acacia Savanna, about 60 km south east of Maiduguri. It occupies parts of Borno, Yobe, Gombe, Bauchi, Jigawa, and some parts of Kano state farther north.

The name of the forest comes from the village of Sambisa which is on the border with Gwoza in the East. The Gwoza hills in the East have peaks of 1,300 meters above sea level and form part of the Mandara Mountains range along the Cameroon-Nigeria border

Considering its size and convenience, the Boko Haram insurgents, driven out of major towns by both the military and civil defence forces, have sought refuge in Sambisa and the nearby Mandara Mountains from where they sneak out to launch attacks on their targets.

The military had traced some of the insurgents’ camps to the forest on different occasions and dislodged them; yet, the terrorists move deep into the forest to evade arrest.

A military source said there were villages located in Sambisa before the advent of insurgency with people living peacefully.  In the middle of Sambisa National Park was a village called Njimia.

“The insurgents have mixed up with locals and succeeded in persuading them into sympathising with their ideology. The inhabitants were used in obtaining and transporting essential commodities from other towns to the insurgents hiding around them; locals who failed to join them either leave the communities or risk being killed,” he said.

He said herders who moved their cattle and other types of domestic animals were made to pay taxes on their animals to the insurgents.

Alagarno forest, on the other hand, covered parts of Borno and Yobe states and is also a hiding place for insurgents.

Sources said Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau has over the years been shuttling between Sambisa and Alagarno forests, launching attacks on communities in Yobe and Borno states.

 My take on Sambisa – IBB

Responding to a question in an interview with this paper on the forest last year, former military president, General Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida (rtd), said he took the national guards to the Sambisa forest to secure the place and the country.

He said he was not happy that a positive idea was misconstrued because some people thought his plans for the Sambisa Forest and the people that would be trained there was to perpetuate himself in power.

“We looked at the country generally to get an area where they could be trained (national guards) and one of our brightest young officers who was a governor in Borno at that time told us that there was a place (Sambisa) where they could be trained.

“I feel bad that it has been taken over, if there is anything like that; but I also feel vindicated. If the guards were there doing their training, it wouldn’t have been possible to take over the forest,” he said.

Good news from Falgore forest

In Kano, the Falgore Forest is located about 150 kilometres from the city and cuts across three local governments of Tudun Wada, Doguwa and Sumaila.

Falgore Game Reserve started as Kogin Kano forest reserve which was developed during the British colonial period in 1940s. The forest reserve was only upgraded into a game reserve in the 1960s and subsequently called Falgore Game Reserve.

Kano State is one of the few states in northern Nigeria not seriously affected by terror attacks although it shares boundaries with Katsina and Kaduna states both heavily affected by banditry.

However, some remote villages in the state have recorded cases of kidnapping and other crimes in recent times.

The forest was becoming a den of criminals but the collaboration between the Nigerian Army and the Kano State government halted it.  It has been converted to a military training ground to forestall criminal activities.

Recently, about 500 million was set aside for the construction of the first phase of the military training facility at the forest.

Dajin Rugu gradually becoming bandits’s den

Dajin Rugu is a thick forest that stretches from Birnin Gwari in Kaduna State, through parts of Katsina State and ending in Zamfara State.

Twenty years ago, the famous Dajin Rugu was home to wild animals such as lions, elephants, hyenas, gorillas and zebras, among other wild animals. The forest was also famous for its rivers, dams and rocks which make the forest a beautiful tourist site.

However, a recent visit to Rugu forest by our reporter shows that this famous tourist attraction is diminishing, due to neglect by the government. There are no access roads to the forest, not to talk of the roads leading to tourist attraction sites within the forest.

The only road leading to Rugu forest from Tambari village is also dilapidated, causing major difficulties to motorists and visitors into the forest.

It was observed that aside from being a haven for wild animals, Dajin Rugu has turned into a camp for Fulani cattle herders, thieves and armed robbers. Even the Fulani, Daily Trust Saturday observed, are currently migrating from Rugu with their herds because of lack of water and grass for the animals.

