close
Saturday, September 4, 2021

Buhari regime bans all telecom networks in Zamfara as repentant bandits return to trenches

The shutdown of telecom signals came days after Governor Bello Matawalle banned the transportation of food items and restricted the movement of commercial motorcycles.

and • September 4, 2021

The Buhari administration on Friday ordered all telecom networks operating in Zamfara to shut down operations forthwith as security forces ramp up measures to contain the reemerging upsurge of armed banditry ravaging the state and its environs.

Telecom regulator NCC in a directive to mobile network carriers on Friday said all telecom masts should be demobilised across the beleaguered state and in neighbouring communities where signals from masts could be beamed into Zamfara.

“The pervading security situation in Zamfara State has necessitated an immediate shutting down of all telecommunications service in the state from today September 03, 2021,” NCC chief Umar Garba Danbatta said in a letter sent to Globacom headquarters in Lagos.

“This is to enable relevant security agencies to carry out required activities towards addressing the security challenge in the state, in line with the requirement, Globacom is hereby directed to shut down all sites in Zamfara State and any site(s) in neighbouring state that could provide telecommunications service in Zamfara State,” the letter added. “The site shutdown is for two weeks (September 03 – 17, 2021) in the first instance. Your urgent action in this regard is required.”

NCC

The directive could spark concerns about the safety of citizens across the state, and whether or not the administration has powers to deprive millions of citizens of their rights to communicate and access information. Mr Dambatta did not immediately cite any extant constitutional provisions for the measure in his letter to telecom operators.

The government said the two-week measure would aid security forces in their bid to trap bandits in their hideouts while disrupting their information flow with informants and other collaborators. Zamfara has been amongst the worst-hit states since armed bandits launched their rampage across Nigeria’s northwest.

Kaduna and President Muhammadu Buhari’s home Katsina have also suffered frequent and severe clashes from armed bandits, which often include mass abductions and seizure of lucrative assets and gold mines.

The shutdown of telecom signals came days after Governor Bello Matawalle banned transportation of food items and restricted the movement of commercial motorcycles between 6:00 p.m. to 6:00 a.m. The governor also said placed a moratorium on the transportation of petrol and other fuels in Zamfara.

Mr Matawalle, who had previously sought a truce with bandits and urged Nigerians to show them love and encourage them to eschew their criminal lifestyles, has recently lamented that bandits who had previously turned themselves in and promised seizure of hostilities have been returning to their criminal past.

Dozens of so-called repentant bandits have been arrested in recent weeks in Zamfara and Katsina, with the police warning that efforts to integrate them into the society may be tougher than politicians have publicly admitted.

A spokesman for the governor did not immediately return a request seeking comments about whether or not the government would continue its peace talks with bandits in the wake of their spontaneous return to the forests.

More from Peoples Gazette

Emeka Dawuda-Wodu

World

Nigerian teenager jailed 48 years in UK for murder

The 31 years jail term pronounced on August 16 by a jury will run concurrently with the six and 11 years jail terms.

Politics

Afghan women desperate to escape Taliban rule: UN

Many Afghan women are desperate to leave. However, only a fraction will succeed, leaving millions at the mercy of the Taliban.

Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)

Anti-Corruption

Nigerian faces 30 years in U.S. prison over wire fraud

Charge of conspiracy to commit bank and wire fraud provides for a sentence of up to 30 years in prison, five years of supervised release, a fine of up to $1 million.

Adekunle Fadare

Diaspora

UK jails Nigerian man for serial sexual assaults

Detectives pieced together CCTV footage and financial evidence to link Adekunle Olaleye Fadare to five separate sexual assaults, four of which took place on the same day.

World

Google locks Taliban out of Afghan government emails

Afghan ministries of finance, industry, higher education, and mines, including the President’s office, had used Google’s servers.

António Guterres

World

United Nations to convene high-level meeting to assist 38 million Afghans: Guterres

According to the United Nations, one in three Afghans does not know where their next meal will come from.