Tag: Fulani

  • Hausa/Fulani, Ndigbo, others endorse Ambode

    Hausa/Fulani, Ndigbo, others endorse Ambode

    Lagosians expect the dawn of a new era next month. Ahead of the governorship elections, indigenes and non-indigenes are mobilising support for the candidature of Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode, the standard bearer of the All Progressives Congress (APC). A member of the Akin Ambode Campaign Group, Odunayo Akinsiju, examines the impact of the volunteer group in its engagement with ethnic nationalities in the Centre of Excellence.

    It is not so much of a walk in the park as it is a long, hard haul to the top with a man who looks set, perhaps destined, to becoming the next governor of Lagos State. I am talking about Akinwunmi Ambode, the 51-year-old chartered accountant who is contesting as the Lagos State governorship on the platform of the All Progressive Congress (APC) come April 11, 2015.

    This is an account of a volunteer who had a ring-side view of this amiable candidate’s busy schedule last Saturday. And what a difference that day made in accentuating the point that this is a candidate who would leave no stone unturned in reaching out to every stakeholder in Lagos State with his message of continuity and sustainability. His body language and his remarks at each occasion revealed why he is the ideal candidate that is arguably the most qualified and better prepared at this period to continue with the legacy of successes that Lagos State has been witnessing in the past 15 years.

    The day started with the biggest revelation. The Igbos, contrary to insinuations, are indeed behind the candidacy of the APC candidates and are not averse to the type of progressive ideology that the ruling party in Lagos State preaches. And so the day began with a grand rally at Onikan Stadium, where a full house of professionals, elders, women, traders, youths and students – all of Igbo extraction and based in Lagos State – trooped out to unequivocally make their stand known: they were out to endorse the Buhari-Osinbajo team for the Presidential election as well as the Ambode-Adebule team for Lagos State governorship.

    It was their show, the Igbos in Lagos. Funded and organized by them to express their position. And although the rally had in attendance key APC leaders and candidates like Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, the national leader of the party with his wife, Oluremi; Ambode and his running mate, Dr. Oluranti Adebule and several other candidates of the party, it was still a platform decidedly mounted to demonstrate where the Igbos stand in the forthcoming election.

    It was a necessary and commendable stand to make at this time when endorsement of certain candidates has become desperate and dollarized. Anybody who claims to be on your side ought to be able to stand up and be counted for you. This is what the Igbos have done, just like the Arewa people did last month at the same venue, declaring in one voice that no amount of last-minute transactional overtures would make them vote against their conscience.

    This principled stand did not escape Ambode in his remarks. By that rally, the Igbos have reciprocated the good gesture of the successive administration in Lagos, a state where they have kept a commissioner’s slot for several years and where one of their own has been the official spokesperson of the party for many years. The next four years will witness more cordial relationship between the Lagos State government and the Igbo whose contribution to the commerce and fortunes of the state is well acknowledged, Ambode said clearly. His promise was that in his administration, if elected next month, no one will be discriminated against on the basis of tribe, religion or creed, while also promising an improvement in the business environment of the state.

    The Arewas were next and this Epe-born technocrat is showing no sense of fatigue or irritation even though he had been out the previous night till the wee hours of the morning attending a dinner meeting with all the aspirants who contested the party’s slot with his last December. The meeting with the Hausa leaders in Lagos was as strategic as the Igbo rally. The non-indigenes’ votes in the state, said to be between 35 and 40 per cent of the total registered voters is a voting bloc that cannot be ignored. Both the Igbo and the Arewa are said to account for the largest chunk of that total.

    Warm welcome and a promise of total support for his continuity agenda awaited Ambode from the Sarkin Hausa and the entire Arewa community, when Ambode’s campaign train arrived in Yaba. How can a candidate be so blessed in one day, getting the endorsement of both the Igbo and the Arewa in Lagos the same day, two weeks to the Presidential elections and four weeks to the governorship poll? To these ‘non-indegene Lagosians,’ apart from his own sterling qualities as a well-read, and well-experienced Public Finance expert, Ambode is reaping the fruits of the labour that his party, the APC, has sown in the past 15 years in Lagos.

