Information on Yola, Nigeria: Deadly explosion hits Yola; many feared killed.
Deadly explosion hits
Yola; many feared killed
http://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/headlines/193393-breaking-deadly-explosion-hits-yola-many-feared-killed
.html
Yola is the capital city and administrative center of
Adamawa State, Nigeria. Located on the
Benue River, it has a population of
336,648 (
2010). Yola is split into two parts. The old town of Yola where the Lamido resides is the traditional city but the new city of
Jimeta (about 5 km NW) is the administrative and commercial centre. Generally the term Yola is now used to mean both. To the north are the
Mandara Mountains and the south are the
Shebshi Mountains with Dimlang (
Vogel) Peak the second highest
point (2,042 m) in
Nigeria after
Chappal Waddi (mountain of death). Yola is an access point to the
Gashaka Gumpti
Nature Reserve, which is the largest national park in Nigeria, the Ngel
Nyaki montane forest reserve, the
Mambilla Plateau, The
Sukur UNESCO World heritage site, which is
Africa's first cultural landscape to receive
World Heritage List inscription,[1] The Yadin
Waterfalls, The Kiri Dam on the
Gongola River, The
Benue national park in nearby
Cameroon, The
Waza National Park, and Cameroonian town of
Garoua, which lies across the
Border, on the Benue river.
History[edit]
Established in 1841, Yola is a municipality that sprawls across the hillside of this North-Eastern region of Nigeria. It was the capital of a
Fulani state until it was taken over by the
British in
1901.
Today, it is the capital of
Adamawa State, which was formed in
1991 from part of
Gongola State.
Modibbo Adama, a local chief of the Fulani, founded Yola in 1841. During the
Islamic movement led by Shehu
Usman Dan Fodio in the early
19th Century, Modibbo Adama was recognised as a learned Muslim who could lead the people in the Upper Benue area. Modibbo is the Fulani word for "learned one". Probably the first
European to visit the area was
Heinrich Barth in 1851, shortly after Yola was founded. He traveled by the
Sahara route, coming through
Kukawa near
Lake Chad, which at the time was the capital of the
Borno Empire.[2] Yola has the first airport in Nigeria as well as first town to have electricity.
Infrastructure[edit]
The nearby town of Jimeta has a market, zoo, an airport with direct flights to
Saudi Arabia, NiPost and NiTel offices as well as the main mosque and cathedral. Being a state capital, it is a major transport hub with buses and taxis heading north to
Mubi and
Maiduguri, west to Numan, Gombe, jalingo and
Bauchi and south to
Makurdi and
Katsina Ala. Taxis are available to Garoua in Cameroon. There is an airport with regular flights to
Abuja and
Lagos.
The town is home to various institutions of learning, such as the:
American University of Nigeria-
AUN,
Adamawa State Polytechnic, The Modibbo Adama
University of Technology Yola (MAUTECH) previously known as
Federal University of Technology, Yola, located about 10 km north of the city on the road to Mubi,
The Federal Government Girls College, Yola,
ABTI Academy, Chiroma
Ahmad Academy,
Ahmadu Ribadu College, MAUTECH university secondary school,
Concordia College (which was nominated as the best post primary school of the year
2007 by the
National Association of
Nigerian Students). and many other educational institutions.
Adamawa has one of the best depots in Nigeria, located about 5 km west on the road to Numan.
Tourist sites include: the Three sister hills, which are three scenic rock formations standing side by side at the same height, The Njuwa lake fishing festival, The Lamido's
Palace and the
Annual horse-riding durbar. Although originally a
Fulbe settlement, the town is now home to virtually all of Nigeria's ethnic groups, as well as people from the neighboring republic of Cameroon.