Tag: Fulani herdsmen

  • ‘How God saved me, my wife from herdsmen’

    For Mr. Augustine Nzedigwe Udealor, his family and the people of Mmiata Anam, Anambra West Local Government Area of Anambra State, April 4, 2019 would remain evergreen in their memories.

    Some group of persons suspected to be Fulani herdsmen had on that faithful day stormed the agrarian community around 5 am, killing no fewer than six farmers and leaving about 30 others with various degrees of injuries.

    Although the government had assured that the crisis between herdsmen and crop farmers in the community which led to the ugly incident has been resolved, there is still palpable apprehension among locals in the area.

    While some have fled their farms for fear of a recurrence, others temporarily stopped going to theirs, while some courageous ones resort to occasional visits to theirs farms.

    One of the survivors of the killings, Mr. Augustine Nzedigwe Udealor, was full of gratitude to God for saving his life and that of his wife, attributing their survival to divine intervention.

    Narrating his ordeal to the Nation, Udealor said they could have been among the dead if not that blinded their eyes from seeing where they hid.

    According to him, they had gone to work on their farm around 8 am when the herdsmen struck.

    Read aso: Ekiti governor regrets killings by herdsmen

    “We were working in a farm close to our house when a neighbor came to inform my wife about the presence of the herdsmen in the community.

    “My wife and the woman were discussing the matter without knowing that I was overhearing what they were saying.

    “It was not up to 10 minutes that some heavily armed men surrounded me with guns and machetes.

    “As soon as I screamed, they came after me, my wife and the neighbor. We all ran in different directions.

    “In fact, it was God that saved us because when they came searching for me, they couldn’t see me inside the bush were I hid, even though I was seeing them.

    “I hid there for some hours out of fear, because I didn’t know exactly where they were.”

    Udealor however said he later came out and was able to see his wife and the neighbor, after searching for them for a while.

    He said while one of them was wielding a loaded gun, others were holding machetes in their hands.

    He added, “My wife later told me that the herdsmen had killed one Chief Obugo Nnakwe while he was fetching firewood in his farm.

    “I even heard they killed four people in the nearby Iyiogbu farm settlements and burnt their houses before coming to our side.”

    Describing the incident as unfortunate, Udealor said it was a reprisal attack in revenge for the January 29, 2019 clash that led to the death of two herdsmen alleged to had raped wives of two farmers in the area.

    “When the farmers overheard their wives shouting for help, the herdsmen attacked them with cutlass, but the farmers overpowered them.

    “They collected the herdsmen’s cutlasses which they used to kill them,” he added.

    He said the herdsmen were later arrested and remanded in prison.

  • Miyetti Allah pledges to work for peace in Ondo

    The Miyyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria on Wednesday resolved to address the incessant kidnappings and destruction of farmlands in Ondo State.

    The resolution followed a stakeholders’ meeting held at the Governor’s Office in  Akure.

    The meeting,  which was at the instance of the state government, was to find a lasting solution to the farmers -herders clashes and other criminal acts.

    Alhaji Muhammad Kirowa, the National President of the cattle breeders’ association, said his leadership had not condoned criminality in any way.

    Kirowa, who assured stakeholders of the resolve to assist farmers, pledged to bring an end to the farmers-herdsmen crisis.

    “We are here to fish out criminals among the pastoralists. They should come and lay down their arms, and if they refuse, we will work with security agents to go after them.

    “We have also agreed to stop night grazing and under-age grazing. We will impose a penalty on whoever allows his cows to stray into farms.

    “Night movement of migrants will also be organised with security agents. The state government should also support biometric capture of our members in the state for identification and security purposes,’’ he said.

    In his remarks, Akeredolu urged members of the association to notify security agents about suspected criminals in their group.

    The governor also promised to enact laws against underage and night grazing, adding that the state government would capture the biometric data of all cattle rearers in the state for proper identification.

    “We will work with anything resolved because they are good decisions.

    “ Night grazing and under age  grazing must be looked at  almost immediately so that we can have laws that will ban both,” he said.