    While the federal government struggles to deliver on its promises and is adjudged to have failed in the key areas of national security, accountability, power, oil and gas and in provision of social infrastructure, thereby making the desire for change at the centre a necessity, Lagos State on the other hand has been exemplary in how to grow Internally Generated Revenue and deliver on promises, thereby making the state attractive not just to indigenes of other states but to foreigners as well.

    Such a working state, the Igbo and Arewa communities are unanimous in their verdict, deserves the services of a technocrat who has the requisite experience, who understands the workings of government and who was part of the painstaking effort to grow the finances of the state in continuing with the good works of the incumbent governor. In their wisdom, that man is Akinwunmi Ambode, the University of Lagos-trained Chartered Accountant who spent 27 years of meritorious service in the Lagos State Civil Service, rising to become the Auditor General for Local Governments and later as Accountant General/Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Finance.

    But Ambode was not done on that interesting day. And he chose a community in dire need of government attention as his next point of call. Makoko, next on the schedule, provided a platform for the governorship candidate to hear first-hand the yearnings of that community and to address a town hall meeting that sought to reassure on the type of change they should expect in the next four years. While slums and shanties may be an unfortunate feature of most mega-cities in the world, due to inadequacy of resources, Makoko, from Ambode’s assurance, will witness a true transformation in the new dispensation. “The Lagos of our dream is here. It is a Lagos that will work for everybody. We will build on the achievements of Asiwaju Bola Tinubu and Governor Babatunde Fashola administrations. We are coming to consolidate on those achievements and Makoko will not be left out in this new dawn,” said.

    If it is about roads, for instance, Ambode was confident that his Project 20-20-57 would come to the rescue of localities like Makoko. What this project means is that if elected, Ambode’s government, would have minimum of 20 roads and 20 streetlights constructed in each of the 57 local councils each year. “With this template, more than four thousand roads would have been completed across all the local governments and council areas in Lagos in four years.”

    For a man whose selfless disposition is widely acknowledged, Ambode exudes real passion about his desire to serve as the governor of this prosperous state. His vision is clear and he has an infectious way of communicating it to the people. “We seek a clean, safe and prosperous Lagos, where justice and equity shall reign,” he reiterated at each function. And because he is real and demonstrably amiable, Lagosians, just like the band of hundreds of volunteers that have enlisted to his cause, believe him.

    He did not end that memorable Saturday without looking in at the Ikosi residence of Hon. Tunde Salau, who passed on last week. Touching words of condolence poured out from his pen, describing the departed as a strong pillar of support… a seasoned politician and leader. May your story never end.” He had more kind words to the family of the departed also.

    Campaigning with Ambode was like a long cruise, in which you hardly feel the strain. So it can be said of last Saturday, like the great American jazz singer once sang: what a difference a day makes, and the difference is Ambode.

  • Fulani kill 5 Tiv farmers

    Fulani kill 5 Tiv farmers

    Fulani herdsmen on Friday, launched another attack in five villages in Logo, Governor Gabriel Suswan’s local Government killing nine people in the process and burning over one hundred houses.

    The villages attacked included Chembe, Tse-Mue, Ifer, Mgbakpa and Oragbai all in Ukemberagya council ward which is four kilometers away from Anyiin, the country home of Governor Gabriel Suswam.

    Senior Special Assistant to Suswan on Media and Public Affairs, Chief Joseph Anawah, who is an indigene of the area said that the insurgents numbering about 100, used different routes to invade the villages.

    The governor’s aide stated that the insurgents traced some farmers to their farms and killed them, adding that most of those killed included people that were rendered homeless as a result of last year’s attacks on the communities by the herdsmen and had returned to their villages to cultivate their farmlands.

    He sued for the swift intervention of the federal government and other well meaning individuals and organizations to end the crisis in order to save the state and nation from imminent famine following the displacement of farmers who rely mostly on their farms to feed themselves.

     Confirming the incidence, the Police Public Relations Officer, DSP John Bako said two people  had died in the attack.

