General News of Thursday, 30 November 2017

Source: kasapafmonline.com

DCE flees as tensions escalate in Bimbila; soldiers deployed

Armed soldiers have been deployed to restore calm in Bimbila Armed soldiers have been deployed to restore calm in Bimbila

Thirty armed soldiers have been hurriedly deployed to the Nanumba North District capital on Wednesday evening after a rival family in the Bimbila chieftaincy dispute allegedly defied a Regional Security Council order not engage in drumming and dancing as Dagombas and other related ethnic groups advanced preparations toward the celebration of the Damba festival.

The late Nakpaa family which formed a parallel authority last month had reportedly refused to obey this order by REGSEC to cease all activities relating to the celebration of the Damba festival after defying an earlier one not to enskin a Regent.

The ban on drumming and dancing at the palace was reproduced by the District Security Council at a meeting on Monday superintended by the DCE, Abdulai Yaqoob who reportedly fled the town after the reminder.

However, as the drums keep sounding loud from the palace of the Regent and rival family, the late Napkaa Naa family again disregarded the order and also beat drums and engaged in a flurry of traditional activities in what obviously appeared to be a power-sharing situation.

The army numbering over dozen which came to stop the drumming after the local police struggled to ensure compliance were met with stiff resistance in a standoff that ensued between the youth and them.

Shots were reportedly fired when the soldiers stormed the palace. It is still not clear who fired the shots but a security source told Kasapa News the sound of the weapon showed it wasn’t sophisticated.

The DCE told Kasapa News he had no details of the new security arrangement and directed inquiry to the Regional Minister and denied claims he had fled the town because of the tensions.

He said he departed the town to attend a RING program held in Tamale which ended Wednesday and repeated his outrageous remarks of having no information about the latest security measures in his jurisdiction where he is chairman of the Security Council.

According to him, the Regional Security Council were now in charge of the Bimbila chieftaincy and issued the ban.

A spokesman for the family Fuseini Adam Mustapha confirmed the military operations and accused the DCE of bias. He said the DCE must be held responsible in the event of any clashes in the town.

Mustapha said they would resume drumming tomorrow and warned they might not be able to control the youth if the military try to scuttle the activities again.

“The DCE knows why he doing that – he is doing that because of his selfish interest and if there are problems tomorrow he would be held responsible because he went to REGSEC and told them there is nothing in Bimbila, why are you calling for reinforced. He is a liar. Yesterday when we even contacted him he told us he called for the reinforcement”, he stated.

Sunglana Salifu Dawuni announced himself, Regent of Bimbila, exactly week after the late Nakpaa Naa Salifu Dawuni was buried after about fours in a morgue.

He declared at the time amidst spontaneous public cheers, that “my grandfathers were the custodian of Bimbila and handed over to my father and it’s my turn now. The one talking – referring to the rival faction – has no traditional ancestral lineage. My forebears are bigger than his and therefore, it is our ancestors who would help me rule Bimbila”.

The two family have been fighting over it Bimbila skin for years. Many have been killed, mostly women and children in the conflict which is currently before the Supreme Court.

Eleven people were killed earlier this February when violence broke out between the Naa Dasana and Nakpaa Dawuni family.