By Barr. Zanaib Usman Jalingo, Jalingo
In moments of uncertainty, when fear travels faster than news and parents lie awake wondering about the safety of their children far from home, leadership is tested but by action.
The recent evacuation of Taraba State students from Jos following the unfortunate attacks in Plateau State by Gov Kefas Agbu offers a powerful reminder of what responsive governance truly means. When reports emerged that students from Taraba State were stranded and vulnerable, the response from the government was neither delayed nor uncertain. It was immediate, decisive, and deeply humane.
16 Hummer buses, accompanied by security escorts, were dispatched under the directive of Gov Agbu Kefas. This is beyond getting vehicles for transportation, it is a symbol of reassurance. Why? Because in that moment, he carried more than students; he carried relief, hope, and the comforting message that no Taraba child stands alone in times of danger.
Leadership, at its finest, is not only seen in grand speeches or ceremonial occasions. Sometimes it reveals itself quietly in the urgency with which a government chooses to protect its people. In the worried voices of parents who finally exhale after hearing their children are safe and in the silent gratitude of young students who realize that even hundreds of kilometers away from home, their state still remembers them.
Governor Kefas’ prompt intervention reflects something deeper than administrative responsibility; it reflects a philosophy of governance rooted in care. A government that sees its students beyond the lens of statistics in educational records, but as living embodiments of Taraba’s future.
These young men and women left their homes with dreams tucked into their backpacks. They went to school seeking knowledge, growth, and opportunity. When crisis threatened that journey, their government answered without hesitation but with presence.
There is a profound symbolism in those buses moving across the highways from Jos back to safety. They remind us that governance, when guided by compassion, can become a form of protection; a shield extended over every citizen regardless of distance.
Taraba State has always been known as the Nature’s Gift to the Nation, but perhaps its greatest gift lies in Gov Kefas Agbu who places values the lives and properties of his people. In times like this, governance transcends policy and becomes something almost familial: a protective hand reaching out to bring its children home.
History often remembers the loudest moments of power. Yet sometimes the most meaningful acts of leadership are the quiet, swift decisions that protect life and restore hope.
And in that sense, the evacuation of Taraba students from Jos will be remembered as a logistical response to a crisis and as a defining gesture of leadership; one that reassures every Taraba student, wherever they may be, that their government sees them, values them, and will always stand ready to bring them home.
Barr. Jalingo is the Honourable
Commissioner for Information and Re-orientation, Taraba State.







