Category: Sunday magazine

  • Let’s work together, Uche pleads with Christians, Muslims

    Christians and Muslims must learn to tolerate one another and collaborate for national development, Prelate of the Methodist Church of Nigeria, His Eminence Dr. Samuel Uche, has stated.

    He said all the different religious groups need one another, stating that none can exist on its way.

    Uche spoke last week at a media parley ahead of the city wide crusade of the Archdiocesan of Lagos billed for April 10-11.

    Stressing that Nigeria belongs to all, the prelate stated that those working towards imposition of any particular religion in parts of the country are misguided and misinformed.

    No religion, he stressed, can survive on its own.

    Uche also berated those beating the war drums, dismissing them as myopic and novice.

    War, he explained, cannot solve anything but will only bring more sorrow to Nigerians.

    According to him: “There is so much insecurity in the country, massive unemployment and so much poverty.

    “We do not want anybody to put religious sentiments into these. There is the need to de-emphasis religion and tribal sentiments as a reason for fomenting trouble in the country.

    “So we are appealing to both Christians and Muslims to come together and cohabit peacefully.”

    Uche challenged Nigerians, irrespective of their religious and tribal sentiments, to condemn the activities of the Islamic sect, Boko Haram.

    He said: “Boko Haram is evil. We must all as a nation rise up to condemn the sect and also pray fervently for the peace and progress of the country.”

    He crusade, according to him, is aimed at praying for the nation and empowering Nigerians through the initiatives of the Prelate’s family NGO-Care and Touch Foundation.

    He assured that free medical screening would be available from 2pm daily during the crusade aside from the spiritual blessings.

  • Ways you didn’t know you could use coconut oil

    Ways you didn’t know you could use coconut oil

    HAVE you ever used coconut oil in your beauty routine? Never mind that it’s found in the kitchen, coconut oil has become the moment’s most obsessed about natural beauty staple and it has amazing beauty benefits:) Below, are ways to incorporate it into your beauty routine:

    *Makeup remover: Coconut oil will gently remove your makeup.just make sure to rinse it off after! Place some on a cotton pad and rub gently in circles around your eye area to get rid of makeup.

    * Hair softener: Use coconut oil as a DIY hair mask to soften your hair and add moisture. Just scoop it out and apply to your hair, focusing on the ends (girls with oily hair can avoid the root area altogether). You can leave it in for 30 minutes or even sleep with it in,rRinse it out in the shower and shampoo and condition as usual.

    *Shaving cream: Give yourself a smooth shave by using coconut oil in place of your normal shaving cream. This is a great idea for those of you who have sensitive skin and may be sensitive to all the chemicals in normal shaving creams.

    * Frizz-tamer: Use a tiny amount of coconut oil to smooth down flyaways and add shine to your locks.

    * Moisturizer: The fatty acids in coconut oil helps lock moisture into the skin, so smooth some over your elbows and other rough spots to soften and heal.

    * Cuticle oil: If your nail beds have been looking a bit dry and ragged, just dab some coconut oil on them. Do this before bed and put on gloves , you will wake up to soft, smooth nails.

    * Body scrub: Make your own body scrub by combining coconut oil with brown sugar. Coconut oil a*

    * Face scrub: Add some baking soda to your coconut oil for a gentle face exfoliator. You might feel a bit of residue after rinsing, but the oil will absorb into your skin after a few minutes.

    * Eye cream: Coconut oil is great for hydrating the gentle skin around your eyes ,it’ll leave your eye area baby soft and decrease signs of wrinkles.

  • City of David’s women offer free treatments

    No fewer than 1000 residents of Oshodi, Igbosere and Bamgbose in Lagos have benefitted from the free medical treatment of the

    Arise Women Ministry Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) City of David Victoria Island.

    The convener of the programme, Pastor Siju Iluyomade, said the gesture is patterned after Christ who not only fed the hungry but also healed the sick.

    She informed there had been six outreaches at Makoko, Ebute Metta and Tafawa Balewa Square (TBS) among others with over 5000 people treated for minor ailments.

    The initiative, she said, is to attend to the well-being of the people to ensure their health is on the front burner, adding: “Without healthy women the country will never grow.”

    Iluyomade said people were screened diabetes, hypertension, malaria and pneumonia, among others.

    She said that the life expectancy of 52 years for women in the country as stated by the World Health Organisation (WHO) is disturbing.

    Iluyomade said God is concerned about people’s welfare, especially their health, adding that this was the motivation for the group.

    On the quality of the treatments offered, she explained: “We offer treatments similar to what they will get at the Primary Health Care Centres (PHC).

    “If we found complicated cases, we refer them to any secondary or tertiary facility closest to the patients”.

    She identified hypertension as the most common ailment detected among the tested women.

    “I don’t know if it is stress- induced or caused by people’s lifestyle. Also, there are cancer cases. We hope the next initiative will be able to bring fund for cancer research into the country,” she stated.

  • Is there no balm in Gilead?

    Without any doubt, health stands out as the greatest asset of life. When a man’s health is challenged, everything he has loses value. That is why the world says, “Health is wealth.” In the world today, healthcare is one of the most costly services. That is why God is visiting you with free health and cure now (Jeremiah 33:6-7).

    God does not only want you to be spiritually robust; He wants you to be physically, mentally, psychologically and emotionally robust (3 John 1:2). When you are hurt, God is hurt. He is hurt because He had already fully paid the price for your total health (Isaiah 53:4-5). You have been bought with a price; therefore, glorify God in your body (1 Corinthians 6:20). You don’t pay for any product twice.

    Your body has been redeemed from the corruption of sickness and disease. Your body is now to glorify God, not the devil.

    Who is this Great Physician?

    He introduced Himself as the Physician that was prophesied by Jeremiah, in Jeremiah 8:19-22. But when Jesus heard that, he said unto them, they that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick… (Matthew 9:12). His Name is Jesus.

    On the Cross, Jesus carried on His head every sickness and disease that have tormented you. Jesus paid the ultimate price to credit total health into your account and my account. We are told that He received 39 wicked Roman stripes that had iron thorns attached to them. When they whipped Him and pulled it, it drew flesh from His Body and His Blood gushed out. Jesus painfully received 39 of them, for every form of classified sickness and disease that the world will ever know (1 Peter 2:24; Isaiah 53:4-5).

    The end came to all our sicknesses and diseases. For surely He had borne our sicknesses and carried our pains, therefore, every pain and sickness has become illegal (Isaiah 53:4-5). The end came to every torment, when Jesus rose from the dead; the deal was sealed and you are now free (1 Peter 2:24).

    Every health issue was fully settled before they began to rear its ugly head. Every sickness and disease bows to His authority (Philippians 2:9-11). This is what qualified Him as The Great Physician.

    What is His Great Prescription?: Understand that behind every sickness and disease is the spirit of infirmity; that literarily translates as the spirit of sickness, according to Luke 13: 11, 13. Also, behind every affliction of sickness and disease is the wickedness of the devil at work (Job 2:7). The devil’s stronghold is darkness: his power is called the power of darkness (Luke 22:53; Psalm 74:20; Ephesians 6:12). But the strength of darkness is in the absence of light.

    Every time you turn on the light in your room, darkness gives way (John 1:1-5). When the light of the Word breaks forth, your health springs forth speedily (Isaiah 58:8). God’s Word is the all-purpose Balm in Gilead. God’s Word is the greatest Balm for the cure of all manner of sicknesses and diseases (Psalm 107:20; Matthew 21:8; Jeremiah 8:19-22). When you are lighted by the Word, you are in command. You don’t need to pray to be healed, just pray to be lighted. When light comes, darkness packs out instantly.