  • How Lamido resolved Fulani/farmers conflict in Jigawa

    How Lamido resolved Fulani/farmers conflict in Jigawa

    “The sad of Jigawa’s misfortune would finally come to an end. In line with our philosophy, we appear only when where there are challenges, but I must admit we are dumb-founded, more than shocked and astonished by the report, and of course we will take it as part of our dark history while putting up a mechanism to forestall all future occurances”
    — Sule Lamido

    Clashes between pastoralists and farmers are worsening in many parts of the country due to disputes over grazing reserves and water sources but the present administration in Jigawa state under Sule Lamido is far ahead of all others in tackling this social problem. The state government has established 400 grazing reserves, 50 of which have already been gazetted. Grazing reserves tend to be merely unattended bush in other places but in Jigawa State, Lamido has seen to it that they are equipped with facilities such as windmills, power pumps and boreholes as well as improved grass and resting facilities.

    The effort to establish and demarcate grazing reserves in Jigawa State was part of a multi-dimensional approach adopted by Lamido early in the day to address the perennial problem of clashes between pastoralists and farmers which claimed many lives in the state. Another aspect of the strategy was the setting up of security and sensitization committees to monitor the situation, as well as the payment of compensation to victims of past crises in order to discourage them from seeking revenge.

    Similarly, in its effort to encourage and enhance the pastoralists, Jigawa State Government launched the 2014/2015 animals vaccination exercise recently in Birnin-Kudu Local government area in the state in which the state government vaccinated 3,438,590 cattle against diseases in the past seven and-half-years 2007-2014. Also the state government had immunised 1, 611, 197 sheep and goats, while 53, 450 dogs were also vaccinated against rabies.

    Due to routine vaccination, the devastating diseases that often affected animals in the state had declined significantly. Also the government has included poultry in the programme to prevent Newcastle disease. Jigawa state government often purchases assorted veterinary drugs for farmers at subsidized prices and modern surgical equipment for nine veterinary clinics across the state. Lamido’s administration had invested a lot of resources on agriculture as the main stay of the economy.  Also, the economic and investment summit in the state in 2013 was convened by Lamido because of his commitment and efforts in the Agricultural sector, in which more than 80 per cent of the investors who participated at the summit expressed willingness to invest in agro-allied industries in the state.

    An accompanying aspect of this overall social policy also discourages allowing domestic animals to roam freely in towns and cities. Cattle, goats and sheep contribute in making towns dirty, and cause accidents, hence the new policy that makes their owners to tether them in their houses.

    This far-reaching social policy was not restricted to the animals and pastoralists alone. It also accommodates the children of the herdsmen. Jigawa state government has established many nomadic schools in the state to accommodate a large population of Fulani children. The governor approved that all nomadic schools in the state must be funded, equipped and staffed while ensuring that the children are taught both Islamic and western education respectively.

    Sule Lamido followed up his initiatives (administrative policies) with another project that facilitates easy access to him. He has a dedicated GSM phone line by which citizens can reach him in order to complain, offer advice, suggest and object or criticize his government’s policies and programs. The Talakawa’s leader, attends to everyone who texts or calls without intimidation, humiliation, victimization or deprivation. It is not for nothing that citizens of Jigawa State speak of the Lamido as a governor, mentor, leader, guardian, father and a messiah.

     

    Adamu is Special Adviser to Jigawa state governor on Media

  • Akwa Ibom communities beg Akpabio over Fulani herdsmen

    Akwa Ibom communities beg Akpabio over Fulani herdsmen

    Some communities near Uyo, the Akwa Ibom State capital,  have appealed to Governor Godswill Akpabio, the Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Rt. Hon Samuel Ikon and the Commissioner of Police, Mr Gabriel Achong, to save them from Fulami herdsmen.

    They accused the herdsmen of destroying their farms.

    The communities also called on the House of Assembly to pass a law prohibiting Fulani herdsmen or any other person in the state from causing destruction to any other person’s legitimate business.

    The communities’ spokesman, Mr Andy Bassey Eyo, said the people of Ikot Abasi Idem, Ikot Eto and Ikot Ekwere are tired of suffering in silence from the activities of Fulani herdsmen.

    He said when confronted, the herdsmen usually tell them that the cows belong to ‘big politicians’ and ‘big people in government’, that they were only employees.

