Tag: clashes

  • 2019: Police declare war on clashes

    •To hold politicians liable

    Ahead of the 2019 general election, the Lagos State Police Command said yesterday that it would not tolerate clashes and street fights by political thugs.

    Commissioner Imohimi Edgal warned politicians to control their supporters, vowing to prosecute any politician whose supporters engaged in violence, lawlessness.

    He spoke at a town hall security summit aimed at ensuring a violent free election, held on Lagos Island.

    Edgal said: “We cannot allow cultists to begin to fester, hoping that they will receive patronage from politicians. Lagos is a cosmopolitan state, an elite environment. So there is no room for thuggery in Lagos.

    “I am calling on politicians to abide by the rules. The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) has made it clear that any form of campaigns or political activities for presidency and National Assembly elections are to commence on November 18. Not earlier than that.

    “While governorship election campaigns will start on December 2. So, politicians and their supporters must be patient. Political activities will not begin under any guise before the scheduled dates.

    “We do not need to disguise campaigns in the name of thank you tour, or any other political activity before the stipulated time. Politicians should not go to public places and give money out. I am also advising that they should not give money out, because most of the troubles and killings that come up are usually because of money sharing.”

    According to him, cultism has assumed a frightening dimension in the state, recalling the recent killings on Ikorodu Road during a politician’s ‘Thank you tour.’

    “As stakeholders we must not take the issue of cultism with levity because it has the potential to dislocate the peace that we experience across the state.

    We will not allow people come from anywhere and heat up Lagos Island in the name of politics,” he stressed.

     

  • Kwara monarchs sue for peace to end clashes

    The Olofa of Offa, Oba Mufutau Gbadamosi, and the Elerin of Erin-Ile Oba AbdulGaniyu Ajibola Ibrahim, have urged communities in Offa and Oyun councils of Kwara State to embrace peace for the development of Ibolo land.

    Oba Gbadamosi and Oba Ibrahim spoke at the opening of a unity football competition, tagged: “Maigida Unity Cup,” in Erin-Ile.

    Ladorb Peace Initiative, a non-governmental organisation, organised the competition as part of a peace parley between Offa and Erin-Ile.

    Both communities had engaged in bloody clashes over the years.

    Oba Gbadamosi appealed to his subjects to allow peace reign.

    The monarch, who is the secretary of Kwara Traditional Council, appealed to sons and daughters of Ibolo land to eschew violence.

    He said: “Our presence at this event is to show our subjects that we are in good terms. You should learn how to co-habit, forget about the past and forge ahead for mutually-beneficial development of our areas.

    “God in his wisdom created us together and no community will leave for each other. So we should learn to forget our differences and continue with our legitimate businesses with one another.

    “We should be united and ready to address the challenges confronting us as a dialect, and set goals towards ensuring that Ibolo land becomes a force to be reckoned with in Kwara State.”

    Oba Ibrahim stressed the need for rulers and stakeholders to map out strategies to harness the area’s natural resources and strength for socio-economic and political development.

    He said they should identify, strengthen and explore the potential of each community and town for the interest of Ibolo land.

    The monarch, who hailed the initiator of the peace parley, described the move as a first.

    According to him, the initiator has set the pace for others to follow.

    He described the parley as a welcome development, explaining that the method adopted is fantastic and in line with best practices.

    Oba Ibrahim noted that football is a great unifying factor that knows no tribe or religion.

    He urged  towns and communities to accept the peace deal with sincerity, forget about the past and move forward for the development of Ibolo land.

    Chairman of the initiative Umar Balogun thanked the monarchs, saying their presence at the event would lay to rest negative claims by doubting Thomases.

  • 145 arrested over herdsmen/farmers clashes

    No fewer than 145 suspects have been arrested by the police over herdsmen/farmers clashes in some parts of the country, including Benue, Kaduna and Nasarawa states.

    The arrests occurred between January 2016 and January 2018, a Presidency source said.

    President Muhammadu Buhari who had given instructions to security agencies to fish out perpetrators of the violence, has been visiting some of the trouble spots and is expected in Benue State.