    Responding on behalf of security  agencies in the state, Brig.-General James Ataguba, the Commander, 32 Artillery Brigade, Akure, said kidnapping was one of the most worrisome security challenges in the state.

    He, however,  appealed to all members of Miyetti Allah to hearken to the plea of the association’s leadership and refrain from criminality. (NAN)

  • Taraba community: We’ve lost 62 persons to herdsmen attack

    …Yandangs seek justice

    The Yandang Community in Taraba state on Wednesday said the killing of six Yandang traders at Iware market square, a Jalingo suburb, on Tuesday, has brought the total number of its natives killed by herdsmen to sixty two, only from last Sunday.

    Six Yandangs, already displaced by Fulani herdsmen hostilities in Lau local government area, were hacked to death when they brought cows to Iware market to sell and alleviate their sufferings in an IDP camp.

    They were trailed and brutally massacred by Fulani marauders who alleged the cows were stolen ones.

    Leader of the Yandang ethnic group, Alfred Kobbiba, who condemned the attack and killing, said the victims were not cattle rustlers.

    Kobbiba, a Special Adviser to Governor Darius Ishaku on Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), said they were demanding justice over the dastardly act.

    He briefed reporters in Jalingo while crying to security agencies to bring the perpetrators to book.

    Kobbiba said: “The brutal killing of six of our people at Iware cattle market is most unfortunate. We are saddened.

    “All the six people killed on Tuesday in Iware cattle market are well known to me and I can attest of their good character.

    “The cows they brought to the market for sale were their personal cows. Our people are in the business of cattle rearing too, contrary to the claims of the attackers.

    Read Also: Taraba bridge collapses after downpour

    “Five of those killed are Yandang people from Mayo Lope while one is from a neighbouring village.

    “We strongly suspect that the killing is a continuation of the violence by Fulani herdsmen already going on in Lau,” he said.

    “If the cows were really stolen from them, why didn’t they report the matter for their cows to be returned? Instead they killed the people and disappeared.”

    The Yandang people alleged that the Fulani herders have sacked several communities in Lau local government area and are now grazing freely in their crop farms.

    They called on the federal and state governments to address the matter, adding: “the situation has now posed a serious danger, as food insecurity looms.”

    Their leader (Kobbiba) disclosed that many, injured in the market attack, were receiving treatment at the Federal Medical Centre in Jalingo.

    A security meeting was yesterday held by Governor Darius Ishaku and the commissioner of police on how to “trace the killers.”

    Governor Ishaku told The Nation that “cow theft is a criminal act that will not be condoned but is not enough reason to kill anyone.”

  • Herdsmen kill six traders in Taraba market

    Suspected herdsmen on Tuesday struck at a suburb of Jalingo, the Taraba State capital, killing six traders at Iware market.

    It was gathered that the deceased were also robbed of their cash.

    Five of the victims are natives of Mayo-Lope, Lau local government area of Taraba State where scores were massacred and several others injured by herdsmen few days ago.

    The other victim, whose name was given as Ethan Nast, is said to be a resident of Damsa local government area of Adamawa State.

    A dependable source said the men, already displaced by crisis involving Fulani herdsmen in their area (Lau) on Tuesday came to Iware market with their cows to sell, do some other businesses and alleviate their suffering.

    “They were trailed by their assailants all the way from Mayo-Lope where they set off, to   Iware where they were hacked to death at the market,” the source said the killers disappeared immediately after their onslaught.

    Sources said the killers invaded the market as though they were traders.

    Another source, an eyewitness, said, as the market began to swell with buyers and sellers, the attackers emerged from the crowd in large number and began to machete the victims.

    Four bodies were counted immediately. One of the victims who was identified as Baban Lumu, a cement dealer from Mayo-Lope, was fleeing from his attackers to a nearby police outpost, but no sooner had he arrived the police station than he died of the multiple cuts. Police recovered N80,050 from him.

    Another victim died in the hospital.

