Header Ads

Again, Buhari blames banditry on mining activities

 


Mr Buhari also called for a meeting to end banditry in parts of the North-west and North-central zones.

 

President Muhammadu Buhari has for the second time, blamed the banditry in Zamfara State on the mining activities in the region.

 

The president stated this on Thursday evening in a statement by presidential spokesperson, Garba Shehu.

 

Mr Buhari had in 2019 banned all mining activities in Zamfara, saying they were to blame for the rise in banditry.

 

That ban, over a year ago, has not stopped the killings and kidnappings by bandits in Zamfara and neighbouring states.

 

Thousands of persons have either been killed or kidnapped by the bandits in Zamfara, Katsina, Sokoto, Niger, Kaduna and Nasarawa states since Mr Buhari assumed office.

 

There had been suspicions that the criminality is a fallout of the artisanal mining of gold, lead and other mineral resources in those areas.

 

Fresh meeting

The statement by Mr Shehu said the president has ordered a fresh meeting in a bid to put an end to the resurgence.

 

He said an order has been given to the National Security Adviser (NSA), Babagana Monguno, to convene a meeting that will draw up a pathway to ending the menace.

 

“President Muhammadu Buhari has ordered for an immediate response to rising cases of bandit attacks on communities in Zamfara State.

 

“In a directive to the National Security Adviser, Major-General Babagana Monguno (Rtd), the President ordered that there must be a clear pathway to ending the resurgent banditry that has continued to cost lives and the displacement of thousands of families from their towns and villages,” he said.

 

Mr Shehu suggested that the president’s latest directive was because of a letter he received from a Zamfara official.

 

He said the Speaker of the Zamfara State House of Assembly, Nasir Magarya, had written a letter, appealing to the president to intervene in the matter.

 

“In this respect, a meeting is soon to take place that will deliberate on security and the issue of illegal mining which is fuelling the crisis in Zamfara State,” the statement said.

 

“In addition to NSA the convener, the meeting will be attended by Major-General Bashir Magashi (Rtd), Ogbeni Ra’uf Aregbesola and Architect Olamilekan Adegbite, Ministers of Defence, Interior, and Mines and Steel respectively.

 

“Also to attend the meeting are the Directors-General of the Department of State Services, DSS, and the National Intelligence Agency, NIA.

 

“Beyond the problems of bandits and cattle rustlers, the scale of lawlessness has been aggravated by illegal miners who are harvesting resources they have no legal rights to exploit.

 

“Official statistics suggest that there are more than 20,000 such miners undermining this important part of the economy, operating in a manner that is extraordinarily harmful and destructive. The result is chaos.

 

“This meeting is expected to address these and associated issues of corruption, government oversight and lawlessness,” the statement read.

 

Troubled residents of Zamfara and neighbouring states who have suffered from the bandit attacks will wait to see if the president’s latest directive will lead to a substantial change unlike that of 2019.

No comments

Powered by Blogger.