    The source, who does not want his name in print, also revealed that of the number, 124 had been charged to court, while 21 suspects are under investigation and waiting to be charged to court.

    He said: “So far, 106 suspects have been arrested and charged to court for prosecution on the following offences – criminal conspiracy, inciting disturbance of public peace, assault and mischief.”

    On March 5, no fewer than 24 persons were killed; 20 others were feared missing in two communities in Okpokwu Local Government Area of Benue State following fresh attacks by suspected herdsmen.

    “Early in the year, three suspects with Ak-47 rifles were apprehended by the Police Intelligence Team in Benue, nine members of untrained Civilian JTF/Livestock guards with prohibited firearms were arrested by the military in Arufa, a boundary town between Benue and Taraba with five AK-47 rifles who confessed that they were employed as Livestock Guards by a state government on a N150,000 monthly salary.

    “Similarly, 16 suspects were arrested in Gboko Local Government Area and investigations are ongoing. Several members of armed militia and unknown gunmen were killed or apprehended by the police.

    “Other arrests made include that of six suspects on January 1, 2018 following the police response to the killings in Akor Village in Guma Local Government Area on December 31, 2017.

    “Exhibits recovered from the suspect include three cutlasses, charms and other items. All the suspects were charged to court for culpable homicide. Concerted efforts are being made by the police to apprehend all culprits in the conflict,” the source said.’

    The police, he noted, have had their fair share of attacks while trying to fish out the culprits.

    Quoting a police source, he said: “On January 25 this year, two visiting Police Mobile Force (PMF) from 20 and 32 led by their respective unit commanders were ambushed by a group suspected to be pastoralists while they were on patrol at Sati village in Guma Local Government Area of Benue State.

    “During the ambush, Inspector Abdullahi Isiaka was shot and wounded. Sergeant Solomon Dung was reported missing.

    “We are doing our job diligently to ensure safety of lives and property in these flashpoint areas. So, it is unfair when some people say we are being partial in how we are handling the conflict,” the police source said.

    The Presidency source said that the Police had lost several of its officers. One is still missing in action in the course of restoring peace to the state.

    “About 30 of our colleagues have been killed in the line of duty. Sergeant Dung is still missing in action,” the source said.

    He said that the disbandment and disarming of the Livestock Guards and militia groups in the state are ongoing so as to forestall further violence.

  • Easy solution to farmer-herdsmen clashes

    SIR: Agriculture is the planting of crops and rearing of animals. Even if there are enough white-collar jobs to go round and we all get six-digit salaries, we would all starve without agriculture. Imagine getting to the market and meeting only fellow salary earners but no food to buy.

    The farmer-herdsmen clashes are therefore highly unfortunate and should be eradicated before everybody runs to Libya. How will young people be encouraged to stay here and farm in an atmosphere of danger?

    There is an easy solution to the problem. Cattle are reared in ranches in developed countries and they produce more meat and milk than our cattle.

    The money used for buying AK-47 rifles should be used to buy lawn mowers, fuel (to power them) and trucks (for transporting grass).

    Herdsmen should leave their cattle in ranches and go around in trucks with mowers to cut weeds and grasses, pile them into their vehicles and transport them to their cattle. For example, school football fields and the space between the lanes of dual carriageways across Nigeria contain plenty of grass to be mowed for cattle. (Herding cattle across expressways to eat the grass can obstruct traffic and cause terrible accidents).

    I’m sure all these cost less than an AK-47 rifle.

    Who will not be pleased at finding his farm (or house surroundings) weeded free of charge without a single crop trampled or eaten? (The herdsmen will also be getting free grass in return).  On the other hand, cattle bred in one place put on more flesh and produce more milk (like European cows) than cows herded around which burn up what they eat as they walk about from place to place. They will also be better guarded in ranches against cattle rustlers than in the open forests. So it is a win-win situation for both parties.

    Only humans can differentiate between crops and weeds; cows and other animals can’t. No matter how much you beat them into order, some of them will still eat or trample on crops.

    We need both meat and crops in this country. Let’s put on our thinking caps and prove to Donald Trump that we are not a “shithole country”.

     

    • Foluso Adeboye,

    Osun State.