    Eyo said the contractor given the job to provide electricity in their communities abandoned it.

    He added that it is regrettable that Ikot Abasi Idem, which shares boundary with Shelter Afrique Extension, an estate where the high and mighty, has no access road. He appealed to Akpabio to rectify the situation.

  • Hausa/Fulani give conditions to return to Southern Kaduna

    Fulani and Hausa people, who were displaced by the 2011 post-election crisis at Zango Kataf Local Government Area of Kaduna State, have agreed to return, but with conditions.

    Speaking at a town hall meeting at the Zango-Kataf Council Secretariat, organised by the Interfaith Mediation Centre at the weekend, Sarkin Hausawa, Zonkwa, Alhaji Uba Ado said the government must tighten security and rebuild all houses burnt during the crisis before they return.

    He said for peace to reign, the natives of Zango-Kataf and neighbouring areas must accommodate settlers and shun inciting statements.

    Ado said: “A situation where the natives openly call us settlers is degrading and unacceptable.”

    The paramount Chief of Zango-Kataf, Harrison Bugon, assured the Fulani and Hausa of security.

    The Director of Intervention, Interfaith Mediation Centre, Imam Mohammed Sani, urged the natives and non-natives to reach an agreement that would ensure peaceful coexistence.

    Expressing joy that the displaced persons agreed to return to Zango-Kataf after two years, Sani said: “This is the essence of the meeting. We are happy that our efforts to ensure relative peace achieved in Southern Kaduna has yielded positive result.”

    He urged people of various faiths to respect and tolerate one another.

  • 25 killed by ‘Fulani’ in Taraba

    •’Security operatives ignored us’
    •Police: we’re on ground

    Twenty five people were yesterday killed by suspected Fulani men in Sondi, Wukari Local Government Area of Taraba State.

    But the police said they recovered seven bodies.

    It was learnt that the hoodlums attacked Sondi in the morning as residents were preparing for church, setting homes on fire.

    National President of the Nigeria Association of Wapan Students (NAWAS) Tsokwa Addanti Ajidiku said the attackers, dressed in military camouflage, invaded the village around 8am

    Ajidiku blamed the attack on the “lukewarm attitude of security operatives”, who he alleged had prior knowledge of the invasion but failed to act.

    He said: “We are not happy with the security operatives because they were aware that these attackers would invade the village today. The attackers wrote us and we informed them, but they didn’t prevent the attack.”

    Ajidiku said House of Assembly Speaker Josiah Kente, who is one of the members representing the area, had not done enough to end the crisis.

    Police Commissioner Ademola Omole said: “The attackers are Fulani men. About seven people are feared dead and some persons sustained various degrees of injuries. We are fully on ground now. I have sent troops to the area and peace has returned.”

    A resident, who did not want to be named, said: “Why is it that the attacks are targeted at Southern Taraba? Why are the attacks targeted at Christians? Why are the attacks directed at Jukun and Tiv residents?”

    Yesterday’s attack came a few days after the Speaker and majority of the lawmakers passed a vote of confidence in Acting Governor Garba Umar for, among other things, restoring peace to the state.

  • Fulani arsonists kill 25 in Taraba

    Fulani arsonists have allegedly attacked Sondi village in Wukari local government area of Taraba state killing twenty five people. 

     
    Police said they have recovered seven bodies.The attack took place Sunday morning when residents were preparing for church service. Property worth millions of naira were destroyed.

    National President of the Nigeria Association of Wapan Students (NAWAS), Tsokwa Addanti Ajidiku said that the attackers stormed the village at about 8a.m.

     
    “The attackers were dressed in military camouflage,” he said.Ajidiku blamed the attack and killings on the “lukewarm attitude of security operatives”

    whom he said, had knowledge of the invasion but failed to take a proactive measure.

     
    “We are not happy with the security operatives because they were aware that these attackers would invade the village today.
     
    “The attackers wrote us and we informed them, but they couldn’t prevent the attack.”
     
    State Commissioner of Police, Ademola Omole, said “the attackers are Fulani men.”
     
