The Plateau Initiative for Growth and Development (PIGD) has called on political actors in Plateau State, especially the factional governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Sunday Biggs, to rise above what it described as unnecessary semantics, and focus on the realities on ground.
In a statement issued by its National Coordinator, Nengak David, the group said Plateau’s political space should not be turned into an arena for tension, distraction or needless verbal confrontation, but should instead become a platform for serious engagement on ideas, vision and practical alternatives for the people of the state.
According to the PIGD, Plateau people deserve a contest driven by substance, not noise, adding that any politician seeking to challenge Governor Caleb Mutfwang must be ready to tell citizens what he can do better than the present administration.
“Rather than stir unnecessary tension or engage in political shadowboxing, Sunday Biggs and other political actors should tell Plateau people what they can do better.
“The issue is not who can shout the loudest, but who can present a clear, realistic and people-centred vision for the state,” David said.
The group commended the Mutfwang administration for what it described as visible and measurable achievements across key sectors, particularly security, health, education, agriculture, transportation, water, energy, tourism and road infrastructure.
It noted that in the area of security, the administration has revamped ‘Operation Rainbow’, recruited and trained over 1,500 personnel across communities, commenced the recruitment of 1,000 Forest Guards, launched the state security and information centre with a toll-free line, and invested in security technology, operational vehicles and gadgets to support security agencies.
The group also pointed to major interventions in the health and education sectors, adding that these achievements were too significant to be dismissed through political rhetoric.
David advised those seeking power to respond with stronger ideas, rather than attempts to diminish progress already recorded.
“It is not enough for anyone to play politics with words. Plateau people are seeing roads, health interventions, school projects, agricultural support, security reforms and efforts to restore the dignity of the state.
“Anyone seeking to challenge this administration must come with a better plan, not empty rhetoric,” the statement added.
PIGD further praised the administration’s agricultural interventions, including procurement of fertilisers and farming inputs worth over ₦20 billion, support for farmers with improved seedlings and equipment, youth training in modern agriculture, and the establishment of agro-processing zones in Shendam, Mangu and Heipang.
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The group also highlighted ongoing road and urban renewal projects across the state, including the Utonkon–Nunku–Keana Road and flyover, Haske Gwafan Road links, Jos urban road networks, zonal and rural road projects, as well as water schemes, solar-powered boreholes, mini-grids and renewable energy initiatives.
The PIGD urged Biggs and other PDP actors to avoid statements capable of heating up the polity, warning that Plateau State cannot afford political tension at a time citizens are looking for stability, development and responsible leadership.
“Plateau belongs to all of us. The contest for power must not become a contest for bitterness.
“Let those who want to govern tell the people how they will improve security, create jobs, support farmers, fix roads, strengthen education and expand healthcare. That is the kind of politics Plateau needs now,” David said.