    Read Also: Taraba killings: Police arrest four suspects

    “The market was disrupted, as people, men and women, ran for their dear lives,” an eyewitness  told The Nation.

    Armed policemen, led by a Divisional Police Officer (DPO), Abubakar Inusa, a Chief Superintendent of Police (CSP), arrived at the scene, at the nick of time.

    They were seen battling hard to restore normalcy and convey the injured to the hospital.

    Three persons were seriously injured. They were taken to the Federal Medical Centre (FMC) Jalingo, for treatment but one of them died in the hospital of “excess bleeding.”

    The six bodies were deposited at the FMC’s morgue.

    The arrival of the bodies threw the hospital in mourning mood, with many patients, particularly women, lamenting, wailing and weeping uncontrollably.

    Police spokesman, David Misal, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), confirmed the attack and killings to The Nation.

    Speaking with our correspondent, Misal said: “Six people were killed at Iware market by yet-to-be-identified persons.

    “Some people brought cows to the market for sale but were attacked and killed when information got to Fulanis that the cows were stolen ones, he said.

    Misal, who said the police were able to restore calm in the area, disclosed that the Police Command was gathering intelligence on how to trace those behind the attack and whether the attack is a spillage of the violence in Lau.

    “We are trying to find out the perpetrators who took the law into their hands, instead of reporting to us, if really a case of cattle rustling was established,” he said.

  • Suspected herdsmen kill three farmers in Benue

    Suspected Fulani herdsmen have shot and killed  three farmers  in Tse- Tyodugh village ,Tombo ward, Logo local Government area of Benue state .

    A community Leader and All Progressive Party (APC) chieftain Chief Job Tiza, who confirmed the killings gave the names of those killed as Ormoba Tsebo, Mkarsha Kyaave and Aondofa Iorliam.

    Chief TIza told The Nation that the farmers were killed about 7; 30am on their way to the farm.

    He said four person were riding on one Okada to their farm when they were ambushed by suspected Fulani herdsmen who open fire at them killing three on the spot, while one survived and is on admission in the hospital .

    Read Also: Herdsmen killed two soldiers in Benue

    Tiza appeared to security agencies to live up to their responsibility of protecting lives and property, especial operation whirl stroke.

    Chairman of Logo local Government area Hon. Richard Nyajo ,who also confirmed the incident dismissed reports by military that’s internally Displaced persons have returned this their home .

    Hon. Nyajo called on security agencies to tackle security challenges in the Local Government .

    Police Spokesman Moses Yamu, a DSP, said he was yet to get the report.

    “As we speak, those displaced persons have refused to return the area because the herdsmen are still occupying all the farm areas and entire communities.

  • Reps to NSC: Rescind your decision on anti-open grazing law

    The House of Representatives on Wednesday asked the National Security Council to rescind its decision calling on States to suspend Anti Open Grazing Law.

    The lawmakers also asked the Federal Government to submit a supplementary budget to the National Assembly to develop Colonies immediately in those states that have agreed to donate land.

    The resolution of the House was sequel to the adoption of the prayers of a motion of urgent National Importance by a member, John Dyegh (APC Benue) titled: “Need to rescind the decision of the Security Council as announced by the Minister of Defence calling on States to suspend ranching and Anti Open Grazing Law.”

    While moving the motion, the lawmakers said that the Fulani Herdsmen crises in Nigeria predate the present administration of Muhammadu Buhari.

    He further said: ” For the past over 7 years, the clashes between Fulani herdsmen and farmers has been on the increase with so many lives lost with farmlands and villages overtaken by herdsmen and resultant  effect of farmers abandoning their ancestral homes and God given lands.

    “They live in camps as refugees and are dying in those camps for lack of food and proper medical care as their land is taken over by herdsmen.”

    Dyegh said the unprovoked Agatu killings by Fulani herdsmen that claimed over 800 persons and ravaged over 20 villages” made Benue eminent sons and daughters to come together to find a lasting solution to the problem.”