  • Ogbeh on herdsmen-farmers clashes

    Ogbeh on herdsmen-farmers clashes

    ADAY before the conference on the transformation of the national livestock industry was held in Abuja, the Agriculture minister, Audu Ogbeh, last Monday addressed the concerns of many stakeholders regarding, particularly, the frequent clashes between herdsmen and farmers. He needed to assuage the feelings of hopelessness in the sector, but he was unable to raise expectations that the clashes would end soon. He said unequivocally that he was unable to stick his neck out to hazard a date when the conflicts would end.

    According to the minister, “I can’t give you a date when the conflicts will end, but I can give you a date when the conference will end. I can give you a date and I will, when implementation begins. And we will start as soon as possible.” He adds, “To solve this problem requires a great deal of planning and expenditure. You can’t think that after one meeting, then recommendations come, you want to solve the problem; you don’t have all the funds at once, because this is a problem that has been with us for quite a while, it’s just growing and getting worse. The budget we have can’t cope, the state governors must be involved. Other stakeholders who want to keep ranches, cattle must be here. If we don’t have the money, we ask the FAO, the World Bank or AfDB because that is their job- to help us out. Then, we draw our design, do a costing and pass it on to them.”

    As everyone recalls, there has been no consensus whatsoever on how to limit or even eradicate the clashes. A number of plans have been suggested, but many of those plans are mundane, insensitive and provocative. But as the minister said, even when the plans become fully sorted out, sufficient budgetary provision and infrastructure to tackle the worsening menace have been lacking. In effect, lack of thinking has apparently met lack of funds; and lack of urgency is feeding lack of resolve, thereby cooking a lethal brew of explosive rage certain to shake the nation to its foundations if the right tactics and policies are not adopted sooner than later.

     

  • Police, monarchs tackle herders-farmers clashes

    Police, monarchs tackle herders-farmers clashes

    For two days in Abuja, the police, traditional rulers, the Leadership Group, and others sought answers to perhaps Nigeria’s most pressing challenge, PRECIOUS IGBONWELUNDU and FAITH YAHAYA report.

    ‘We must provide an enabling environment for the herdsmen who do not require electricity or road. All they need is water and it is not being provided. I am an individual, I drink water and it is a private thing but animals also have the right to survive. When we bring in the argument of private business, we are linking it to ethnic or religious dimension; we are not looking at it from the business angle. Markets, dams, roads and others are provided by government. If we should tell a taxi driver to construct a road for himself because he plies the road, it makes mockery of Nigeria’

    The horrors of herders-farmers clashes are everywhere in their gory details. People, among them women and children, are murdered in cold blood, farmlands, houses are destroyed, herds are killed or rustled in thousands.

    Socio-economic activities are brought to a halt in affected communities, which affects the economy of the nation. Hunger, poverty and unemployment become the order of the day, posing grave threats to national security.

    No fewer than 12 states-Adamawa, Zamfara, Kaduna, Ekiti, Delta, Niger, Plateau, Benue, Enugu, Ebonyi, Anambra and Taraba-are battling with the crisis, apart from such other security challenges as communal wars, kidnapping and armed robbery.

    This was why the office of the Inspector-General of Police (IGP) Ibrahim Idris convened a national security summit in collaboration with the Leadership Group and the National Council of Traditional Rulers of Nigeria (NCTRN).

    Participants at the two-day summit held at the International Conference Centre (ICC), Abuja, expressed worries that the herders-farmers clashes might break the country if nothing was done to stop it.

    The participants included Governors of Kaduna, Benue and Gombe states, Nasri el-Rufai, Samuel Ortom and Ibrahim Dankwabo respectively, Minister for Interior, Gen. Abdulrahman Dambazau; Sultan of Sokoto, Sa’ad Abubakar III, Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi, Etsu Nupe, Alhaji Yahaya Abubakar, Obi of Onitsha, Igwe Nnaemeka Achebe, Emir of Gumi, Justice Lawal Gunmi, Chairman, Leadership Group, Sam Nda-Isaiah, Professors Oshita Oshita, Sani Luga, Jospeh Golwa, Hamidu Sharabutu, Olu Ogunsakin and Armstrong Adejo, Director General, Awareness Trust, Dr. Lydia Umar, legislators, as well as representatives of herders and farmers.

