El’rufai Breaks Silence, Admits Banditry Would Jeopardise Nigeria’s Food Security

Abuja (Precise Post) –  At last, the Kaduna State governor, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai, has opened up on the jeopardizing effects of bandits in northwest, saying that food production would be hampered  as a result of the activities of bandits in the northwestern part of the country.

Governor El-Rufai raised the concerns on Friday while speaking to State House Correspondents during a private visit to the seat of Power.

According to the governor, he was in Abuja to pay a visit to the new Chief of Staff to the President, Professor Ibrahim Gambari, as well as meet with Minister of Defense and the Service Chiefs over the activities of bandits in the northwest, especially as it concerned Kaduna State.

The governor, who acknowledged that the crisis had ravaged the region in the same manner the Boko Haram terrorism had ravaged the northeast, also acknowledged the fact that the Nigerian military forces had so far performed tremendously in the operations aimed at ending the crisis.

He however, expressed the fear that the bandits’ next target to migrate to might be Kaduna State, especially as they had started feeling the heat turned on them in Sokoto and Zamfara states by the military.

He categorically noted that he had taken the preemptive step to charge the military to a reinforcement in the state as failure to deal with banditry now would take a huge toll on the farming season, adding, however that he had already security assurances from the Chief of Air Staff that every necessary step would be taken to secure the state for farmers.

“The Sokoto story only hit the headlines just a few days ago, but in Zamfara, in Kaduna, in Niger, in Katsina, this banditry has become a northwestern scourge and we have been battling it with the support of the military; we are very grateful to the Nigerian Air Force, the Nigerian Army and in our own particular case, even the Navy has been holding fort Southern Kaduna.

“We’ve been dealing with this issue and our concern now is with the operations in Sokoto and Zamfara. Many of the bandits will move to Kaduna, this is part of the reasons I’m here, I’ll let be meeting with the Minister of Defense and the Service Chiefs to try to get more military activities, some operations to be strengthened.

“I must say that they’ve been doing very well, they’ve supported us, but this banditry is a big problem. It’s going to affect agriculture unless it is dealt with and I believe that it will be dealt with. The Chief of Air Staff has assured me that whatever that will need to be done to wipe out the bandits, to enable our farmers to go to farm as the rains advance, will be done. We are confident that things will get better.

“It’s most unfortunate that we’ve had to deal with it in the northwest in the same way that Boko Haram ravaged the northeast, these bandits are also becoming a serious problem in the northwest, but the problem is being addressed”, the governor said.

Speaking on the effect of the Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic on governance, Mallam El-Rufai noted that these had become the most difficult time to be in the saddle as a leader, calling on all Nigerians to work with President Muhammadu Buhari as well as the governors, so that the country could be driven safely out of the dangers of the health crisis.

He observed that the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic had overshadowed the realisation of the movement of time, so much that those elected into office a year ago could hardly notice that it had already been a year since the last elections.

“Because of the global situation with this pandemic, many of us have even forgotten that we’ve even spent one year in the office. Many of us are celebrating it in a very low-ke…

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