    He said: “About seven people were feared dead and some numbers of persons sustained various degrees of injuries. 

    “We are fully on ground now. I have sent troops to the area and peace has returned.”

    A resident said “the state government has been behind the attacks and killings. Why is it that the attacks are targeted in southern Taraba? Why are the attacks targeted at Christians? Why are the attacks directed at Jukun and Tiv residents?”
    Ajidiku said the Speaker of the State House of Assembly Josiah Sabo Kente who is one of the members representing the area has not done enough to end the crisis.


    Sunday’s attack came few days after the Speaker and majority of the lawmakers passed a vote of confidence on Acting Governor Garba Umar for, among other things, restoring peace in the state.
  • Groups support grazing reserves for Fulani herdsmen

    THE Catholic Institute for Development, Peace and Justice (CIDJAP) and African Centre for Human Security, Peace and Sustainable Development (AFRISDEV) have thrown their weight behind the calls for grazing reserves for nomadic Fulani herdsmen in the South East.

    They said this would checkmate the incessant bloody clashes between some farming communities in the Southeast and Fulani herdsmen.

    The reserve, according to them, will also minimise such conflicts in the zone.

    Ahead of the establishment of the reserve, the groups last weekend organised a security seminar  for the Fulani and the communities leaders in the state.

    The Director of CIDJAP, Prof. Monsignor Obiora Ike, stated that the seminar was timely because the bloody clashes have become a ticking time bomb.

    Ike, who was represented by Rev. Fr. Anthony Ezekwu, stressed that CIDJAP stands to promote the pastoral and social teachings of the Church, giving succour to the downtrodden including the spirit of work and dignity of labour.

    He urged for peace, dialogue, tolerance and freedom of existence in the communities.

    “Era of nomadic practices of roaming villages with cattle and sheep is over and must be approached differently.

    “Many lives of humans and cattle have been lost. Properties have been destroyed and a lot of harm done.

    “The Fulani are not Boko Haram. They are humans, friends and brothers. They need us and we need them,” he said.

    The Enugu State Commissioner for Agriculture, Engr. Mike Ene, regretted that out of 415 grazing reserves none exists in the South-East.

    The commissioner, who was represented by Dr. Onyeka Emmanuel, Director of Veterinary Services, recommended that every state in the zone should have at least one reserve through Public Private Partnership (PPP).

  • Bridge Of Terror

    Bridge Of Terror

    A stretch on Lagos-Ibadan Expressway is travellers’ nightmare

    It is generally believed among users of the road that the more than 100-kilometre Lagos-Ibadan Expressway is notorious for several dangerous spots, either due to the activities of armed robbers or as a result of damaged portions. Perhaps the most notorious of the stretch is the ‘Long bridge’, shortly after the Mountain of Fire and Miracle Church as you approach Lagos.

    On a typical afternoon when the traffic is light, the long stretch of the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway ‘Long Bridge’, stretching from Wawa to Kara, looks safe and good to the ordinary eyes. But your perception of the safety changes when your vehicle breaks down, leaving you a sitting duck for attack by marauders whose activities defy time and place.

    Though the trend had long been on, with most survivors pointing fingers at the Fulani herdsmen around the area, but the dangerous dimension of the situation was brought to the fore when a retired Army General was killed by his attackers.

    According to reports, Brig. Gen. Sylvester Iruh (rtd), who had a day earlier attended a function in Ilorin, Kwara State, was on his way back to his home in Akute, Ogun State, on the fateful day in 2012. He had had a smooth ride until he had a tyre problem somewhere on the ‘Long Bridge’. No sooner had he stopped to fix the tyre than some suspected Fulani herdsmen emerged from under the bridge and shot him with an arrow.

    Like the family of late General, those who had been unfortunate to have been mugged on that notorious bridge would not even wish the experience for their enemies.

    Ironically, majority of those who had fallen victim to such attacks were those who had gone to perform religious activities in one of the churches or the other located along the expressway. Not minding the traffic on the bridge anytime there is a programme by any of the religious bodies, the marauders are always around to pounce on their unfortunate preys and when they do, they attack viciously, leaving their victims with tales of tears, sorrow and blood.