    What is this Prescription Worth?: The Word of God is the all-purpose Balm for the all-round restoration of your health and vitality (Proverbs 4:20-22; Luke 5:17). There is no other source in this world that compares with the efficacy of the Balm in Gilead. This Balm does not only answer for the living; it answers, also, for the dead (John 11:25, 39-44). Every other medicine only attempts to cure, but the Balm in Gilead guarantees cure and beyond that, guarantees restoration (Job 33:21-25).

    Friend, the power to key into divine health, is the preserve of those who are children of God. Are you a child of God? You become a child of God, by confessing your sins and accepting Jesus as your Lord and Saviour. You can be God’s child now, if you haven’t been, by saying this prayer: “Lord Jesus, I come to You today. I am a sinner. Forgive me of my sins. Cleanse me with Your precious Blood. Deliver me from sin and satan, to serve the Living God. Today, I accept You as my Lord and Saviour. Thank You, for saving me! Now, I know I am born again!”

    I will continue with this teaching next week. Exceeding Grace and the Unspeakable Gifts of God are your portion this year!

    Every exploit in life is a product of knowledge. For further reading, please get my books: Keys To Divine Health and The Healing Balm and Satan Get Lost!

    I invite you to come and fellowship with us at the Faith Tabernacle, Canaan Land, Ota, the covenant home of Winners. We have four services on Sundays, holding at 6:00 a.m., 7:35 a.m., 9:10 a.m. and 10.45 a.m. respectively.

    I know this teaching has blessed you. Write and share your testimony with me through: Faith Tabernacle, Canaan Land, Ota, P.M.B. 21688, Ikeja, Lagos, Nigeria; or call 7747546-8; or E-mail: feedback@lfcww.org

  • Theme: His knowledge and the edge

    Theme: His knowledge and the edge

    Text: “……… but the people that do know their God shall be strong, and do exploits.” Daniel 11:32b

    The world is now governed, led and directed by knowledge and not brawn, deception, lies, cultism, thuggery etc as being brazenly displayed in the political life of our dear nation. Today’s world is a world of advanced technology where yesterday’s implements have been rendered useless. Therefore, whosoever is desirous of having full benefit of today’s opportunities must seek knowledge and never stop to seek knowledge. It is difficult if not impossible for anyone to enjoy the full benefits of life without having an understanding of its dynamics. 3 John 2 says that prosperity and health are products of knowledge development.

    From our text, the Bible says that knowledge is the key to strength and doing exploits. Suffice to say that when the knowledge of God increases, it opens the gateway for good health, success, prosperity, breakthrough and testimonies. The advantages of knowing God are that it will give you an edge of strength, meaning that you will be immovable, unshakeable and untouchable. Secondly, you will experience an edge of prosperous life. Where others are failing, you will succeed like Isaac who during the time of famine in Philistine heard God and that year, reaped a hundredfold and was envied by the entire city ( Genesis 26:1-13).

    No wonder Hosea said that “ My people perish for lack of knowledge” ( Hosea 4:6a). What he meant was that ignorance is a major highway to destruction and sudden death while knowledge, which is from two words “know” and “edge” means that it is what you know that sets the pace for the edge you have over your peers and contemporaries. Prophet Isaiah shed more light on that spiritual axiom when he wrote that “my people are led into captivity because they have no knowledge; their honorable men are famished, and their multitude dried up with thirst.” ( Isaiah 5:13).

    It is not knowledge of powers of wickedness or the terrible things they are able to do that avails but knowledge of Jesus Christ, His powers, supremacy of His power, greatness of His name (Philp 2:9-10) and the weapons of warfare that are available to us to counter and destroy the schemes and attacks of the wicked (Ephesians 6:10-12).

    The armies of Israel, for example, were once in the bondage of fear by the Philistines for many days as a result of Ignorance of who they were in God until a young man of knowledge called David came to the battlefield. He heard the threat of Goliath but juxtaposed it with what he had experienced as a shepherd boy who partnered with God, and knew that the battle would be of no significance (1 Samuel 17: 32-37). He knew God so much that he dropped the garment of warfare that was given to him by King Saul for five stones. The end result was that God went ahead of him and the shame of many days was halted with a stone ( I Samuel 17:40-50) – His knowledge gave him an edge over his brethren!

    Beloved, the knowledge of God, and not fear, is very principal to success and living a life of victory over the devil and his agents. During this season of Lent, kindly ensure that you devote more time to studying the word of God as stated in Joshua 1:8, increase your knowledge of Him, meditate in the word every time and observe to do what He commands then you shall have good success in Jesus’ name.

    Prayers: Oh Lord, increase my knowledge in you and let me have strength and grace for exploits in Jesus’ name.

  • Abdusalami Abubakar: ‘What’s happening in Nigeria  now is mindboggling’

    Abdusalami Abubakar: ‘What’s happening in Nigeria now is mindboggling’

    It is easier for the camel to pass through the eyes of a needle than to get an interview with former Head of State of, General Abdusalami Alhaji Abubakar (GCFR).

    The amiable general earned his place in history after successfully handing over power to an elected civilian government in 1999 bringing a 19-year period of military rule to an end and ushering in the current democratic dispensation.

    Aside occasional flash interviews, you can hardly get the general to comment on burning national issues or his life away from the public sphere. But on the eve of the commissioning of an ultra-modern general hospital built in his honour by the administration of Governor Mu’azuBabangida Aliyu of Niger State, the general, fondly called Triple A by friends, welcomed MORAKINYO ABODUNRIN, ASSISTANT EDITOR, to his hilltop home in Minna.

    The home of the Abubakars, contrary to some stories, is modest, considering their status as the country’s former First Family. Though this was an evening reengagement, the lightning effects brought out the beauty of the decor in the living room with everything perfectly put in place.

    But it is the composure and the overall disposition of the general that made a huge impression as he discussed freely (off record) with his other guests.

    Even though the general was in a lively mood, he shied away from answering some questions because, as he said, ‘we have passed through all that and there is no need in going for a fishing expedition.’ Yet, he is as worried as any Nigerian about the insecurity in almost all partsof the country. He also spoke about how destiny played a key role in him becoming Headof State following the death of General Sanni Abacha in 1998. Excerpts.

     

  • Herdsmen or killer squads?

    Herdsmen or killer squads?

    As the body count arising from clashes between farmers and cattle herders grows across the country, Dare Odufowokan, Assistant Editor, probes the increasingly bloody conflicts and how to resolve them.

    HE age-long land disputes and fresh disagreements over grazing rights between nomadic cattle-keeping communities and farmers across the country have become worrisome. Many lives have been lost to the point that the international human rights organisations have become worried too. Rough estimates have put the death toll at about 2000!

    The menace of the rampaging herdsmen are such that in Benue and Plateau states in the north-central of the country, their activities have been likened to a genocide on the native Tiv, Idoma, Berom, Angas, Kwalla and Taroh people. In recent months, the marauders have carried out their deadliest campaigns ever, descending on villages after villages while bearing AK 47 rifles and other sophisticated weapons, and leaving only after they have raped women, slaughtered hundreds of people, razed houses and destroyed whole villages.

    The situation has become so grim that the Catholic community in Benue State earlier in the year asked President Goodluck Jonathan and Governor Gabriel Suswam to find solutions to the on-going killings of innocent people by suspected Fulani herdsmen in the state to prevent further loss of lives and property. Catholic Bishops of Gboko, Otukpo, Makurdi and Katsina-Ala Dioceses, Most Reverends Williams Avenya, Michael Apochi, Athanasius Usuh, and Peter Adoboh, respectively made the call at joint news conference in Abuja.

     

    A call for help

    In their statement, they pleaded, “We call on both the president and governor of Benue State as Chief Security Officers, CSOs, to take responsibility of security in Benue State.” But rather than for the killings to abate in the two worst-hit states after the plea, things got worse. Perhaps emboldened by the successes of their gory escapades over the years, the killer band extended their tentacles across the borders into Kaduna State earlier this month as heavily armed Fulani herdsmen attacked several villages in Southern Kaduna killing at least 100 villagers in an early morning massacre.

