• Half-Unclad women demonstrate over disruption of business
• Air Force men stone journalists at venue
• President warns service chiefs against rivalry
• Explains choice of Badeh as CDS
PRESIDENT
Goodluck Jonathan’s visit to Yola, Adamawa State, yesterday provoked
the ire of some residents who protested against the disruption of their
commercial activities.
The President’s visit was the first since
he assumed office. He was in Yola to commission an Air Force Secondary
School of about 50 students. The school was established by the Chief of
Defence Staff, Air Marshall Alexander Badel, an indigene of the state.
Hundreds of market women took over the streets along Mohammed Mustafa
Way about 10:00 a.m., protesting against the closure of their shops over
the visit of the President.
They were chanting different songs
condemning the President for spending public funds on a trip that constituted economic problems to the residents of Yola.
In a statement on Monday by the Army Public Relations Officer, Captain
Nuhu Jarfaru, he stated that from 9:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. yesterday, the
busy Numan road, Galadima Aminu road, which house all the commercial
banks in the capital and Jimeta-Yola Road would be sealed off.
A
woman who identified herself as Mrs. Ijeoma John, a vegetable seller at
Jimeta modern market told The Guardian that Jonathan’s visit was not
only anti-Yola residents, but that it was designed to inflict more
hardship on the already suffering residents of the state capital.
“ I’m shocked by this kind of attitude by the soldiers. They cannot
fight Boko Haram, it is us harmless civilians that have become their
target. They should face Boko Haram and leave us alone to continue with
our suffering that the PDP government is inflicting on Nigerians”, she
stated.
The women who were walking half-Unclad protesting
against the military who closed down the busy market located along
Galadima Aminu Way, urged the President to resign if he had no trust in
those that voted him into power.
“Even during the late Gen. Sani
Abacha’s dark days there was nothing like this, but in a democratic
government our President we laboured for to win an election is today
denying us our daily bread. It is very sad”, one of the women said.
Journalists working with different national media organisations in the
state yesterday also got a share of the pains of Jonathan’s visit. They
were stoned out of the venue by men of the Air Force on an order from an
officer suspected to be the head of the school Jonathan visited to
commission.
Trouble started for journalists at the venue of the
occasion when the Public Relations Officer of 75 Strike Force, Yola,
Flying Officer Ishaku Abdullahi, asked journalists to wait in one of the
classrooms for their accreditation.
Little did it occur to the
waiting reporters that trouble was looming. An officer with a nametag
A.A. Dogo, suspected to be the head of the school slated for
commissioning came and asked who directed the reporters to sit inside
the classroom. But after an explanation from the chairman of the
correspondents’ chapel Mallam
Umar Dankano, of the Peoples Daily Newspapers, the aggressive officer left without a word.
A few minutes after, another man dressed in a rough suit with a name
tag SPA Emmanuel C. Anita, came and ordered the reporters who were
waiting to be accredited to get out of the venue, saying that their
presence was not needed. But before Dankano could offer some
explanations, some men of the Air Force started throwing stones on the
reporters.
It took the intervention of some military officers
from the 23 Amour Brigade Yola to rescue the helpless journalists out of
the venue.
While commissioning the school, Jonathan warned that the hitherto rivalry among the services would no longer be tolerated.
He said the insurgency would be better tackled with synergy among the service chiefs.
“I urge you all to cooperate... there has been some mutual competition
among the service chiefs and personnel, this time around, we will not
tolerate any unnecessary competition...
“We charge you to work
together... and believe that we would no longer experience any
unpleasant situation we had in the past because of some obvious lapses,”
he said
He said the National Assembly along with traditional
institutions could form the bedrock on which “we can move our country to
the next level.”
Commending the initiative of the school as a
foundation for the development of scientific and technological
innovation, he said it would also fill the void created by the closure
of schools in the area as a consequence of the Boko Haram menace.
Jonathan said the appointment of Badeh to the office of the Chief of
Defence Staff was because of his ability to manage allocated resources
for the development of the Air Force, where he was the chief before his
elevation. He said that he could use that quality for other services as
their head.
“One of the reasons for lifting the CDS from the
Chief of Air Staff is, I noted carefully that in terms of managing
resources, I believe that he tried.
“I believe that for him
taking charge now, as CDS, he can work with other colleagues and
properly brief them on how to do it, then the Nigerian Armed Forces will
be different Armed Forces”, he stated.
The CDS along with other
service chiefs according to the President would be decorated soon after
the National Assembly screening within the week.
While tracing
the historical evolution of Air Force schools in the country, Badeh said
the intention was to ensure that quality education was brought to the
doorsteps of staff’s children and others within the communities they
were based.
According to him, he noted that with the
commissioning of the Comprehensive School in Yola, all the six
geo-political zones now have one each.
Earlier, Jonathan paid a
courtesy visit to the Lamido Adamawa, Alhaji Mohammed Aliyu Mustapha,
who urged the President to fast-rack the restoration of normalcy in Yola
and the entire state.
The paramount ruler said the curfew
imposed on the state had crippled socio-economic activities completely,
such that “business no longer thrives here because of the restriction.”
He also asked the President to consider the reconstruction of some of
the federal roads linking the states with its neighbours to facilitate
easier access and trade.
No comments:
Post a Comment