Borno State House of Assembly Service Commission

A statutory body known as the Borno State House of Assembly Service Commission was established pursuant to Assembly Service Commission Law, 2005 {also amendment in 2011}. The Commission is headed by a Chairman with three {3} Permanent Commissioners, two ex-officio and a Secretary.

The Commission is responsible for the recruitment, training, discipline of the staff of the Borno State House of Assembly and Local Government Legislative Staff which is the case in all states of the Federation including the National Assembly, Abuja.

Hon. {Engr} Abdullahi Musa Askira, Hon. Umar Kaigama {Yarema}, late Hon. Ali Darni Abba Saleh and Alh Musa A. Gwoma were the pioneer Chairman and members of the Commission appointed for four {4} years on 12th September, 2011. Hon. Abdullahi Musa Askira voluntarily relinquished his position on 9th December, 2014 while tenures of other Members of the Commission expired on 12th September, 2015.

At the exit of the pioneer Chairman, Hon. Ibrahim Audu Mirnga was appointed as Chairman of the Commission on 24th December, 2014 while Hon. Umar Kaigama {Yarema}, late Hon. Ali Darni Abba Saleh and Hon. Ibrahim Sani were appointed as members for another four years. Hon. Ali Darni Abba Saleh died while in Service on 27th February, 2017. The Commission has four {4} Directorates of Administration and Supplies; Finance and Accounts; Planning, Research and Statistics; Appointment, Promotion, Discipline and Complaints.

Borno is a state in Nigeria.

It’s one of the six states that form the North-East geopolitical zone of Nigeria.

Borno shares international borders to the North with Niger and Chad as well as with Cameroon to the East. Its Southern and Western borders are shared with Adamawa, Gombe and Yobe States. Maiduguri is the state capital.

State capital: Maiduguri

Local Government Areas: 27

Landmass: 57,798.1 sq km (22,316 sq mi) – 1st of 37

LANDMASS, LOCATION

Borno State has an area of 57,798.2 square kilometres.

It lies roughly at latitude 11°30’ North and longitude 13°00’ East.

HISTORY AND PEOPLE

The first settlers of Borno State were the Teda (Tibesti), Kanuri and Kanembu who lived around the state’s lake and rivers. These people were also called Sao. The Sefawa later displaced them in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.


Borno State has its roots in the move by the Saifawa rulers (Mais) of El Kanemi to the area west of Lake Chad in the fourteenth century. These people were referred to as the people from Bahr-el Nur; this name was later corrupted to Borno. It was under the Mais that the Kanuri emerged as a nation. The Fulani jihad of the nineteenth century weakened the authority of the Mais who were eventually displaced by Muhammed El-Amin lbn El-Kanemi, a Kanembu Islamic scholar who established the El-Kanemi dynasty, took the title of Shehu and transferred the capital to Kukawa. Rabeh, a Shuwa Arab, sacked much of Borno in 1893 and became its ruler, transferring the capital to Dikwa.

European colonisation in the last decade of the nineteenth century led to Rabeh’s defeat and the dismemberment of the Borno Empire. Following its division between the British and the French at the turn of the twentieth century, Borno State became part of Northern Nigeria. It was part of the Northern Region in the three-region structure of 1954 and part of North-Eastern State following the establishment of twelve federal states by General Yakubu Gowon’s military government. It was established as its own entity in 1976 following the dissolution of the North-Eastern State. The state’s borders were further adjusted when Yobe was excised from it in 1991.

Borno State is heterogeneous with twenty-eight (mostly Chadic) languages. The Shuwa Arabs, Kanuri and Marghi are the most represented people in the state and Kanuri is its dominant language. Other ethnic groups include the Hausa, Fulani and a number of tribes from southern Nigeria. Islam is the major religion in the state. There is a Christian minority concentrated around Maiduguri.

CULTURE

The people of Karai-Karai and two other tribes in Potiskum, Nangere and Fika local government areas mark the Barakau festival in June and September every year. During the festival, the people kill a cock of over one year old and splash its blood on the farm implements of each household.

Other cultural activities include the Durbar and Menwara festivals. The durbar festival is marked with display of horsemanship and reflects the state cultural diversity.