    The attacks took place in Moro’a Chiefdom in Kaura local government area of the state. Residents of Me-sankwai, Tekum and Ungwan Gatah villages all under the Moro’a Chiefdom were reportedly woken from sleep in the early morning raid by Fulani attackers with several men, women and children massacred. Several homes were also set on fire by the rampaging attackers. Some eyewitnesses stated that some villagers were simply burnt in their homes.

    A villager who lost family members said, “They took scores of our people with them into forests in all the villages; this is not fiction but the reality of our predicament. Please, help us let the whole world know because the security agencies and the government are suppressing information about our communities. We are mourning, they came around 11pm when we were sleeping and started attacking until around 2am. There was no security presence or protection.”

    And in the weeks that followed that brazen attack, armed Fulani herdsmen slaughtered not less than 113 people in nearby Katsina State on the same day the president visited the state. According to reports, the attackers were ethnic Fulani cattle herders who have a history of tension with local farmers and rode on motorcycles into the villages in broad daylight, killing whoever was on sight.

    Abdullahi Abbas Machika, a lawmaker, said 47 people were buried in one village alone in Katsina State after the attack. Reports quoted the State Police Commissioner, Hurdi Mohammed, as saying “The victims include men, women and children. Rescue teams are still combing nearby bushes [to] search for more bodies.”

     

    Requiem after murder

    A month earlier, during a requiem after yet another gruesome attack in Plateau State, the Interfaith Mediation Centre’s Community Peace Action Network had issued a February 24 bulletin calling attention to “incessant attacks by unknown gunmen,” despite a large, official security presence.

    It catalogues the recent carnage thus:

    *February 20 attack on a village with 13 killed and nine injured.

    *February 21 attack; nine children, two women and two men were killed.

    The killings are blamed on Hausa-Fulani Muslim herdsmen and the victims are Christian Berom farmers as usual. This is a familiar pattern. A new scenario, however, seems to be that the killers are wearing army uniforms and move about in trucks painted in army colours.

    A few days after the requiem, the burial party had to be summoned again after no fewer than 30 people were again killed and 25 others injured when gunmen struck at Shonong in Bachit District of the Riyom Local Government Area of Plateau State. Over 40 houses were torched by the gunmen believed to be Fulani cattle rearers. Also affected were domestic animals belonging to the villagers.

    The attackers were said to have stormed the village around 7am on Monday in a commando-like manner, shooting sporadically. Those killed were caught in the pandemonium that followed staccato bursts of gunfire. Shom Toma, one of the survivors, who received treatment at the Vom Christian Hospital, Jos, told journalists that the attackers numbering over 100 struck at a time most of the villagers had gone to their farms. Toma said he was moulding some blocks near his house when he heard gunshots. He said most of the victims were children and elderly people.

    For years unending, the state has tasted the bitter pills of attacks by herdsmen. In July, 2012, the then chairman of the Senate Committee on Health, Senator Dantong Gyang Dalyop and Gyang Fulani, the Majority Leader of the Plateau State House of Assembly, were among the many people murdered during a mass funeral in the Barakin-Ladi local Government Area of the state. A member of the House of Representatives, Simon Davou Mwadkwon, was badly injured in the attack. The funeral had hardly been concluded when heavily armed men in military uniform descended on the mourners, gunning them down at point blank range.

    On February 20, 2014, gunmen, suspected to be Fulani herdsmen, had invaded Wase Local Government Area of Plateau State, killing no fewer than 20 persons and setting many houses on fire. This came barely 48 hours after two villages were attacked in Riyom Local Government Area, leaving 30 people including two policemen dead.

    According to sources, the gunmen stormed Mavo village in Wase Local Government in the early hours shooting at the inhabitants and killing some with the use of cutlasses. Sources said over 10 houses were razed by the attackers. It was said that the gunmen stormed the village at about 2 am when many of the residents had gone to bed.

    This development made youths in the community to troop out to protest the killings but were forced to return to their homes by security operatives who insisted that such an action would lead to further bloodshed. Constant clashes between the Taroh and the Fulanis had been witnessed in the last few months and they were believed to have been curbed with meetings organised by the security agencies in the state with the major stakeholders from the two camps.

    The gory tale continued in neighbouring Benue State as 36 innocent Nigerians were murdered in Gbajimba town, the headquarters of Guma local government area of Benue State, gunmen suspected to be Fulani herdsmen killed no fewer than 36 people last Wednesday. Churches and schools were burnt, just as shops and some government properties including the secretariat situated in the centre of the town were torched. The place is now totally deserted.

    The supervising Minister of Aviation and Minister of State for Trade and Investment, Mr Samuel Ortom, hails from the affected local government area of the state. Until Wednesday, Gbajimba was the only place that was yet to be attacked in the entire local government area. Since the day Governor Gabriel Suswam’s convoy was attacked in the area, the homes of Ortom and commissioner for lands and survey, Mr John Tondo, have been destroyed.

    It was gathered that, about noon on the fateful day, the invaders stormed the council headquarters in broad daylight, shooting and burning houses in the process. The council chairman, Frank Usa- Adi, who narrated the incident at the Accident and Emergency wing of the Benue State University Teaching Hospital, Makurdi, said the attackers shot sporadically and killed scores of people. Adi, who escaped death by a whisker, accused the police of showing levity. The gunmen came, killed, burnt houses and quickly left the place without security interference, he said.

    “The attack this afternoon is very unfortunate and this is the most ugly attack Guma local government has ever witnessed because Gbajimba is the headquarters; and for the gunmen to have invaded and razed the place, something is actually fishy. The police abandoned us.”

    Houses and other places were burnt and we have managed to convey scores of persons killed by the attackers to this mortuary, and those injured were also brought to this Benue State University Teaching Hospital (BSUTH) for urgent medical attention. Others were moved to Abinsi and in Northbank areas,” Usa-Adi said.

    On March 13, 2014, Suswam’s entire village at Anyii in Logo local government area was sacked by the suspected mercenaries. The invaders also slaughtered over 22 persons whose corpses were still trapped in the farms at Anyii and Ayilamo where the fleeing locals believe the mercenaries have set up their camps.

    It was discovered that from Anyii, Suswam’s ancestral home, to Ayilamo, a stretch of about 25 kilometres, all the inhabitants of the close to 29 villages had been sacked by the rampaging herdsmen. It was also discovered that all of the governor’s kinsmen, extended family members, elders, women and children have been sacked from their ancestral homes by the marauders, leaving the entire village deserted. One of the fleeing locals, who gave his name as James Terzungwe, said the invaders came to their communities from neigbouring Nasarawa State.

    “They came from Nasarawa State after crossing River Benue and stormed our communities in their hundreds, when people were already in the farms. That was why many of the people were killed because they were caught up in the farms where it was very difficult for them to escape or jointly defend themselves. That attack left over 22 of our people dead, those are the ones we have seen, many are still missing and nobody knows about their condition because we gathered that so many corpses are still in the farms and bushes near the river, but no one can go near there for now because the Fulanis have completely taken over those areas,” he said.

    Just two days earlier, Suswam himself escaped death by the whiskers when his convoy was ambushed by suspected Fulani herdsmen at Tse Aekenyi in Guma Local Government Area of Benue State. The governor who led a team of security men including the Police, Civil Defence Army and the State Security Service (SSS) to take an assessment of the destruction caused in the area by the Fulani herdsmen last week ran into the same herdsmen who opened fire at the governor and his entourage when he made a stop over to assess some houses that were recently burnt at Tse Akenyi.

    The rampaging herdsmen who had at the early hours of the morning destroyed over 72 villages and killed 25 residents in Ukpan, near Daudu were repelled by security forces in the convoy of the governor.

