Daji Sani writes that Governor
Mohammadu Jibrilla Bindow of Adamawa State moved his entire cabinet and
friends to the Malkohi IDP camp to celebrate this year’s Eid-El-Kabir
with the IDPs

To put laughter on the faces of the
Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) who had been traumatised following
their experiences in the hands of the Boko Haram insurgents, Governor
Mohammadu Jibrilla Bindow of Adamawa State moved his entire cabinet and
friends to the Malkohi IDP camp to celebrate this year’s Eid-El-Kabir
with the IDPs.
The Malkohi camp became a destination for
such a visit given the bomb explosion that rocked the camp last year
which left six IDPs dead and several others injured including four staff
of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) who were on duty on
that fateful day.
As a result of this development, the Malkohi IDP camp has attracted
sympathy from people within and outside the state who troop to the camp
with donations and gifts to empathise and sympathise with the IDPs and
NEMA over the deadly bomb explosions.
While addressing his cabinet, IDPs and
host of friends to his administration at the Malkohi camp on the Sallah
day, Bindow said he was moved by the great danger posed by the
insurgency in the North-east, where the IDPs had to go through some
difficult experiences beyond human comprehension before they were
brought to the camp.
He lamented that many IDPs lost their
love ones and properties to attacks from Boko Haram insurgents which he
said left them in hopeless situation. According to him, the IDPs for a
very long time have not experienced a situation of merriment and
laughter due to their predicaments and ordeals in the hands of the
insurgents.
Bindow who was visibly concerned about
the plight of the IDPs, said their coming to the IDP camp was also to
celebrate victory with the IDPs over the end of insurgency and the
return of normalcy and to thank God for His mercies over the region. He
further explained that nobody believed that the insurgency will
overwhelm the region going by the level of damage and the strong network
of the insurgents in the areas.
“We have to thank God for using President
Muhammadu Buhari to bring normalcy in the North-east. If you know what
happened about five years ago till last year, then you need to thank
God. We also need to thank the military for a job well done,” he said.
The goverrnor said very soon the IDPs will return home to start their normal lives as the military has liberated almost all affected areas but he was quick to add that the military is on top of the security situation in the region.
The goverrnor said very soon the IDPs will return home to start their normal lives as the military has liberated almost all affected areas but he was quick to add that the military is on top of the security situation in the region.
Bindow at the IDP camp also promised that
his government will continue to support the IDPs and also collaborate
with other humanitarian organisations to improve their living
conditions.
He explained that the society has an obligation to wipe out their traumatic memories of cruelty and wickedness inputted in their minds by insurgency, through the expression love, kindness and making merriments around them to make them forget about their traumatic past.
He explained that the society has an obligation to wipe out their traumatic memories of cruelty and wickedness inputted in their minds by insurgency, through the expression love, kindness and making merriments around them to make them forget about their traumatic past.
He added that if the society continues to
express love and concern over the plight of the IDPs, it will help them
recuperate from their unholy and inhuman experiences in the hands of
the Boko Haram insurgents.
“This act would disabuse a thought in their minds that nobody cares that was why they were left in the hands of Boko Haram insurgents to destroy their valuables and kill their love ones mercilessly.
“We must give these IDPs a sense of
belonging and treat them as our brothers and sisters to remove
stereotypes and any form of discrimination, but if we allow them to join
the society with these level of hatred in their minds there may be a
similar problem that may resurface in the nearest future again.
“Therefore, let us express true love to
dislodge and overwhelm the animosity inputted in them by the Boko Haram
insurgents’ incessant onslaught on them,” he said.
Food, drinks, gifts and various kinds of
music and dance steps were at the Malkohi camp with the aim of
expressing amusements and a sense of togetherness with the IDPs. The
governor also ate from the same dish with the IDPs and danced with them.
He told them that “we are in this together, you are not alone, we feel
your pains much more as you do and you are not outcasts but you are just
in a temporary situation, very soon you will go back home to live a
normal life.”
Bindow observed that without the effort
of President Buhari’s administration nobody in the region would have
celebrated this year’s Sallah with his or her eyes closed for fear of
attacks by the insurgents.
Also speaking at the IDPs camp, Comrade Ahmed Sajoh, the state Commissioner for Information, said the current administration is the government of the masses following its developmental activities.
Also speaking at the IDPs camp, Comrade Ahmed Sajoh, the state Commissioner for Information, said the current administration is the government of the masses following its developmental activities.
He said the reason the governor walks
freely among the downtrodden without any form of molestation and
harassment from them was because all his projects are masses-driven
adding that at an early morning walk with the governor to mark Adamawa
at 25, the governor ordered the evacuation of some refuse dumps across
the state that have been there for many years.
“You can see how people are rejoicing because most of these dumps have
been there for many years and have been a menace to residents close to
it and the evacuation has given them relief,” he said.
Sajoh called on the IDPs to cooperate
with government and other humanitarian organisations that are in the
camps to provide the basic necessities of life to them due to their
situation.
Responding on behalf of the IDPs, Mr. Dominic Samuel lauded the gesture of the governor adding that it was the first time a governor was coming to celebrate Sallah in their camp.
Responding on behalf of the IDPs, Mr. Dominic Samuel lauded the gesture of the governor adding that it was the first time a governor was coming to celebrate Sallah in their camp.
“This is the first time a governor and
his entire cabinet are coming to identify with us during a celebration
like this one. We thank
Governor Bindow for his humanitarian heart and
the love for IDPs and the common man in the state.
“Every day we hear about your
developmental activities in the state through our radio, we believe that
God who brought you this time was because he has heard the cry of
Adamawa people who have been neglected by the previous administrations
that governed the state.
“We want to also use this opportunity to
thank the state coordinator of the National Emergency Management Agency,
Alhaji Sa’ad Bello, for his tireless efforts to see that we are well
feed and taken care of,” Sammuel said.
He said that NEMA has done very well in
managing the camp and also appreciated the efforts of the security
personnel and other donor NGOs and humanitarians organisations like
UNICEF, who he said have been supporting children’s educations in the
camp.
Sammuel said the UNICEF has always been
at the forefront at supporting children and women especially vulnerable
and orphans at risk.
Another IDP who identified herself as Hajiya Mero told THISDAY at the camp that the generosity shown them by the government and NEMA was something to reckon with and thanked God for liberating their communities noting that they are only waiting for clearance to return to their native homes.
Mero who said she hails from Gwoza town
in Bornu State, expressed willingness to return to her native town to
start her normal life. She explained that though she lost her husband to
the insurgency but life must continue because there is nothing she
could do.
“The day they killed my husband, I
watched them killing my husband even when I pleaded on his behalf, they
refused but threatened to kill me, if I continue to disturb them with my
plea. So my husband asked me to stop and immediately they slaughtered
my husband in my presence like a goat,” she said
She said the only obligation left for her
now is to train her children left for her by her late husband adding
that she gives God all the praise and glory. She said at the peak of the
crisis they never knew that they would be alive to celebrate Sallah
with Bindow.
No comments:
Post a Comment