MAJOR TOWNS AND CITIES

Maiduguri (capital), Biu, Bama and Dikwa.

LOCAL GOVERNMENT AREAS

GOVERNORS

  • Musa Usman (Governor– Military): May 1967 – July 1975
  • Muhammadu Buhari (Governor– Military): July 1975 – March 1976
  • Mustapha Amin (Governor – Military): March 1976 – July 1978
  • Tunde Idiagbon (Governor– Military): July 1978 – October 1979
  • Mohammed Goni (Governor – Civilian (Great Nigerian People’s Party)): October 1979 – October 1983
  • Asheik Jarma (Governor – Civilian (Nigerian People’s Party)): October 1983 –December 1983
  • Abubakar Waziri (Governor– Military): January 1984 – August 1985
  • Abdulmumini Aminu (Governor – Military): August 1985 – December 1987
  • Abdul One Mohammed (Governor – Military): December 1987 – December 1989
  • Mohammed Maina (Governor – Military): December 1989 – June 1990
  • Mohammed Marwa (Governor – Military): June 1990 – January 1992
  • Maina Lawan (Governor – Civilian (Social Democratic Party)): January 1992 – November 1993
  • Ibrahim Dada (Administrator – Military): December 1993 – August 1996
  • Victor Ozodinobi (Administrator – Military): August 1996 May –1997
  • Augustine Aniebo (Administrator – Military): May 1997 – August 1998
  • Lawal Haruna (Administrator – Military): August 1998 – May 1999
  • Mala Kachalla (Governor – Civilian (All People’s Party/; All Nigeria People’s Party)): May 1999 – May 2003
  • Ali Sheriff (Governor – Civilian (All Nigeria People’s Party/People’s Democratic Party)): May 2003 – May 2011
  • Kashim Shettima (Governor – Civilian (All Nigeria People’s Party)/All Progressive Congress): May 2011 – May 2019
  • Babagana Zulum (Governor – Civilian (All Progressive Congress)): May 2019 – Present

ECONOMY

Borno State is primarily an agrarian society. The majority of the people are farmers, herdsmen and fishermen. There is also considerable local trade in sorghum, millet, corn (maize), rice, cotton and indigo.

The state is the most important livestock-producing area in Nigeria, an industry dominated by the Fulani and Shuwa. Livestock (mainly cattle with some goats and sheep), cattle hides, goatskins and sheepskins, finished leather products, dried fish, crocodile skins, groundnuts and gum arabic are all exported from Maiduguri.

Cattle rearing and poultry farming take place in the surrounding countryside, as does fishing along the shores of Lake Chad and the Yedseram river. Other local industries include cotton weaving, dyeing and the tanning of leather.


The mineral resources found in the state include clay, salt, potash, limestone, kaolin, sandstone, iron ore, uranium, quartz, magnesite, mica and granite.

EDUCATION

The tertiary institutions in the state are University of Maiduguri, Borno State University, Maiduguri, Ramat Polytechnic, Maiduguri, Sir Kashim College of Education, Waka Biu; Umar Ibn Ibrahim El Kanemi College of Education, Science and Technology, Bama; Mohammet Lawan College of Agriculture, Maiduguri; Mohammed Goni College of Legal and Islamic Studies, Borno College of Agriculture and the Federal Staff Training Centre, Maiduguri.

FAMOUS SITES

Chad Basin Natural Park, Chingurmi-Duguma

The park has three parts. In the Chingurmi-Duguma area of the park 66 species of birds have been recorded such as the black-crowned crane, African-collared dove among others. 

The Bula Tura Oasis area is a number of swampy valley called oases and is home to some rare desert wildlife which include ostrich, glossy ibis, ratel, and mongoose.

The Bada Nguru Wetlands area has the Dagona Waterfowl Santuary. The sanctuary is significant as it is host to migrant European birds that flock there in the thousands every year as they escape Europe’s winter.

Biu Plateau, Biu

The Biu plateau contains a number of extinct volcanoes.
It is the source of many tributaries of the Gongola River. It has an average elevation of 2,300 feet and covers 5,200 square kilometres.

Do Rabeh’s Fort, Dikwa

Located in Dikwa town, Rabeh Fort is a 125-year-old monument that depicts the rich cultural heritage of the people of Borno State.