    A recent report by the Anglican Church in Benue State showed how nearly 1000 people lost their lives to incessant attacks by Fulani herdsmen.

    “On Oct. 12, gunmen killed 30 Christians in Oguchi-Ankpa,” Christian leaders said. Apochi and Bello said the Christians were killed in their sleep after Muslim Fulani herdsmen broke into their homes. Houses, church buildings and other properties were destroyed in the attacks.

    On October 4, Fulani gunmen attacked Ejima, killing three Christians, according to Stephen Dutse, chairman of Agatu Local Government Council. Three days prior, Christian and community leaders in the area had declared a month of fasting and prayer in the face of unceasing attacks on them. Not less than 60 Christians have lost their lives in three attacks by Muslim Fulanis within the last two months, November and December, while over 10,000 Christians have been displaced and church activities been suspended.

    Juliana Obeta, chairperson of Okpokwu Local Government Council, said the assailants killed one person while several others were wounded and treated at St. Mary’s Catholic Hospital in Okpoga.

    Authorities later reportedly discovered that some of the assailants were dressed like Fulani but were apparently hired assassins from out of state. Armed with AK-47s, the assailants invaded several communities, including an attack on a funeral, killing and burning houses and church buildings.

     

    Unending killings

    The killings have not been restricted to the states in the north central alone. For example, on December 24, 2012, some nomadic Fulani herdsmen invaded the border town of Oja-Odan in Yewa North Local Government Area of Ogun State, killing two people who were said to have prevented their cattle from grazing on their farmlands.

    On many occasions, different communities had always appealed to the federal and state governments for protection as the dry season approached, for fear of attacks by the murderous herdsmen. Yet, there has hardly been any reported instance when law enforcement agents had arrested and prosecuted the culprits. A socio-cultural group, the Ketu Advancement Front, comprising 30 villages, once had cause to appeal to the government for protection, their communities having been attacked by Fulani herdsmen operating between the borders of Nigeria and the Benin Republic.

    The attacks on Ketu led to the killing of no fewer than 40 innocent residents of the area. Last August 27, some Fulani cattle rearers were arrested in Aboriso village, Iseyin, Oyo State, for allegedly inflicting injury on a farmer named Fatai Alimi after a disagreement over grazing on a commercial farmland belonging to Alimi and his siblings. Brother of the injured farmer, Muibi Azeez, said the herdsmen led a large herd of cattle to the farm, which caused the destruction of crops. He said a heated exchange ensued as Alimi challenged the herdsmen. He added that the herdsmen responded violently, and later attacked them.

    “They came to our farm with their cattle and destroyed our crops. There was a disagreement and, in the process, my brother was seriously injured. I escaped from the scene to alert the villagers and the police,” Azeez said.

    Speaking to The Nation on the menace that the herdsmen have become in the state, the senator representing Benue North-east senatorial district, Senator Barnabas Gemade, said the trend would destabilise the country if it is not urgently stopped.

    The senator who alleged that the attackers hailed from neighbouring African countries of Chad, Mali and Cameroun, alleged that they were hired to destabilise the country. The senator alleged that most of the attackers were not herdsmen as often claimed, but were rather miscreants with the motive of causing internal crisis in the country especially in the Middle Belt region.

     

    He said: “I think they really want to see some war fought in the Middle Belt part of the country which is a very big shame. Otherwise, how can you see an insurgence taking place in the middle of the country and the people who are doing this are coming from neighbouring countries such as Chad, Mali, Cameroun, Congo and many others.

    “How did they pass through all the land that they passed through before getting to Benue which is right in the middle of the country? I think it is a matter which has to be looked at very critically. The law enforcement agencies have to take it upon themselves to look into this matter.”

    He added: “Well it is a matter that needs very urgent action by a combination of all the security agencies in this country to fish out the people behind this. The Tiv and Idoma people are not the only people who have fertile lands in this country. There are many other tribes living in the Benue region where the land is very fertile and full of grass for animal. But why are they not fighting those tribes? Why are they insisting on fighting the people who are in Benue State?

    “That tells you clearly that there is a motive behind it and this motive is not just addressed to the people living on fertile land but against a system and that system is against the peaceful existence of Nigeria and the peaceful performance of the government of the nation at this time. And I think the law enforcement agencies should take this serious. As political leaders, we are talking about it. We are calling on people in this country not to allow our people take laws into their hands. You know that every community in Nigeria can raise an army if they want to do so and it is not right for us to begin to raise an army for ourselves and that is why the national defence forces should to do their jobs.”

    The senator believed that the attackers are a mixture of miscreants from various parts of the continent, adding, “We are telling the government that they must raise a defence force that will come in and raid these areas and get rid of these people. We are also calling on people in these affected areas to be vigilant and they should not aid and abet those coming into their lands to go and attack the people. Let them not push us to a point where we have to raise an army.”

    Also, speaking on the menace, Ortom said Fulani herdsmen need to end the terror being unleashed on the people of Benue. “I call on the aggressors and Fulani herdsmen to stop the senseless killings. End the fire and bloodshed which has brought tribulation and torment to all Benue people. End the terror now. The security situation in our dear state has worsened, nowhere is safe.

    “Our people have been driven from their ancestral homes and farms. This situation should perturb every ethnic nationality in Nigeria. They have destroyed communities in Makurdi, Torkula, Daudu, Tse-Akaahena, Tse-Ortom and over 60 other villages. My farmland of over 150 hectares has been destroyed by the terrorists who have hidden under the platform of Fulani herdsmen to carry out this mayhem,” the minister said.

     

    What is at stake?

    Over the years, the herdsmen are demanding grazing land and stock-routes. As a response from the government, a bill empowering the federal government to establish grazing reserves in all states has passed a second reading in the Senate. But sadly, it is already mired in legal controversy and ethnic rows, giving the impression that it may take long for it to come to fruition if it ever does. Consequently, the herdsmen want to be allowed to graze openly, irrespective of whose farmland is damaged by their herds.

    But pundits say that cannot be. The system of open grazing of cattle, experts insist, is archaic. Many countries have developed large grazing reserves and it is against the law in many countries to herd livestock in the open. We have once argued that “unregulated grazing begets environmental degradation and smacks of irresponsibility on the part of those in power at all levels,” says Audu Ogbeh, a former minister.

    Holland, Australia and other countries with rich livestock management traditions present models Nigeria could copy. It is said that grazed cows produce less milk than those confined to sheds, where feeding is controlled. Cows now live in football-field-size covered sheds, rarely venturing outdoors, and are milked three times a day. With 13.9 million cattle, 22.1 million sheep, 34.5 million goats, Nigeria can sustain a thriving animal husbandry industry. The practice of open grazing, where animals destroy crops, has to stop. Herded animals are of less nutritional and financial value, according to Ogbeh.

    “It is the cause of the tension we are witnessing around the country. Since livestock farming is a major occupation in northern Nigeria, governments in the region, therefore, should develop this business portfolio into a money-spinner. In addition, Fulani herdsmen do not have any special privilege more than the fishermen in the creeks. Through regional integration, state governors in the core north with substantial Fulani population have to revive the grazing reserves that dot the region and establish more irrigated reserves where the herdsmen will rear their cattle.

    “It is their cup of tea since the welfare of cocoa farmers in the South-West and that of fishermen in the Niger Delta are the responsibility of their respective states and local governments. Setting up grazing fields, apart from solving pressing security challenges, could also boost their internally generated revenue,” he said.

    Thus amid deadly clashes with farmers and expulsion orders by state authorities, thousands of nomadic herders in the country do not know where to turn. The consequence of this is that tensions linked to pastoralist-farmer disputes continue to mount in recent months in several states. Local authorities expelled 700 pastoralists from Borno State in the northeast in May 2009 and some 2,000 from Plateau in April, according to reports.