    They agreed there should be a standard operating procedure for livestock farming, just as the issue of forest guards, rehabilitation of grazing reserves and adoption of cattle ranching topped the discussions. The participants also suggested a harmonious relationship between the wives of herders and farmers, noting that it would nip clashes in the bud.

    IGP Idris said the way out of farmers-herders conflict was for Nigerians to be tolerant with each other.

    He said, “The main way to tackle the issue of herdsmen and farmers is for us to be our brother’s keeper. We grew up in this country and we saw how people migrated to other places and settled peacefully. I think it is just the element of give and take that is lacking and like somebody observed, Nigerians are becoming intolerant of each other. Until we stop the intolerance and believe that we have to forego something in order to get something, the communal clashes and ethnic disagreements would continue. The reason for the summit is for all stakeholders to assemble and proffer solutions to improving security across the country.”

    Nda-Isaiah suggested that the government should use the same force it deployed in tackling Boko Haram on the farmers-herders crisis, adding that the police should be equipped and deployed not only the military.

    Sharabutu, who’s the President, Veterinary Council of Nigeria, said the standard procedure would minimise open grazing and also stop young Fulani children from being herders. He said it would make the herders responsible for the actions of their cattle, adding that it would also stop night grazing.

    Sharabutu presented a paper on “identifying regulatory controls for movement of livestock and the cultural relationship with farming communities: Options for peaceful co-existence.” He said the lack of infrastructural provisions for grazing was the main cause of the conflicts.

    He lamented that the established and developed stock routes for grazing have been either overtaken by buildings, farmlands or abandoned, noting that the development has forced herders to keep moving in order to save their cattle.

    According to him, cattle need at least six hectares of land per year to survive and there were approximately 19million grazing cattle in the country, forcing herders to scavenge.

    Sharabutu said though there were 417 grazing reserves to cover four million hectares, only about 170 were gazetted, just as he pointed over taxation from authorities and lack of water for the cattle as other reasons herders avoid road shoulders.

    On the way forward, Sharabutu said all herders must be registered and identified, adding that government should provide necessary infrastructure that would encourage people to establish livestock farms and settle down.

    He said: “The issue of infrastructural provision for the existing grazing reserve is the main thing. Why we keep talking about maintaining animal farms, those establishment (grazing reserves) particularly in the northern parts of the country, have no deliberate allocation that would solve the problem of these livestock farmers.

    “If we have to do that, then we must provide for them in the budget and make sure that these established grazing reserves must work at all cost. The Ministry of Environment must provide forest guards to police our bushes.

    “Most of our security agents are resident in town. It should look at the issue of forest guards. If we had forest guards that are operational in Sambisa forest, Boko Haram would not stay there and dug tunnels, where ammunition were buried without people knowing.

    “Already, the Minister of Agriculture has brought the issue of Agro Rangers but that is to protect farm lands and crops, forest guards are meant to protect those areas and they are to be provided by our own institutions in this country.

    “Everybody will tell you cattle rearing is private business. Agriculture and farming are private business. Who gives them the feeds and who promulgate policies? Who build access roads and markets for traders? Who gives them loans? Why can’t the government provide dams for the herders?

    “So, there is an extent to which we talk about private business. We must provide an enabling environment for them. The typical herdsmen do not require electricity nor road, all he needs is water and it is not being provided. I am an individual, I drink water and it is a private thing but animals also have the right to survive.

    “When we bring the argument of private business, we are linking it to ethnic or religious dimension; we are not looking at it from the business angle. Markets, dams, roads and others are provided by government. If we should tell a taxi driver to construct a road for himself because he plies the road, it makes mockery of Nigeria.”

    Sharabutu talked about the functionality of traditional rulers and prosecutors, whom he said, are usually heads of professional bodies such as the blacksmiths, farmers and herders.

    “Now if we make them functional, they will be very serious and thereby solve the problem at the beginning point. Traditional rulers must be given a proper standing not the ceremonial kind of leadership. We have cited example on how they are commended but they do not have any legal backing to actually implement their activties.

