Kano State Governor, Abdullahi Ganduje, has condemned the killing of an Igbo market woman, Bridget Agbahime, at Kofar Wambai market in Kano city, by suspected hoodlums.
Rising from a meeting chaired by the Governor and attended by prominent people including the State Chairman of the Christian Association of Nigeria, Bishop Ransome Bello, husband to the deceased, Pastor Mike Agbahime, Islamic scholars and security agencies, Governor Ganduje described the incident as illegal, unfortunate and regrettable.
In a six-point resolution read by the Governor after the meeting, the state government and other stakeholders condoled with the husband of the deceased, Pastor Agbahime stressing that “the killing of his 75-year-old wife is illegal, unjustifiable and without her fault”.
Governor Ganduje, who pledged to support the bereaved family of Mrs. Agbahime in their trying period, also expressed condolences to the family on behalf of the government and people of the state.
Meanwhile, the state CAN Chairman, Bishop Ransom Bello, said his organisation was fully satisfied with the resolutions, adding that there was nothing better any person would expect than what the Governor had done.
While urging people of the state to remain calm, he maintained that with the efforts being made by the state government, peace has returned to the state and that the stakeholders meeting was the beginning of the end of dastardly acts such as killings in Kano.
Also the Eze Ndgibo Kano, Chief Boniface Ibekwe called on all civil and community leaders to put hands together to ensure lasting peace, urging other governors in Nigeria to emulate Ganduje’s initiatives in ensuring brotherly co-existence.