    Read Also: Police equivocate about anti-open grazing laws

    ” And after robust debates they came up with the recommendation of Anti- Open Grazing Law and called on the State Government to process it by a bill into Law,” adding that Section 4(7) of the 1999 Constitution gives express powers to be the State Assemblies to make laws for the good governance of the states.

    “This is not the only state that has made laws for good governance in its state. For instance, we have seen states making laws against trading in alcohol and prostitution and such laws are obeyed by visitors and indigenes alike without interference by the federal government.”

    He said it is wrong given the tenets of democracy for the federal government to dabble into the affairs of the states “ignoring the laws of the land in such a manner as this, more so as the Land Use Act has given power over land to Governors.”

    The lawmaker reminded his colleagues that the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development has said that Eleven (11) states have agreed to donate enough land to accommodate all the cows by the herdsmen into colonies ” to end this crises, more so that even the National Economic Council in one of its meetings also agreed that Ranching is the best way to end this crises.”

    When the Speaker of the House, Yakubu Dogara called for a vote on the motion, it was supported by majority of members.

  • Miyetti Allah opts for cattle colony, rejects ranching in Nasarawa

    Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN), said it preferred the establishment of cattle colonies to ranching system as a solution to the end farmers/herdsmen crisis in Nasarawa state.

    The state MACBAN chairman, Husseini Muhammed, made this known in a town hall meeting in Lafia, saying the ranching system is expensive and very difficult to manage.

    Preferring cattle colony, he said it is cheaper, affordable and is inclined with the norms, culture and tradition of Fulani herdsmen.

    Hussein, who described his Fulani kinsmen as peaceful and law abiding people of this country, blamed the anti-open grazing law in Benue state as being responsible for the clashes seen in recent times between herders and the Tiv farmers.

    Read Also:Killings: Court asked to declare Fulani herdsmen, Miyetti Allah terrorists

    He stated, “We have lost over 60 herdsmen and thousands of our cows also are nowhere to be found, they got lost due to hunger, while others were killed by the Tiv people from Benue state”.

    In a related development, the Tiv Development Association through its chairman, Mr Boniface Effe accused Fulani herdsmen of rendering havoc on Tivs communities for no just cause than the anti-open grazing law in Benue which does not have anything to do with Nasarawa state.

    Mr Boniface said: “Over 200 people lost their lives, while 8570 houses were destroyed in all the attacks carried out this year by suspected Fulani herdsmen.”

    He called on the Federal Government to facilitate the process for Tiv people to return to their homes and begin this year’s farming.

    He however, appreciated Governor Tanko Almakura for providing them with relief materials, expressing confidence that no distant time they will all return to their ancestral homes.

  • Herdsmen kill five in Benue

    Suspected Fulani herdsmen have killed five farmers at Ukemberagya district, near Anyii, in Logo local government area of Benue State.

    Anyii is the country home of former Governor of the state, Gabriel Suswam and was the last Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camp Vice President Yemi Osinbajo visited before returning to Abuja later on Wednesday.

    The Vice President visited the state on a peace mission on Wednesday.

    A community leader, Chief Joseph Anawah, told The Nation on phone that the attackers who were armed with sophisticated weapons stormed the settlements in Ukemberagya at 6:30 a.m. and operated for about three hours.

    “They moved from one village to another, shot sporadically and razed houses,” he said.

    Anawah listed those killed as Bem Torjem, Apedzan Chia and Ikpuku Korya.

    The spokesman of the state police command, Moses Yamu, said he has not been briefed on the incident.

     

  • Benue: ‘Fulani herdsmen’ come of age

    An April 24, the ubiquitous, all-slaughtering, “Fulani killer herdsmen”, the sweet headline invention of Nigeria’s southern media, struck again in Benue.

    In Ayer-Mbalom community, in Benue’s Gwer East local government, the “killer herdsmen” attacked St. Ignatius’ Catholic Church, killing two Catholic priests: Joseph Gor and Felix Tyolaha, among the 17 that lay dead.