    “We settled in Damboa [in Borno State] like many other Fulani nomads, running away from desertification and drought in the far north where we have little food for our herd,” nomad chief Alhaji Jebbe told researchers. If every community we move to treats us like this I don’t know where we will turn to. Our herd, which is our source of existence, will be ruined and we will in turn be ruined,” he said.

    A local expert said effects of climate change are partly to blame for the disputes. Northern nomadic communities are increasingly moving southwards as climate change turns their grazing land into desert, Kabiru Yammama, environmental consultant with Green Shield of Nations, a Nigerian NGO, said.

    “About 35 percent of land that was cultivable 50 years ago is now desert in 11 of Nigeria’s northernmost states: Borno, Bauchi, Gombe, Adamawa, Jigawa, Kano, Katsina, Yobe, Zamfara, Sokoto and Kebbi,” Yammama said. Nomads expelled from Borno State had travelled 1,000km eastwards from Zamfara in search of grazing land, and are now heading back again, according to Jebbe.

    The livelihoods of some 15 million pastoralists in northern Nigeria are threatened by decreasing access to water and pasture – shortages linked to climate change, according to Yammama. The rainy season in northern Nigeria has dropped to an average of 120 days down from 150 days 30 years ago, cutting crop yields by 20 percent, according to a 2008 National Meteorological Agency study,” he said.

    Lending his voice to the debate over what could be at the centre of the crises, the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Mohammed Abubakar, blamed the crisis on the nomadic nature of the herdsmen who have lost grazing fields and cattle routes in recent times due to the activities of farmers.

    “They move from one place to another, from here to Cameroun to Niger to Chad. One of the challenges we have is that years back there were grazing places, there were routes for the Fulanis to follow, today the story is different, no grazing places no routes to follow,” he said.

    But beyond the simple economic arsons of the herdsmen wanting to graze at all cost and the farmers being determined to protect their crops, it appears another dimension has crept into the issue. Rising from an emergency meeting recently, the Middle Belt Dialogue alleged that the attacks on farming communities have concentrated on areas largely inhabited by Christians. The group cautioned that continued attack may be interpreted to mean a plan to exterminate the people of the region.

    There is also palpable fear amongst security experts that the situation may degenerate into an open armed conflict in the regions. This concern is daily mounting as the attacks continue unabated. Perhaps this is why a number of state governments are swiftly moving to confront the issue headlong.

    “If the Fulani herdsmen’s activities are not quickly curtailed, we are inclined to be apprehensive of reprisal actions by the persistent victims. This may lead to an open armed conflict in the regions which may further aggravate the security challenges in the country. The government need to take more drastic action against the herdsmen killers in Plateau State. We are of the opinion that the activities of the Fulani herdsmen deserve no less attention from the federal government than it has given Boko Haram, as both represent unabashed terrorism and unrepentant murder,” Aminu Wase, a former police commissioner said.

    Similarly, in a bid to curb the excesses of Fulani herdsmen who have constituted nuisance to security of people of Oke Ogun area of Oyo State through cattle-rearing on their farmlands, the state government recently warned the Fulanis to resist the temptation of rearing their animals on farmlands.

    The state Commissioner for Local Government and Chieftaincy Matters, Chief Peter Oluremi Odetomi, said the people of the state were not rejecting the Fulani but were opposed to the vandalisation of their crops.

    “We want to prevent the rancour between the Fulani herdsmen and farmers who complained of destruction of their crops,” he disclosed.

    Odetomi said that there must be perfect peace between the Fulani and Yoruba in the state, adding that anything that would threaten the existing peace must be avoided. He reminded the Fulani of the need not to rear their cows on farmlands where the farmers’ crops could be destroyed, stressing that doing that would cause rancour between them and the farmers.

    Also, the Ekiti Government recently set up a 50-man task force on the alleged destruction of farms across the state by persons suspected to be herdsmen. The Secretary to the State Government, Dr. Ganiyu Owolabi, made this known on Tuesday at a meeting with stakeholders and victims of the clashes. Owolabi said that the government evolved the measure in order to find a permanent solution to the occurrence of such attacks.

    According to him, the cattle reportedly destroyed between six and seven hectares of farm crops on a daily basis across the state. He said the matter was of serious concern as it threatened government’s huge investment in agriculture. He expressed sympathy with the victims whose crops were destroyed, especially Alhaji Giringi Sulaiman. Owolabi noted that about 100,000 hectares of maize and yams farms, valued at about N80 million belonging to Sulaiman along Ijan-Ekiti Road, were attacked and destroyed by suspected herdsmen.

    The state Commissioner for Agriculture and Natural Resources, Mr Jide Arowosafe, noted that many farms, including those of the ‘Youth in Agriculture Programme’ were reportedly destroyed in recent times. He advised the herdsmen to take advantage of the grazing facility already created at Irele-Ekiti. Arowosafe said that the government would replicate the facility in all local government areas as a way of curbing the herdsmen’s excesses and the rampant destruction of farmlands.

    Meanwhile, it is not that the country outrightly lack grazing lands. At least, on paper, the federal government in the past got some places to be designated as grazing lands to help the pastoralist Fulanis take care of their herds. `The idea is that the Fulanis will gross the grass they need to feed their cattle and avoid unguarded grazing that has been the cause of so many crises across the country.

    “Across Nigeria, there are more than 400 grazing reserves covering about 4,200,000 hectares of land. But most of these are yet to be gazetted by the relevant authorities. The state governments will have to gazette them to prevent people from encroaching into them. These are yet to be done in most cases. It is this lack of gazetting that is killing the idea meant to reduce clashes between the herdsmen and farmers to the barest minimum,” Sulaiman Faisal Aliyu, spokesperson of the Miyyeti Allah Cattle rearers Association in the southwestern region, said.

    Most of the grazing reserves are today farmlands being cultivated by some people even after government’s order that they be reserved for grazing. Some claim they are yet to be compensated for their land since the idea for the grazing reserve was conceived in 1996.

    According to Aliyu, keeping the natives away from the grazing reserve has not been easy because they are yet to be settled by the federal government.

  • Plateau: From ethnic  crises to cattle rustling

    Plateau: From ethnic crises to cattle rustling

    Yusufu Aminu Idegu takes a look at the new crime rocking Plateau State.

    CATTLE rustling (the act of stealing herds of cattle ranging from 50 to 200, 300) is the new crime in Plateau State and security reports have linked serial attacks in the state to cattle it. The issue of cattle rustling became noticeable in 2009. In the 17 local governments of the state, only three have minimal cases. These are Jos North, Pankshin, and Kanam. The highest cases are in Jos South, Riyom, Barkin Ladi, Bokkos, Shendam, Wase and Mikang. Others are Langtang North and Langtang South.

    According to the Commander of the Special Task Force (STF) on Jos crisis, code named ‘Operation Safe Haven’, Major-General David Enetie, the challenges before the command is the issue of cow rustling which he said has become a major business among the youths of the state. He said along with cow rustling is the proliferation of prohibited arms and military uniforms.

    The General who disclosed this a few weeks after taking over the command said, “The major challenges the task force and security agencies in the state are facing in the restoration of peace remain issues of cow theft, prohibited arms in the hands of civilians as well as proliferation of army uniforms.”

    He said, “Religious and ethnic crises were over in Plateau State as far back as two years ago; what we are witnessing now are attacks and killings caused by criminals who go about stealing cows. And such criminals are heavily armed.

    “Stealing of cows has become a very lucrative business in Plateau State. The youths have found stealing of cows as a means of survival because the major business with high income in the state is cattle breeding. So, the youths have devised ways of stealing cows. The recent attacks are reprisals following theft of cows.