  • 12 feared dead in Rivers cult clashes

    •Police confirm four deaths 

    Gunmen suspected to be cultists on Saturday killed 12 residents of Ula-Upata and Edoha of Ahoada East Local Government of Rivers State.

    The dead included a woman and her three children.

    The attacks occurred barely 48 hours after some gunmen killed three persons in Okwale in Khana Local Government.

    The attack on Ula-Upata reportedly occurred at 1 pm while Edoha was reportedly invaded at 9 pm on same day.

    Police Commissioner Musa Kimo confirmed the killing yesterday in Port Harcourt, the state capital.

    The police chief said four persons were killed at Ula-Upata but did not confirm the casualty at Edoha.

    He listed the victims as: Monica Zion (62), Gospel Nwuka (45), Patricia Ziko (42) and Rogers Nwuka (28).

    Kimo said four teams had been deployed in Ula-Apata to restore peace.

    The police chief urged residents to give the command information to enable it take prompt action on crimes.

    A source said armed men invaded and killed 10 residents of Ula-Apata at 1 pm and moved to Edoha, killing two residents at 9 pm.

    The police said normalcy had returned to Ula-Apata, contrary to reports that the area had been deserted.

    The command urged the residents to go about their legitimate duties without fear.

    It assured them of protection.

    An eyewitness said: “Yesterday (Saturday) was bloody at Ula-Ukpata and Edoha. Gunmen killed 19 persons at Ula-Ukpata and Edoha. They invaded Ula-Ukpata at 1 pm and killed 12 persons.”

    “They reappeared at 9 pm and killed two more residents, and moved to Edoha, a nearby village, and beheaded five. The heads of the victims were left on Edoha Road.”

    Police assistant spokesperson Grace Iringe-Koko attributed the tragedy to a cult war between two rival groups.

    Iringe-Koko, who did give details, said only two deaths were confirmed.

  • Buhari, governors agree on ranches to end herdsmen/farmers clashes

    Buhari, governors agree on ranches to end herdsmen/farmers clashes

    To end the incessant herdsmen/farmers clashes across the country, President Muhammadu Buhari and governors have agreed to establish ranches across the country.

    This has put paid to the plan to use grazing reserves.

    Plateau State Governor Simon Lalong stated this yesterday in Jos, the state capital.

    Lalong spoke at the dedication of the new headquarters of Evangelical Church Winning All (ECWA).

    He said grazing reserves will not address the clashes and the killings.

    “The President and governors agreed that there would be no grazing areas; ranches would be established by the government where the cattle would be kept in one place and fed.

    “Government will provide facilities like medical, schools and other needs in the ranches,” he said.

    Lalong said the ranches would not be for Fulani herdsmen alone but for whoever rears cattle.

    He said the Buhari administration inherited a myriad of problems, saying that herdsmen/farmers clashes is only one of such problems and urged the people to be patient.

    He asked Plateau citizens to pray for the state and the Federal Government as all the problems could not be solved in one year.

    Senator Jeremiah Useni (Plateau South), said the delegates at the 2014 National Conference agreed that grazing reserves should be a state affair, not federal.

    He said it would be difficult for farmers to support the establishment of grazing areas as they would not donate their farms for grazing.

    In his sermon, Rev. Anthony Farinto, former ECWA President, called on leaders at all levels to urgently address the difficulties Nigerians are going through.

    The cleric, who condemned the recent killing of a military officers, urged the Federal Government to do all within its power to address the security challenges facing the country.

    “If a serving Colonel could be kidnapped and killed, it portends serious danger for the country,” he said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Kaduna State Deputy Governor, Bala Bantex, attended the service.

  • Herdsmen/farmers clashes worsen

    Herdsmen/farmers clashes worsen

    Incessant conflict between farmers and Fulani herdsmen across the country is affecting the security of communities. These conflicts have led to the destruction of land and water resources as the hooves of cattle trample on them. The destruction of crops by the herdsmen continues to place restraint on effective utilisation of arable farmland, reports BODE DUROJAIYE.