    But when on April 27 preliminary arrests were made, the attack’s alleged mastermind, Aminu Yaminu aka Tashaku, was neither Fulani nor herdsman.

    Neither was he even Muslim at birth.  Security sources say he is a Tiv Muslim convert, with core Boko Haram records.

    Tashaku was among those original disciples, detained with Mohammed Yusuf, pristine Boko Haram leader, that survived Yusuf’s murder in police cell; and most probably a hardened veteran of the first wave of Boko Haram terror, in a blitz to avenge the killing of their master.

    Tashaku’s probable conspiracy dawned, even more, with the profile of his arrested “army”, armed to the teeth: again neither Fulani nor Muslim; nor even farmers or herders.

    The bulk were Benue youths, somewhat linked to the Benue government’s anti-open grazing enforcement militia.  Tashaku, said to be close to Benue Governor, Samuel Ortom, is a big player in that “people’s militia”.

    Said Olabisi Ayeni, an assistant  director, Army Public Relations, 707 Special Forces Brigade, on the Tashaku arrest: “Following an intelligence report, it was gathered that Aminu [aka Tashaku] had concluded plans with his cohorts in Bauchi, Borno, Yobe and Nasarawa states to lunch a major attack on innocent citizens in Benue State.”

    What was April 24 then?  A Muslim-Christian slaughter, as now being falsely trumpeted by many “men of God”, who should know better?

    Or a Christian-on-Christian, Benue-on-Benue massacre, coldly planned to further hang the omnipresent “Fulani killer herdsmen”, in the great southern media gallows?

    Besides, did anyone notice how fast the media drumming for another round of “public burials” quietened, the moment the Benue government realized this latest violence might just be home-brewed?

    Benue’s necromancy, for whatever end, appears unravelling!  But after how many wasted lives?

    So long for a media, led more by emotive, explosive clichés, than by even-handed treatment of news!

    But if you think Tashaku’s was a one-off or novel allegation, just consider this 24 July 2017 petition to the security agencies, by the Shitile community, in Katsina Ala local government of Benue State.

    According to Premium Times that reported the story, complete with a full copy of the petition, that community accused the Civilian Joint Task Force (CJTF), allegedly sponsored by the Benue government, of ethnic cleansing and sundry human rights abuse.  CJTF is allegedly headed by one Aondona Ishenge aka Tor-Abaji.

    But guess who is also named as a local CJTF enforcer in Shitile?   See an extract from the petition, which alleges the CJTF: “is supervised and armed with sophisticated automatic firearms through the office of the Security Adviser, Edwin Jando (rtd) and commanded by one Aliyu Tashaku, who enjoys the ignoble fame of having been an operative of the Boko Haram terrorist group.”

    By the Shitile petition, the terror in that community started in November 2016, with the alleged murder, by CJTF, of two lads, Wangyo Mbatsav and Orkar Galgbom, in Utyondu village of the Mbayondo district.

    Again, a rather extensive quote from the petition, on how the Shitile terror flared and spread; citing dates, casualties and modalities:

    “In January 2017, there were many killed at Tse-Igbe, while on the 18th, 25th and 26th days of June, 2017, Tor-Abaji, dressed in military uniforms and armed with sophisticated automatic rifles, together with his horde of heavily armed gang, moved through Abaji settlement on a spree of destruction, burning down houses and brutalising women and children, after which he arrested some targeted persons whom he took away to an undisclosed location and subjected them to severe torture, resulting in scores of deaths.”

    Do a little content analysis of newspaper reports of these killings.  You bet they would all be belching: “Fulani herdsmen”!

    Aside from the recurring Tashaku, you probably have noted the eerie similarity between the Shitile attacks and the recurring Benue attacks, by their media reportage.

    That’s just a snippet of how the preening fourth estate has let down the realm in a period of dire need!

    Yet, these vile, one-track reports are not limited to Benue alone.  It’s the same in the extensive killing fields, spanning most of the Middle Belt and North East.

    July 2017, for instance, witnessed the great Taraba massacre, allegedly by a local “Christian” militia, with alleged Taraba government sympathies.