    Arms proliferation

    “In several cases where the task force was able to recover the cows and return them to the owners, there will be no killing or attack. But in some cases where the stolen cows are not recovered, what followed are attacks and killings as witnessed in Shendam and Barkin Ladi few days back.”

    He observed, “You are aware that AK-47 is no longer an exclusive property of the military, the weapon has become very common in our society, especially in Plateau State where issue of proliferation of prohibited weapons is on the rise.

    “Another issue is proliferation of army uniforms. Criminals have found the use of army uniform to carry out their criminal acts the safest and effective way to commit crimes. Criminals use army uniforms to steal cows and commit all sorts of robberies.”

    He said this was the reason why the members of the task force no longer wear regular army uniforms, but desert camouflage, adding that despite that, criminals have a way of acquiring the camouflage.

    He wonders: “The puzzles we are trying to solve are: why do criminals steal cows at gun point? How do they dispose the cows after stealing them and where is the market and who are the buyers?

    “If we can find answers to the questions above, we will be able to stop cow rustling business and when we stop cow rustling or minimise them, there will be no more killings or attacks. So to stop further bloodshed here, I call on citizens of the state to stop stealing cows; people should stop buying stolen cows from the state and people should cooperate with the task force to stop these attacks, then we would have restored permanent peace in the state.”

    The STF commander assured that if residents are ready to expose the rustlers, his men would battle them.

    A European Union (EU) sponsored organisation known as Search for Common Ground (SFCG) which has been undertaking a peace building project in the state within the last two years also confirmed the challenge of cow rustling.

    During a peace meeting held in Jos recently, the issue of cattle rustling was the only thing presented for discussion and the Director General Research and Planning, Mr. Chris Kwaja, in a paper, said, “The problems of cattle rustling is the current issue of research before the United Nations (UN) Security Council because it has become a global concern.”

    According to him, “The current security challenges posed by cattle rustlers were predicted over 20 years ago. A study was carried out on the Sahel Savannah of West Africa in 1983 and it was discovered then that there would be huge conflicts in the savannah region due to the effects of climate change. The report specifically mentioned that the conflicts would be between cattle breeders and farmers. The report also proffered solutions to the predicted conflict in the region. But Nigerian government never took the report seriously, thinking such predictions would not come to pass, but today we are facing the reality.”

    He said the conflicts have been fuelled by easy availability of arms and asked, “How come the warring factions are fully armed to the extent that government security agencies are afraid of them? As a matter of fact, cow breeding and cow rustling is not restricted to one tribe in the state. The major native tribes in the state; Berom, Taroh, Angas, Mwaghavul, Goemai and other minor tribes like Ganawuri, Rukuba, Irigwe, Amo, Chip, Mupun, etc all breed cows. The arrest of suspects made so far by security agencies on the Plateau shows that all these tribes including Fulani are involved in cow rustling. But the puzzle is who are the buyers of the stolen cows? The line between war and crime is becoming narrower, it’s like cattle rustling is likely to degenerate into war between farmers and grazers.”

    Observers believe cattle rustling is aided by large scale unemployment in the country. The crime goes with huge economic loss and death considering the sophisticated arms used and the level of coordinated attacks.

    The new dimension that has been added is that it has become inter-state whereby cattle rustled in one state are disposed in markets across other states. Similarly, there is now cross-borders cattle-raiding, especially between Uganda and Ethiopia.

     

    Way forward

    Cooperation among security agencies and adequate funding of operations as well as equipping them and inter-state cooperation among neighbouring states are some of the best ways out. For instance, Plateau State has already established a security outfit called ‘Operation Rainbow’. The outfit has a unit known as ‘neighbourhood watch’ given the fact that almost every ethnic group in the state breeds cows.

     

    The STF has had to expand its operations to take care of cow rustling; this was not part of its initial mandate and mission in the state. This is because more lives are being lost in the clash between cattle breeders and farmers, and cattle owners and criminals.

    The STF on its part will prefer that cow rustling be referred to as armed robbery as it has became obvious that both crimes are committed with sophisticated weapons.

  • Cattle rustling:  A northern nightmare

    Cattle rustling: A northern nightmare

    The vast array of land in the north has been subjected to severe cattle rustling in the recent past. Tony Akowe and Bodunrin Kayode, in this report traverse the area and report.

    JAN Birni village is a community in Birnin Gwari local government area of Kaduna State. It lies on the border between Kaduna, Katsina and Zamfara states. It is a village that, in the words of the traditional ruler of the area and Emir of Birnin Gwari, Alhaji Zubair Maigwari, has completely been taken over by cattle rustlers who kill, maim and rape their victims before dispossessing them of their hard-earned investments.

    It is one of the several villages in the area lying between Kaduna, Katsina, Zamfara and Niger states that are daily living under the terror attack of these hoodlums. In the last four months, cattle rustlers have operated with reckless abandon, without anybody stopping them. In fact, victims now prepare for them and evacuate their belongings from cattle farms in preparation for the coming of these people who tend to be operating with some high level collaboration. Dr. Hakeem Baba-Ahmed, a retired Federal Permanent Secretary and interim Chairman of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Kaduna State, told The Nation on Sunday that even though he was aware of the coming of the rustlers to his farm, he never bothered to report to the police.

    According to him, before invading his farm, the cattle rustlers had operated around the area for several months without anybody stopping them. He said, “Like many large cattle farmers, I lost my entire herds about two weeks ago. In actual fact, we knew that it was coming because cattle rustlers have been stealing cattle from farms around us for the past four months. The nature of the rustlers is such that you can’t resist them and so, there is no point fighting them. A few days before they came, they had rustled a large scale from farms in our area and because we knew that it was a matter of time before they came, we prepared by making sure that people did not sleep with the cattle and evacuated women from the farm because they rape and abduct women. Those taking care of the cattle had told me that they were worried that the cattle rustlers would come and they did come and there was no need resisting them because they came in large number according to the reports I got. They took away everything; the 20 years of investment and growing of my herds were lost in one day. We were very fortunate that they did not kill or molest anybody. I am not alone in this because there are a lot of people who are daily losing large herds of cattle. It has become an epidemic to the north and this is a very serious threat to the economy of the region and needs to be tackled immediately by a government which is serious about tackling an issue which is daily destroying the north.”

    Helpless victims

    Baba-Ahmed who once served as the Secretary to the Kaduna State government under the military regime said he was not aware of any government effort geared towards addressing the problem. He said: “no; I am not aware, and so I will perfectly be honest with you. I did not even bother to report my case to the police. I told you that before they came to me, they have been stealing cattle all around me. This thing is now an epidemic in about eight states of the north where it is happening daily. So, if government at any level is making any effort, it is no working because it is escalating and getting worse. I have heard stories about where these cattle are taken to; I have heard stories about organisations; I have heard stories about people living in the forest with our cattle. I can’t verify this, but what I do know is that this is a very serious problem and it is getting worse by the day.” The Emir of Birnin Gwari corroborated this, saying there has been no effort from the government to address the issue. He said “there is no effort being made by any authority. The only effort that I know of is when the incident at Dogon Dawa took place, soldiers were brought to mount roadblocks along the roads to Dogon Dawa and Birnin Gwari. Later, they brought some policemen and that was all. The rustlers are in the forest, not in Birnin Gwari town, and they’re armed. The local vigilance group tried to fight rustlers and they fought back, causing the Miyetti Allah Association to say that some people are going to kill the Fulani. Rustling is a terrible thing; both farmers and pastoralist Fulani are hard-working people you can find all over my kingdom. The only option now is to decide on how to protect. For the past two years, because we have complained and nothing has happened, we resolved to pray to Allah, as only He can protect us. Those we think can help us have done nothing. The only thing they have done, and we are grateful, was that they mounted roadblocks which are often negative, counter-productive and they do not help anybody. As I told you in the beginning, we don’t know whether we are Nigerians. The rustlers are organised and about two years ago I reported to the governor that some villages and towns are under the control of robbers. They have camps which are fully organised. The military and the police are all aware because they have tracking equipment to know where they are. They are in control of one village called Jan Birni. You can’t go there now if you are not a thief. If they don’t know you, they may kill you. I reported to the government that our people have sighted, many times, helicopters landing and taking off, delivering weapons to these people. My people have ventured to scout around and see that these people are highly organised. They have weapons.”

