Idris who
made the plea in his office in Lagos recently disclosed that about seven local
governments in the state are affected by serious security challenges.
“So Kaduna
State needs assistance from the Federal Government, Kaduna State needs the
assistance of the Inspector General of Police, Kaduna State needs the
assistance of the Director General of the SSS, Kaduna State needs the assistance
of the Army and the Airforce, so that we will be able to go to our farms, so
that we will be able to do our businesses. So many people have lost their
lives, so many people have lost their means of livelihood, so many people have
lost their businesses, so many people are languishing in the hospitals arising
from injuries sustained either from the merciless beaten when they were
kidnapped by these bandits, or when they came raiding and attacking the
villages.”
Idris
asserted that Kaduna State needs more than palliatives, and therefore advocated
a marshal plan to tackle the menace. “We need a bit of marshal plan of action,
we need a rescue, we need much more than palliatives, we need assistance from
Nigeria, we need assistance from well-meaning Nigerians, our able men and women
need to come to the assistance of Kaduna State indigenes, because the masses,
our parents, younger brothers, our sisters, our grandparents, are living in
hunger, they are living in fear, they are living in abject poverty, not because
they are lazy but because of the circumstances we have found ourselves. I have
a farmland, over 2000 hectares, I planted mango trees, cashew nuts, oranges,
papayas, avocado pea, name it, today, I am spending six years without having to
visit the place, I constructed two art dam. I used to plant watermelon annually
that I brought to Lagos, I take to Port-Harcourt, but today, I used to have 27
to 30 staff, now I have just one, imagine if I don’t have another source of
livelihood, I would have been on the ground now. We need assistance, Kaduna
State desperately needs assistance from the international community and
national community,” Idris pleaded.
He commended
the appointment of the new Chief of Army Staff who he said did well when he was
the General Officer Commanding (GOC) 1 Division of the Nigerian Army but said
the problem is not yet over as seven local governments of Kaduna State are
affected by insecurity. “We are happy with the appointment of the Chief of Army
Staff, a gentleman, the General Officer Commanding (GOC) 1 Division of the
Nigerian Army, as GOC he did fairly well in battling the banditry, but have we
gotten to the root of the matter, no. and the challenges are enormous.”
Idris
advocated what he called ‘Elite National Consensus’ and called on those aiding
and abetting insecurity to stop the inimical activities. “Sometimes we just point
accusing fingers to government. What are we doing to help in this? Within the
rank and file of the citizens there are informants, within the rank and file of
the citizens there are goalkeepers, who are keeping the loots of these bandits
or their cohorts in the military or the police.
Now going back to my suggestion of an elite national consensus, what am
I doing that is inimical to Nigeria, I need to tell myself a bitter truth to
stop it. About seven local governments in my state Kaduna are having serious
security challenge, they are mostly affected by this banditry. If you go to the
other parts of Kaduna, the Southern Zaria, or what we now call Southern Kaduna,
yes we call it southern Kaduna now, but originally they were called southern
Zaria, part of the Zaria Emirate, whether we like it or not, we don’t want to
rewrite history. Jaba, Zongu, Kachia, Kafanchan, and a number of others are
also having that challenge. Kaduna State desperately needs assistance from the
international community and national community.”
On what
intelligence agencies are doing to nib this on the bud he said, “You are asking
the wrong person. I am not a member of the security personnel or the SSS, but
you need to visit Kaduna and have a feel of what is happening. There are
locations in the bushes where some of these criminals have camped themselves,
when they kidnap people, they don’t keep them in the city, they are in the bush
holding them in chain, I am sure you have heard about these people, also they
get supplies, where are they getting them, they buy their food, where do they
buy their essential items? So they come into town and even when they kidnap people
they kidnap on the strength of prior information, informants among us, and back
to my argument, the national self- interest that we need to develop, why should
I be an informant providing information about this or that so that when they
kidnap, they give me my cut, so why should I be a police man or a DSS that will
be suppressing such a report?
On his
governorship aspiration in Kaduna State, he said, “The Nigerian situation, and
the Nigerian political system, do not appear to favour people like me. So when
you realize that you are fighting a lost battle, you retreat, it may not
necessarily be surrendering, you retreat, and then you also have to learn to
choose the battle you want to fight and when to fight that battle. Sometimes when
you interrogate, you research, decipher the challenges, and tell yourself, maybe
this battle I don’t need to fight it now, may be much later. So that is the
situation.”
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