    Unless the Federal Government urgently addresses incessant encroachment of farmlands by a group called Bororo cattle rearers, and the havoc they wreak on crops, bloody clashes between the farmers and the intinerant herdsmen would be inevitable.

    In Oyo State, villagers from about eight villages, and settlers from Ilora farm settlement in the Afijio Local Government Area of the state have already declared total war on the  cattle rearers. The affected villages include Oluwatedo, Temi-dire, Idode, Kaye, Fitila, Isale-Awon, and Ekefa. The angry peasant farmers narrated how they lost millions of naira to the damages done to their farm produce by the herdsmen.

    Spokespersons for the villagers, Messers Sunday Adeladan and Jacob Ayoola, told our correspondent that invasion of their farmlands by the Bororos started late last year, and that frantic efforts to check the criminal acts were often met with violent attacks by the cattle rearers.

    “Villagers from each of the communities planted cassava, maize, and yams on about 50 acres of farmlands each, but were unable to harvest five ridges because the cattle owned by the Bororo had eaten up all the crops. Whenever we contact these Bororos on the damages and the need for compensation, they will draw out their sharp daggers and cork their guns in readiness for attacks,” they said.

    They accused the police of complicity in the matter, and stressed that all peaceful means to seek amicable resolution were usually thwarted by their attitudes.

    “What is worrisome and provocative is the preferential treatment accorded these Bororos.  If you go to the police station or police post to lodge complaint about them, rather than   act accordingly and do thorough investigation, we (farmers) the complainants will later be treated as the accused. Often times, the police will lock us in their cells, tortured us, on the orders of the Bororos,”they lamented.

    The spokespersons added that the farmers are indebted to over N20 million as loans received, but could not pay back because there is no means of doing so.

    They said: “Our means of livelihood have been damaged and eaten up by cows; we have no other means of sustenance. Our families are dying of hunger, nothing for us to eat let alone allowing our children to go to school. No money to buy text books, school sandals, not to even talk of their uniforms. It is as serious as that.

    “Failure to comply with the ultimatum may invoke anger and violent reactions from us because an hungry person is a mad person. Authorities concerned must intervene now before it is too late.”

    Similarly, Chairman, Ilora Farm Settlers Association, Alhaji Azeez Giwa, lamented that over 8,009 acres of farmlands were eaten up and destroyed by cows owned by the Bororos between 2003 and this year.

    Giwa hinted that an agric loan of N7million received by the settlers from the government could not be repaid, since their means of livelihood had been eaten up. Consequently, he said N40 million is needed as compensation for the   damages.

    He further alleged threats to lives and properties by leader of the Bororo cattle rearers, one Alhaji Jere, who boasted to be untouchable and vowed not to relent in the destruction and damages of their  farm products.

    The situation is not different in Oke-Ogun area where farmers are threatening a showdown over what they referred to as “unabated criminal onslaught” being unleashed by the Bororo cattle rearers who migrated from neighbouring Niger Republic.

    The latest was the destruction of farm produce valued at about N1.5 million on a 50-acre land of maize farm at Simi Akorede border town in the Saki-west Local Government Area of the state.

    The food crops were not only eaten up by over 200 cattle, the cattle rearers also destroyed the left over with their cutlasses. When the owner of the crops, Mr. Akeem Oladejo, reported the matter to the police, he said no action was taken. The daredevil herdsmen, according to him, “even threatened to kill my family members if I dared attempt to prevent their cattle from subsequent damages”.

    Oladejo who collected agricultural loan from the state government almost lost his life before taking his matter to the umbrella body of all farmers associations in the area for appropriate action.

    The intervention of the Local Government Council, according to him, saved the situation from degenerating into bloodbath.

    As a result, tension is already building in the community.  What is more is  the pathetic case of a middle-aged peasant farmer whose left arm was chopped off at  Ipapo in the Itesiwaju Local Government Area.

    The unsuspecting farmer decided to go to his farm one Sunday morning to harvest some tubers of yams for the family meal. On reaching the farm, he saw two Bororo men harvesting some tubers of yam for their cattle to feed on.