“During the dry season, it is difficult to find food and water for our cows, or for us to drink and cook our food,” said Malam Adamu Dantsoho, a herdsman who was born in the forest.

Dantsoho told Daily Trust that, “I was born in the forest and I am still living there with my family and animals. But I have resolved to migrate from the forest to Tiga Area in Kano State, because I learnt there is water and grass over there.

Daily Trust Saturday gathered that the only surviving dam in Rugu as of now is Kirya dam. On a daily basis, about 3,000 animals go to quench their thirst at the dam.  Adamu Dantsoho said, “As they drink, we also drink too. I mean we drink from the same pond with our animals including dogs, snakes and monkeys.”

Like Yankari and Falgore Game Reserves in Bauchi and Kano states, respectively, Dajin Rugu is a potential tourist site, which, if utilized, can attract tourists, not only from within Nigeria, but from all over the world.

The forest is blessed with dams and rocks as well. Kurgyel, Mai-Magurzai, Kangurtsa, Yi-Naka, Tsamre Kirya and Zobe, were among the popular rivers and dams in Rugu forest, while Kauni, Rugu and Dagwarwa are the famous rocks that beautify Dajin Rugu. This is in addition to various hills and smaller rocks, situated at different locations within the forest.

Recover territory to end insecurity – Ex-DSS director

A former Assistant Director of the Department of State Services (DSS), Dennis Amachree, urged the Federal Government to comb the forests and remove criminal elements from there.

In an interview, he also called on the villagers not to confront the bandits and other criminal elements occupying the ungoverned spaces but ensure they provide necessary information to the government and military.

He insisted that negotiating with criminals living in the forests or paying them ransom would only compound Nigeria’s woes.

He said:  “Those places are called ungoverned places and what we need to do is for the government to comb those places. The military is already involved in internal security, so, the military should go there and rout them out.

“There is no need to negotiate with them; there is no need to pay them ransom. We know where they are, then, we should remove them immediately. We hear that they are not even Nigerians. That is better. They should throw all the military men there and remove them by force. That is the only way out.

“Honestly, our country will be safer if these guys are routed out of the forests,” he said.

Speaking on the implications of criminals’ presence in those forests, the former DSS official noted that allowing those criminals in the forests would accommodate more foreign criminals who might at the end destabilise the country.

According to him, “The implication of bandits’ presence is that these ungoverned spaces have been occupied by foreigners who are giving us problems. This led to a spike in kidnapping, rape and other criminalities. The government should just go there and remove them.

“What locals can do is to always give information to government. They are not going to fight them. Any available information they have, they should try to give government.”

However, troops have gained access into the Alagarno forest which was hitherto infested by insurgents, a soldier said, adding that “a super camp which served as an operational base was built by the army there.”

He further said the troops have also gained access into the Sambisa National Park and driven away insurgents from various locations and apprehended many.

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I Haven't Deploy Troops After Bandits To Avoid Casualties - Buhari

President Muhammadu Buhari says security forces have not moved against bandits in the country because of the fear of “heavy casualties of innocent villagers and hostages” that may be suffered in such operations.

Of late, there has been outrage over the body language of the President to bandits in the country. Some sections of the country had also perceived Buhari as allegedly pampering bandits and criminal herdsmen terrorising parts of the country.

Buhari qouted as saying, “we have the capacity to deploy massive force against the bandits in the villages where they operate, but our limitation is the fear of heavy casualties of innocent villagers and hostages who might be used as human shields by the bandits.”

GUINÉ-BISSAU: MORREU O ANTIGO PROCURADOR GERAL DA REPÚBLICA ANTÓNIO SEDJA MAN

O antigo Procurador-geral da República da Guiné-Bissau (PGR), António Sedja Man morreu hoje, informaram esta noite fontes familiares.

Sedja Man foi nomeado PRG em novembro de 2015 pelo então Chefe de Estado guineense, José Mário Vaz e exonerado em novembro de 2017.


Alison Cabral