    Reverend Akin Ajiboye lived to tell his story because of the stories of past victims he had heard of. The man of God, who lives somewhere in the Alimosho Local Government Area of Lagos, was on his way home at about 5am after attending a church service on the fateful day. Eager to get home, he drove his Honda City car until he got to the danger spot where he had a flat tyre.

    But with the sad tales of past victims ringing in his ears, he quickly left the car and took refuge in a disused mechanic hut some distance away from the spot. No sooner had he done this than he noticed four men approach his car. He watched as the men ransacked the car, taking the side mirrors, radio and other fittings. Despite the harrowing experience, Reverend Ajiboye was grateful to God for sparing his life.

    Livinus Ikbo is a resident of one of the communities in the area and also the manager of Tipper Wawa. According to him, the ‘Long Bridge’ is a dangerous place and he would not advise anybody whose car breaks  down to wait a second.

    While acknowledging the fact that the attacks have reduced because the police now patrol the bridge and the presence police posts everywhere, he said he never prayed to experience the attack.

    “There was a time a woman and her daughter were going to one of the church programmes; unfortunately, their car broke down, before you would say Jack Robinson, some people just surfaced from nowhere, attacked the woman and her daughter was seriously raped. The woman eventually escaped from the scene to report the matter to the police. My brother, I don’t pray to have such an experience”.

    If the problem of mugging on the bridge could be controlled by the police, the occasional accidents on that bridge have been a source of concern to the people living in the communities off the express road. “Last week, a car knocked down a man who was going to work early in the morning,” Livinus told The Nation.

    Under the bridge is a water-logged dirty path that cars and pedestrians have turned to a passage.  Even the blind would know that the place was not part of the way created when the bridge was constructed. Curiously, The Nation decided to find out why such path would exist under the bridge.

    Ikbo said the path was created to minimise the death toll on the road. That passage, according to him, was created to allow easy access to other side of the road, though he admitted that the place is not motorable. “Crossing the express road is not easy, I don’t cross the express, I pass  through the short cut under the bridge.”

    Livinus said the security of the area is a bit better now unlike what the people who had the misfortune of having a breakdown used to experience.  On Tuesday when The Nation visited the Wawa part of the bridge at about 12 noon, heavily-armed police were sighted with their patrol vehicle at the foot of the bridge.

    Livinus said it was after a retired General was killed sometime last year that the presence of the police became regular at the bridge the foot of the bridge. There is also a police station very close to the Wawa area of the bridge, he said.

    At the height of the insecurity on the bridge, the marauders had no respect for either time or people. Irrespective of your age, they would attack if they had the slight opportunity. Irrespective of the time, be it night or day, if you were unlucky to have a break-down, they would attack viciously.

    A Lagos-based engineer, Mr. Johnson Duru, will never forget an encounter with the marauders on the bridge in a hurry. He and some members of his family were attacked on that bridge last year. While returning from a trip, his Toyota Highlander SUV developed fault on the bridge at about 5.30pm. He was attacked by three men who emerged from under the bridge, armed with long machetes. “They charged at me, barking, ‘where is the money?’ Before I could fathom what was happening, the driver had run to the other side of the road, leaving me and my family members at the mercy of the robbers.”

    It was a harrowing experience for Duru and his family. The marauders attacked him and his family with machetes and other dangerous weapons. Speaking about his experience, Duru said: “While the robbers concentrated on looting our valuables and money, one of them attempted to cut off my head, aiming the machete at my neck region.

    “I raised my left hand and blocked it. I ended up with a big cut on my left arm, just a little above the elbow. My eight-year-old daughter, Ada, received lacerations on her thigh and leg. Debby, Chinelo and Chidiogo were also traumatised, because they also got injured during the attack.”

    At the end of the attack, the robbers made away with a bag containing his laptop, phones, while his younger sister also lost two phones and an undisclosed amount of money.

    Unfortunately, during the attack, no police patrol team showed up neither did other travellers stop to offer help. Even with a blood-soaked shirt, Duru said he waved to other motorists in vain for help.