    After challenging the Bororo men, the farm owner wanted to pick those tubers of yam already harvested, when one of the cattle rearers angrily drew out a sharp sword from a bag in his left arm. Sensing danger, the farmer threw away the tubers of yam and spoke with his heels.

    The Bororo man still pursued him until he fell over a big stone where the cattle rearer cut off his left hand. Scream of pains attracted passersby who rushed to the scene and took the farmer to a private hospital. He was later taken to the University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan, the state capital for further treatment. The Bororo men  bolted away with their cattle and could not be apprehended till today.

    Going by several reports of herdsmen encroaching and grazing their cattle on farmlands and the pattern of attacks on farmer’s settlements and communities, the Fulani appear overwhelming as the aggressors.

    A Fulani herdsman based in Saki, Abdullahi Sadeeq, said: “Our herd is our life because to every nomad, life is worthless without his cattle. What do you expect from us when our source of existence is threatened? The encroachment of grazing fields and routes by farmers is a call to war.”

    It was gathered that following the protracted crises, the immediate past House of Assembly passed a law for the constitution of a committee in each of the 33 Local Government Areas of the state to be headed by council chairman, while the Divisional Police Officer serves as the secretary.  Other members must include heads and representatives of the communities, as well as of the Bororo cattle rearers.

    As a measure to address this issue, the Federal Government evolved a policy of establishing nationwide grazing reserves and routes.

    Apart from existing grazing areas, the Federal Capital Territory planned three reserves to serve about 15million pastoralists in the Northern states, including the demarcation of 175,000 hectares of grazing land, building of veterinary service centres, and construction of settlements for nomads to use en route. A total of $247 million was earmarked for the project. The government also demarcated about 1,400km livestock route from Sokoto State in the Northwest to Oyo State in the Southwest; and another 2,000km route from Adamawa State in the Northeast to Calabar in the Delta region.

    So far, the state of the country’s grazing reserves has remained unchanged. Former Minister of Agriculture, Dr. Adesina Akinwunmi once said of the current 415 grazing reserves across the country, only 141 have been gazetted with less than 20 equipped with resources for pastoralists.

    Although a Presidential Committee, of which the former minister was a member during former President Good luck Jonathan administration, was set up and given specific terms of reference aimed at improving existing grazing reserves and designing a new financing regime for them, the committee remained inactive.

    However, the immediate past government earmarked N10 billion for the operation of the Great Green Wall Programme (GGWP) to boost the fight against desert encroachment, a major factor that has driven pastoralists from the far North to the Northcentral region in search of grazing fields.

    From 2011 to 2014, an analysis of the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development’s capital budget showed inconsistent allocation to the development of grazing routes and reserves. In 2011, the ministry allocated N31, 404,899,584 for capital projects. It channeled N310, 489,185 for its National Grazing Reserves and Pasture Development Programme that year.

    Of its N45,009,990,000 capital budget for 2012, a total N930,000,000 was allocated to the development of graving reserves, stock routes (1140km) and resting points across Nigeria. In 2013 and 2014, the ministry allocated N130,582,000 and N100,130,000 respectively from its N50,808,871,428 and N35,151,172,583 capital budgets in the year under review for countrywide grazing reserves development.

    Meanwhile, a llawyer, Wale Adeoye, has suggested that cattle routes and grazing reserves should be “phased out” to emphasise ranching.

    He identified cattle rustling as a disincentive to ranching and called for “better policing”.

    “State governments which have large livestock population should maintain grazing reserves. The three-tiers of government should equally embark on a continuous “modernisation programme” in which nomadic herdsmen will be integrated  into settled communities based on established cattle ranches with fodder development technologies, and including abattoirs, processors and other businesses along the livestock value chain.

    “The integrated development programme should be undertaken and wrapped up within a period of  between five and 10 years after which such settlements should have become self-sustaining with the full integration of the nomadic herdsmen community into modern Nigeria political economy.”

    The lawyer also advocated that traditional institutions should be primarily responsible for the conflict resolution between the herdsmen and farmers, and also their respective associations.

    “The farmers would want their crops to be protected, while the cattleman will also want their cattle to feed. So, the government should fashion out peaceful means to end the crisis.”