    The Emir of Birnin Gwari whose territory has virtually been taken over first raised an alarm about the deteriorating security situation in his domain in January 2013. He told the governor then that “from November last year when we had the Dogondawa incident , the government promised to do something. The late governor and the General Officer Commanding (GOC), One Division, were there but up till now my people are still waiting for the action of the state government. The situation has worsened. They are doing what they like and they are heavily armed. Except in Birnin Gwari town , in other villages in my domain, I am not in charge and you are not in charge too.” The government seems to have treated the issue with kids gloves as things tend to have gone out of hands. However, it is evident that what started like a child’s play way back in 2004 has spread to most parts of the north and today constitutes one of the biggest security challenges in the region, outside the Boko Haram insurgency. While so much attention is paid to the Boko Haram issue, not much is said about the activities of cattle rustlers who derive pleasure in attacking villages in the name of Fulani herdsmen. Communities in Southern Kaduna, Plateau, Benue, Katsina and several other places have been attacked. Sources told The Nation on Sunday that the recent attack on communities in Katsina State was well planned and had the backing of highly placed people.

    An all-comers business

    The Emir was also quoted as saying that “from what we know, the rustlers are a mixture of ethnicities, including Fulani. This has continued and even as I speak, we don’t know how many thousands of cattle have been stolen so far. At one time in 2010, I told the governor that over 7,000 heads of cattle were taken away and during the past few weeks, hundreds were stolen from farmers. The issue is that everywhere you go in the Emirate, you will find a casualty; someone’s cattle were stolen, his wife or children raped and others even killed. The rustlers don’t just take cattle; they barricade roads and rob. Because of that, Birnin Gwari Market, which is one of the biggest around here, is diminishing in terms of trading activities. And as you could remember, sometime in 2011 or so, they came into Birnin Gwari, robbed two banks and carted away millions of naira and because of that, the banks have not started working. People have lost millions of naira in robberies and our lives are in danger. We don’t even know whether we are Nigerians. These rustlers don’t care whether you put fire on your cattle, they will whisk them away. I have seen one video clip that is being circulated where one of the rustlers was on a motorcycle with an assault rifle saying they have weapons, as well as people in the military, police force and government, adding that they will not stop rustling until the authorities stop killing their people. Back to branding of cattle, the rustlers are so clever. If your cattle are branded, they will slaughter them, cut them up and sell them in pieces. They also abduct young men and force them to join their groups. They will come to a Fulani man and ask him to give them one of his sons to join them as a form of protection. If he refuses to do so, anything can happen to him. The abducted person will be part of the rustlers or robbers. So, if you see any Fulani man or someone living comfortably in the forest or somewhere in his ranch, maybe he has compromised his son to be part of them. The rustlers are becoming bolder and bolder. If you go to Birnin Gwari-Funtua axis, they are gradually taking over all villages and towns along the roads. They come out on market days and brandish their weapons without a care.”

    There is a growing concern over the activities of these rustlers and the allegations of collusion in the activities of those involved. The question being asked is how these people can operate with such reckless abandon without being noticed and why the helicopters allegedly bringing weapons to them have never been noticed by the aviation authorities. Aviation experts believe that the activities of such helicopters cannot go unnoticed except there is connivance with officials. Speaking in the wake of revelation by Senator Abu Ibrahim (APC, Katsina) that helicopters were seen landing at certain parts of the north, dropping attackers and their weapons. The senator had told the senate that “we have reports that helicopters were used to ferry the people who carried out attacks. They land in the forest and drop the attackers.” Captain Daniel Omale and Captain Mohammad Joji were quoted by a national daily as saying that with the total radar coverage in Nigeria, there is no way helicopters would come into the country’s airspace undetected. According to Captain Omale, the recently installed Terminal Radar Approach Control (TRACON) covers the whole of Nigeria’s airspace. He said “each of the TRACON cost the country 60 million Euros…. The entire Nigerian airspace is covered. The TRACON in Abuja covers the whole north and parts of our neighbouring countries while the one in Lagos covers the whole south and parts of Benin Republic. So, how would they use helicopters without these equipment picking them? Anything is possible in this country. Our military are spending 1.3 trillion (naira) on security and yet we are in this problem. For Captain Mohammad Joji, a former Managing Director of the defunct Nigerian Airways, with total radar coverage there is no way the helicopters would fly in without officials knowing. Joji said that “from the scope, they can know where the aircraft are coming from, where they are going and what have you. If this thing is happening it means we are in serious danger. Does this mean that these equipment are not working? Are our agencies conniving with these people? Answers must be provided for the posers.”

    While it is difficult to say the number of cattle stolen by these unidentified rustlers, sources revealed that thousands of cattle have been brazenly stolen by persons who often attack villages at night to carry out the nefarious act. Jonathan Asake, a former member of the House of Representative, told The Nation on Sunday that one of his friends lost 40 cattle to rustlers in 2013. He said: “I have a friend who is a retired Naval Commander who has a farm in Zonkwa. About two months ago (the interview was conducted in July 2013), they went into the farm while he was away in Abuja and took over 40 of his cattle. The following week, they went to another farm not too far from his farm and took away over 150 cattle.” A victim of cattle rustling who claimed to have lost 50 cattle said, “they invaded our community, assembled all of us and took our cattle while we watched helplessly, because they were heavily armed.”

    The dog’s bad name

    However, the Miyatti Allah Breeders Association of Nigeria in Kaduna State are concerned that every attack going on across the north are being branded as activities of Fulani herdsmen while they suffer from the activities of cattle rustling. Chairman of the association, Alhaji Ahmadu Suleiman, said that cattle-rustling is occurring at an alarming rate in the state almost on a daily basis but the local vigilance groups have taken measures to address the menace, saying, “they even arrested some rustlers yesterday. We have also recovered stolen cattle, about 78 in number last week Friday at Marmara in conjunction with soldiers. The cattle and thief were handed over to the soldiers.”

    The Nation on Sunday could not confirm whether or not the Kaduna State government is actually aware of, or has received any report from the Emir of Birnin Gwari on the incident, especially the report of cattle rustlers taking over one of the villages in the state or the landing of helicopters bringing weapons to the rustlers. The Director General to the Governor on Media and Publicity, Ahmed Maiyaki, could not respond to calls and an SMS sent to him on the issue was not replied. However, when he eventually returned the call, he promised to get back after discussing with the State Commissioner of Police on the issue. But as at the time of this report, he never did and efforts to get the police spokesman in the state, Aminu Lawan, to speak proved abortive as he did not pick his calls. But the people are appealing to the government to “remember that we are Nigerians and for over two to three years now, we are suffering and nothing tangible has been done. No attempt was made to get to the criminals to attack them or to arrest them. There have only been road blocks which are counter-productive. Sometimes, people complain that the security personnel ask for money. There was a time in Birnin Gwari when some mobile police asked a citizen for money and he refused to give them so they decided to speed away with his vehicle and in the process killed some people. Have they come to protect us, to deal with the robbers or have they come to make us uncomfortable?”

    But for the advent of the Boko Haram insurgents into the social fabrics of the North East and Borno State, little would have been know about cattle-rustling to the indigenes of the state. This is because the only people dealing in cattle are the roving Fulani and not the majority Kanuri who is mostly into crop farming.