    “When some motorists saw my blood-soaked shirt, they increased their speed as they drove past us,” he said. It was a woman who was driving a private bus who stopped to offer him a piece of cloth which he used to tie the wound.

    The men of the Federal Road Safety Commission later arrived at the scene and evacuated Duru and his family to the Lagos State Accident and Emergency Hospital at the old toll gate, Lagos, where they received treatment. His eight-year-old daughter described the experience as the worst in her life.

    Duru said he learnt that a day before he was attacked, a motorist whose car developed a fault on the bridge was killed.

    Attacks by robbers on the long bridge are frequent. Hardly does a week pass without reports of an attack on road users, sometimes leading to death.

    The experience of some passengers travelling in a 14-seater bus from Ile-Ife, Osun State, was particularly traumatic. They were attacked when their bus broke down on the same bridge around 7.30pm. By the time their attackers escaped into the nearby bush, all the passengers had lost one item or the other; most of them lost various sums of cash.

    A female journalist, whose car also broke down on the bridge last year, had her car and valuables stolen. The car was later recovered by the police.

    When our correspondents visited the Olorunishola cattle market opposite the OPIC Plaza, long reputed to be the haven for the marauders, one of the leaders in the market, Moruf Akanni, denied the allegation. While acknowledging that they were aware of the stories, he said the suspected herdsmen were not resident in the market.

    Akanni said people who were linking the activities of the marauders on the ‘Long Bridge’ with people from the market do so to give a dog a bad name in order to hang it. According to him, the leaders of the market had been invited to Alausa, where he said they explained everything to the  government.

    To prove that criminals and criminality are not allowed in the market, Akanni said the authorities of the market only allow cattle dealers from distant places to sleep inside the market because they arrive late.

    And to enforce discipline among the traders, the leaders put in place a fine of N5,000 on an offender who hits another person. Akanni explains: “What we are trying to do is that, whether you are right or wrong, you have no right to slap another person. And the law has helped to maintain discipline in the market.

    “If you look around us here, you’ll see that there is  police presence among us here. We have about three police stations and one police post. Their presence has really helped to maintain security around this area.”

    And indeed, the presence of the police is not restricted to their stations. On this day, as our correspondents drove round the area, a number of police patrol vehicles were noticed around the dangerous spots. Men of the highway police team were seen at the Mowe end of the ‘Long Bridge’, clutching their guns, as if at the ready to go.

    While many agreed that the presence of the police has helped in restoring some semblance of sanity in the area, the harrowing experience of past victims continue to haunt users of the road. As proof that the police will no longer tolerate any act of crime in the area, the Ogun State Commissioner of Police, Ikemefuna Okoye, said his men are on top of the situation, warning criminal-minded persons to stay away.

    While commending the men and officers of the Ibafo Police Division and the Special Anti-Robbery Squad (SARS) for arresting three suspected armed robbers on the bridge last week, the police boss said the command has declared total war against any form of criminality in the axis.

    Meanwhile, as our correspondents drove along the bridge last week, two motorists whose vehicles broke down at about noon refused to stop and carry out any form of repair, though it was daytime. A motorist, driving a white Toyota Camry car with a flat tyre refused to stop; he drove on his rim towards the Lagos end of the road with fears written all over him.

    Experiences like these will continue until the police and other security agencies find a lasting solution to menace of the marauders on the Long Bridge.

  • Herdsman arrested with AK7 riffles

    Herdsman arrested with AK7 riffles

    A Fulani herdsman has been arrested with   seven AK 47 rifles in Anyibe, Benue State.

    He is currently in the custody of 72 Special Forces Battalion in Makurdi, according to the commander of the peace keeping troops at Anyiin.

    The Nation gathered that the suspect was arrested during a patrol by soldiers protecting the country home of Governor Gabriel Suswam.

    The suspect was said to have taken to his heels ion sighting the soldiers who became suspicious.

    They gave him a hot pursuit and he was caught in no time.

    During the interrogation that followed his arrest, he led the soldiers to a hole in which he hid the weapons.

    Herdsmen have launched series of attacks s on villages and hamlets in Benue State killing and maiming people.

    Houses and other property including farms and produce were either set ablaze or destroyed by them.