    At the other end, the sentiments of those opposed to ceding land to cattle herdsmen are no less extreme as host communities see the idea of grazing reserves and routes as “provocative” and “selfish”. They alleged that the move is open to religious and political biases.

    According to two farmers, who spoke in Saki, Mallam Adio Aleem and Mr. Adekojo Alade, the proposal for citing grazing routes and reserves across the country is selfish and provocative. “You can’t ask people in an agrarian area like Oke-ogun, for example, to cut out areas and designate them as grazing precincts just to avoid incessant conflicts with herdsmen. The proposal is simply provocative,”the averred.

    No one has been able to find a middle ground between these two extremes. And so the bloodletting continues. In addition to herds destroying farms in their grazing strides, local communities are also buffeted by large-scale commercial farmers.

  • Agiliti clashes

    •Mile 12 tragedy in Lagos highlights need to phase out ‘okada’ and foster ethnic peace and harmony

    March 1, 2016 was a day many residents of the Agiliti area of Mile 12 in Lagos would continue to remember for a long time. It was a day that another senseless clash erupted there, after a commercial motorcyclist knocked down a woman. His refusal to take the woman to hospital led to the bloody clash in which lives were lost even as properties were destroyed. Policemen and soldiers eventually restored law and order while the state government promptly shut down the Mile 12 Market.

    ‘Okada’ riders knock down pedestrians daily, not only in Lagos, but in many other places where they are still tolerated. But the Agiliti incident was not seen as one of those impunities of the ubiquitous ‘okada’ riders obviously because of the ethnic dimension that it took. The ‘okada’ rider is Hausa while his victim is Yoruba. Still, so what? After all, Hausas and Yorubas are living harmoniously in other parts of the state.

    The answer to the question of what was special in the Agiliti incident to warrant the clashes that followed could therefore be found in the fact that both ethnic groups had barely been tolerating one another. The clashes therefore would look more as opportunistic riots; a symptom of existing tensions among the two ethnic nationalities.

    This puts the ball (of settlement) right in the court of the ethnic leaders in the area. The crisis is an indictment on their ability to foster cordial relations among the people. In any human relationships, there would always be disagreements. But these do not necessarily have to snowball into violent clashes. This is why we call on the various ethnic heads to initiate programmes that would foster unity among the tribes. They could arrange periodic meetings where they thrash out issues of mutual concern; organise get-together parties, cultural shows, etc. to let off some steam. If they had been doing things like these, the pent-up anger that led to the three-day clashes in Agiliti would have been avoided. This goes for all other places where we have such ethnic diversities in the state. The government must also take proactive measures to ensure that we do not have serious security issues in these areas.

    But we cannot put the sad event behind us without returning to the remote cause. The incident has thrown up the continued desirability or otherwise of commercial motorcycle riders on Lagos roads. About four years ago, the immediate past administration in the state barred ‘okada’ from plying some roads. Crime rate in the state dropped significantly and the National Orthopaedic Hospital, Igbobi, Lagos, which used to have an ‘okada’ ward also confirmed that there was a decrease in the number of casualties of ‘okada’ accidents.

    Because of their penchant for impunity, the ‘okada’ riders have returned to some of the roads where they are barred. It has become increasingly clear that most of them have no regard for the law; they ride against traffic as in the present case, disobey traffic lights, carry more than one passenger and hardly wear safety helmets, etc. If they have issues with other motorists on the road, they display an uncommon camaraderie, rally round their own, notwithstanding whether he is the one at fault. Crimes associated with ‘okada’ riders have continued on the upswing, not to talk of the security implications, especially given that many of those plying the trade are not Nigerians. Above all, it is not a fit and proper transportation mode befitting the status of a mega city like Lagos.

    Perhaps it is high time the state government began to think of a complete ban on ‘okada’. A time there was when many Lagosians heard of ‘okada’ in other places but never imagined it would ever be an issue in Lagos. But now that it has, banning it would only lead to people trekking some reasonable distance, which is also good for their health.

    It also would not be a bad idea if the Mile 12 Market is relocated. It has out-  lived its usefulness in its present location even as it constitutes a major impediment to free flow of traffic.