    The Nation, back then, reported the visit of Major-Gen. Ben Ahanotu, GOC 3 Division, Nigerian  Army, Jos, which security jurisdiction covers the Mambilla Plateau area, with its gory and heart-rending massacre: mangled were over 600 helpless Fulani villagers, including pregnant women, whose unborn babies were hacked off their womb.  Later Emir Muhammadu Sanusi would put the gory tally as no less than 800 slaughtered.

    Yet, this crime never grabbed screaming headlines.  The great southern media, that always bristles, over alleged Fulani “Christian massacres”, suddenly went blind, deaf and dumb.  Blessed are those whose sins are covered — by the media?

    This clear media conspiracy notwithstanding, one Kefas Dauda, a Junkun from Taraba, did an open letter to Governor Jonathan Ishaku, that alleged the Taraba government’s complicity in killings in the state.

    Part of that letter reads: “It is now indisputable that the youths allegedly armed by you are emboldened by General Danjuma’s persuasion of self-defence to commit more heinous crimes against our innocent people,” it charged, “by killings, maiming and destructions, which is erroneously but deliberately attributed to Fulani herdsmen.”

    Like Benue, like Taraba, then?

    But absolutely nothing in this piece has exonerated the criminal elements among the Fulani herdsmen.

    Or even the stark, daft and garrulous, among the Fulani, vomiting rubbish about some delusional divine right to subjugate others, fired by a so-called right of conquest.

    These are the stark lunatic fringe that give their kind a bad name.

    Still over all, the southern media has proved a millennial disgrace, sexing up doomsday news along North-South, Christian-Muslim divides; and furiously spurring this country, towards the ruinous cliff of Mogadishu and Kigali combined, by its criminal one-sided reportage.

    But since Rwanda had its consequences, these media and their editors had better brace themselves.

    Those Rwanda editors that drove their country to the abyss, later faced their own abyss in International Criminal Court (ICC) gaol houses.  The Nigerian editors, whose media daily belch emotive mischief, should be prepared for no less.

    Perhaps Nigeria would never hit such a tragic nadir?  Still, it’s good to appreciate how close our media are goading it towards that pit.

    Maybe that realization would force a change for the better before it’s too late.

  • Seven killed in fresh attack in Benue

    Suspected  armed  Fulani Herdsmen have attacked and killed seven Tiv farmers inside  African Church Mbamondo , Ukember Agya, Logo Local Government area in Benue state, in the early hours of Thursday.

    But the Police Public Relation Officer (PPRO) Moses Yamu told The Nation on phone that he was yet to get the information.

    Yamu, a DSP however promised to get back to the Nation.

    The attacked on African Church attack came in less than 48 hours after Fulani herdsmen attacked and killed two priest and 17 worshipers during a funeral mass in Gwer east local government area in the state .

    The Nation gathered that the heavy Fulani terrorists sacked the entire community and leaves several others injuried.

    A victim, James Iorlaha, who escaped the church attacked told The Nation on phone that the attackers  stormed Mondo settlement about 12.22am and started shooting sporadically at those  who were asleep in the church and primary school buildings.

    Most of the victims are internally Displaced Persons ( IDPs) ,who had been attacked early and now taking refuge at the church and primary school block .

    Iorlaha stated that the heedmen set many houses ablaze while scores sustained injuries.

    “The Marauders killed the people and sacked the entire village, also proceeded to Zaki Biam/ Wukari road, mounted roadblocks, robbed motorcycles and other valuables

    Chairman of Logo LGA, Richard Nyajor, confirmed that herdsmen attacked Mbamondo clan of Ukemberagya Gaambe-Tiev and killed so many people inside African Church .

    “The casualties may be much but so far, we have recovered about seven corpses and we are still searching for more. These killers have taken over our entire areas and now leaving at the mercy of God said Richard Nyajo.

    “I want to use this medium to call on federal government to intensify effort and bring these mindless killings to an ends”, Nyajor said.