    However, with the dawn of the Boko Haram in the last decade, a little percentage of rustling was introduced by them to take care of their food needs. To make sure that the cattle they stole from villages, they created several settlements inside the savannah where they had every convenience such as their own cattle markets like the case of the Sambisa.

    The Nation learnt that before the Boko Haram became hydra headed and where chased into the savannah, sheep or goat stealing was done mostly by common criminals during the end of Ramadan as is the case in most communities along the north east. However, with the infiltration of the Lake Chad by bandits from the Republics of Chad, Niger and Mali, it became an issue of concern by agro managers in northern Borno. In as much as it became an occasional issue across several communities across the borders, cattle stealing was restricted to the foreign bandits some of who went as far as Gombe, Borgu and Kontagora in their banditry. The Kanuris will never get themselves involved in such a shameful act, said Mallam Mohammed Modu, a sheep dealer, who owns a small herd of sheep which he sells in Bolori market.

    “But with the advent of Boko Haram, we started hearing cases of our villages being attacked and the cattle being taken away. First they spared the cattle, and then as the years progressed, they had more money their leaders used to order for the killing of the animals.

    “They never had any special pattern of display that anybody can point out to. However, it was obvious that in the beginning of their campaign against western education, there were no criminal tendencies displayed by their leader Yusuf. However, after the death of Mohammed Yusuf, they started their criminal tendencies which involved stealing people’s cattle and taking them into the Sambisa where they store them in their markets

    “They did not only steal cows but even food stuffs which were used to take care of their teeming population,” said Modu.

    It is clear that the little rustling going on mostly by criminal gangs and the Boko Haram, rustling does not have any major effect on the beef consumption pattern of the people here. The few carmels that have been allegedly stolen by Boko Haram have been used for transportation through the bush when going on their slaughter spree but it has really not affected the carmel consumption of the people in Borno State.

  • Unending controversy over grazing land

    Unending controversy over grazing land

    BUT it appears the notion that government’s readiness to create enough grazing lands will solve the problem at hand may not be totally right. This is because following the latest rounds of violence involving Fulani herds, the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Dr. Akinwunmi Adesina announced on Wednesday, March 25, 2014 a decision of the National Economic Council (NEC) chaired by the Vice-President, Namadi Sambo to set up a committee to work out modalities for establishing grazing reserves across Nigeria.

    The Minister said that grazing reserves would help to check the smuggling of arms and ammunition across Nigeria borders by foreigners who come into the country disguised as cattle grazers. He aded that “issues such as increasing population of cattle, coupled with influx of foreign cattle from Nigeria’s neighboring countries as well as urbanization, resource degradation, were behind the need for the new government policy. We have a rising population of livestock, not only in Nigeria but also from our neighboring countries. A lot of animals are coming in from Chad and several other places leading to a large population that our current capacity cannot cope with.”

    But hardly had the Minister’s announcement reached town before opposition to the planned policy emerged, creating the impression that it may take more than the willingness of the federal government to create grazing lands to solve the problem of incessant clashes between Fulani herdsmen and local farmers.

    First to object was the Christian Association of Nigeria, (CAN). The body warned President Goodluck Jonathan against the proposed establishment of grazing reserves across the country for Fulani herdsmen as such move is another grand design to Islamise the nation. CAN President, Pastor Ayo Oritsejafor, while reacting to the plan, stated that such proposal was absolutely unacceptable to the Christian community which has been at the receiving end of a grand plan to Islamise the nation.

    He said establishing such reserves across the country as a means of resolving the protracted animosity between Fulani herdsmen and farmers in various parts of the country is treading a dangerous terrain.

    “The proposal which emerged at the end of the National Economic Council meeting presided over by Vice President Namadi Sambo, is another grand design to Islamise the nation. Fulani herdsmen are another chapter of Boko Haram. If President Goodluck Jonathan accepts the proposal, he should be ready for the consequences.

    “Christians in the country will not fold their arms while the Federal Government unilaterally hands over their farmlands to Fulani herdsmen for grazing reserves which will in a few years be converted to Hausa-Fulani emirates with emirs across the nation. Is there any other tribe in this country that can do these things for three years running now and get away with it? This culture of impunity must stop. The best way to tackle clashes between Fulani herdsmen and farmers head on is for the Federal Government to first and foremost investigate the source of arms supply to the herdsmen before the clashes grow out of control,” he said.

    According to him, “we must establish grazing reserves for them in their own locale where the government can establish modern facilities including schools, hospitals and such facilities that will make life conducive for them and their families bearing in mind that in other nations of the world, cows are not on parade on highways as we have here.” He said it was regrettable that certain leaders of the same tribe could hold a press conference where they accused the government of Benue State of being the brain behind the chaos that had left hundreds of people dead in that state.

    Oritsejafor appealed to Jonathan to find out why nobody had been prosecuted despite the huge number of casualties recorded in clashes in Benue, Plateau, Nasarawa, Delta, Edo, Ondo and several parts of the country, saying if such was not solved, allowing the Fulanis to form their colonies across the nation was dangerous.

    Also kicking against the move is the Tiv nation. According to leaders of the area, it makes no sense to think that a purely immigration problem can be solved by an internal creation of grazing reserves. The argument is that in comparative narrative, there is no rational nexus between stopping smuggling in of cocaine and creation of internal cocaine colonies across the country.

    Speaking on the proposed policy, Leonard Karshima Shilgba, a Tiv social commentator, said the move is certainly not the solution for arms and ammunition smuggling across our borders but securing of the borders will do. He argues that if the leadership of immigration and other relevant security agencies has failed to stop smuggling and illegal entrance across our borders then the President should consider a change of leadership.

    “It is outright stupidity to consider removing a rash on the hand by cutting off the hand. Don’t you think establishment of such cocaine colonies would rather instigate more smuggling of the substance? This comparison pointedly illustrates what the government is trying to do. Setting up of grazing reserves “across the country” The establishment of grazing reserves, which would require taking away of land from indigenous communities, would create more bloody baths across Nigeria. Any government that has failed to secure the borders of a sovereign nation it is mandated to defend is irresponsible.

    President Jonathan’s government has established a familiar pattern of handling problemsrunning away from the obvious solution. For example, it considers complete removal of fuel subsidy as the solution to the abuse of fuel subsidy funds. The government lacks the courage to punish offenders that it refers to as a “cabal”, and has instead decided to punish hapless Nigerians because, in its estimation, they cannot bite. I must warn though, that we the Tiv people will bite. We will not allow grazing reserves for Fulani cattle herders on any inch of Tiv land.

    Our forebears got us this land as far back as the 18th century AD when there was no Nigeria. And no Nigerian government will take it from us. Section 25 of the Nigerian Constitution provides that a Nigerian by birth must belong to a community indigenous to Nigeria, even though timelines for such inclusivity of communities “indigenous” to Nigeria have not been given (1900, 1914, or 1960?). Accordingly, every Fulani cattle herder who claims to be a Nigerian by birth (and not Chadian, Nigerien, Cameroonian, Senegalese, etc.) must find land in their state of origin (as all Nigerians by birth have them) and establish a grazing reserve there. In fact, their state governments can help them to so do.

    One of their Emirs, the Lamido of Adamawa, said on Thursday, March 26, 2014, on the floor of the on-going National Conference that his kingdom “extends to Cameroon”, and that he could be easily “assimilated” if he decided to go and reside there. What is the point? The Fulani people in Nigeria see nothing wrong in bringing in cattle herders from other African countries such as Cameroon, Niger, Chad, Senegal, etc., to graze in Nigeria. Establishing grazing reserves across Nigeria for Fulani cattle herders will mean the gradual take-over of land from indigenous communities in Nigeria!” Shilgba argued.

    With this scenario, there seems to be no end in sight yet for the incessant loss of innocent lives to violence caused by the rampaging Fulani herdsmen.