Tag: Grazing

  • ‘No anti-open grazing law in Nasarawa’

    Nasarawa State Governor Tanko Al-Makura has said his administration will not enact the anti-open grazing law.

    The governor spoke at the Government House when he received skill acquisition items for Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs).

    The items were donated by the National Commission for Refugees, Migration and Internally Displaced Persons (NCRMIDP).

    Al-Makura, who was represented by his deputy, Silas Agara, said the constitution allowed citizens to settle in any part of the country.

    He lamented that over 25,000 persons were displaced because of anti-open grazing law in Benue State.

  • Anti-open grazing law will enable herdsmen’s children acquire education – Bishop

    Anti-open grazing law will enable herdsmen’s children acquire education – Bishop

    Bishop William Aveya of Gboko Catholic Diocese in Benue has said that the anti-open grazing law passed by the state government would enable children of herdsmen to acquire education.

    “Open grazing makes it impossible for the children of herdsmen to acquire education because they remain in the bush chasing cows.

    “If the herdsmen embrace ranches, the children will be less busy with the cattle and have more time for education which is very crucial to a better future,” Avenya told the news men, in Gboko on Monday.

    The herdsmen, under the aegis of the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN), have remained opposed to the law and have vowed to resist it.

    But Avenya said that the law would promote and protect the rights of herdsmen’s children usually denied their rights and privileges.

    “Nigeria is a signatory to many Child Right charters and conventions that seek to protect and enhance children’s welfare.

    “While other children enjoy such rights and privileges, herdsmen’s children are left behind because they are holed up in the hinterland running after cows and getting exposed to the vagaries of the environment.

    Read Also: ‘Lalong not opposed to anti- grazing law’

    “It is certainly not fair to leave the herdsmen’s children uneducated because that will denies them the privilege of exploring opportunities in life,” he said.

    He argued that cattle ranching was the best option that could provide some comfort for cattle, herders and their children, adding that cattle feeding would be improved at the ranches.

    Avenya appealed to herdsmen to accept the law as a panacea to frequent farmers/herders clashes and explore its immense benefits.

    He challenged Nigerians resident in the North-East to evolve ways of reclaiming the desert wastelands, and suggested the growing of grasses to help tackle desertification and provide pasture for cattle.

    Avenya, however, condemned the killing of innocent people by gunmen, and called on the Federal Government to encourage ranching as a way out of the frequent skirmishes.

    The Bishop said that the Church would not encourage reprisal attacks saying, saying that such action had no place in the Christian faith.

    “Instead of carrying arms in self defense, we must encourage each other to pray for the attackers so that God will arrest their spirit and purge them of such wickedness,” he said.

    NAN

  • APDA rejects cattle colonies, opts for ranches, grazing reserves

    APDA rejects cattle colonies, opts for ranches, grazing reserves

    The Advanced Peoples Democratic Alliance (APDA) yesterday added its voice to the opposition against Federal Government’s proposed cattle colonies in different parts of the country.

    A statement issued after a meeting of the National Working Committee (NWC) of the party advised the Federal Government to set up cattle ranches and grazing reserves as a step towards ending persistent clashes between herdsmen and farmers.

    Deadly clashes between the two groups in Benue, Kaduna, Taraba, Plateau and other parts of the country has resulted in the death of hundreds of people in recent times, promptint the Federal Government to moot the idea of creating cattle colonies in a bid to ease tension between herdsmen and farmers.

    The NWC also resolved to set up a financial committee for the party for the purpose of raising funds.

    It reviewed the crisis in the Ekiti Chapter of the party and resolved to suspend working committee in the state while constituting a three-man committee to run the affairs of the party in the state until a congress is held.

  • Open Grazing Prohibition law will  end herders-farmers clashes in Taraba

    Open Grazing Prohibition law will end herders-farmers clashes in Taraba

    Chief John Mamman, the Gangum of Takum, is one of the key political stakeholders of Taraba State. In this interview with Senior Correspondent, Fanen Ihyongo, he speaks on the benefits of the Open Grazing Prohibition and Ranches Establishment Law which has been enacted into law by the Taraba State Government. Excerpts

    THE Open Grazing Prohibition and Ranches Establishment Bill has been signed into law in Taraba State. What is your reaction Sir?

    I am very delighted. And I want to salute the pioneering courage of the members of the Taraba State House of Assembly and Governor Darius Ishaku for enacting the Anti-Open Grazing law, in spite of the stiff opposition from some few misguided elements who were incited from outside Taraba State. I commend the governor for quickly establishing model ranches in the three senatorial districts for would-be ranchers to adopt. I want to urge the committee that is charged with the responsibility of sensitising the herdsmen and farmers to take this all-important assignment with the seriousness it deserves so that the benefits of the foresight of the governor for the people of Taraba will not be frustrated.

    What then are the benefits of ranching to the people of Taraba State?

    There are three critical areas involved, namely; security, herdsmen and farmers. In terms of security, the most obvious benefit of ranching is that it will stem the perennial clashes between herdsmen and farmers. The reoccurring wanton destruction of lives and property will end. The second benefit is the fact that it will be easier for security agencies to monitor and control the influx of nomadic herdsmen into the state. Security agencies will be released from this perennial crisis for other areas of critical needs. The government can now use the funds involved in catering for victims of the herdsmen/farmers crisis for other developmental programmes. There are also many benefits for the herdsmen. The ordinary Bororo/Fulani herdsmen will have the opportunity to own land which they can develop for exclusive use for their cattle. The ranches will be clustered for the introduction of modern technology in livestock production. Improved breeds of cattle for beef and dairy products will be introduced to enhance the income of the average ranching family. With ranches, veterinary facilities will be provided to tackle animal diseases and epidemics. Schools and medical facilities will be within the reach of the families of herdsmen. Education, which is a basic right of citizens, has been denied to this group of Nigerians. With the herdsmen owning lands, they can now build modern houses instead of the shacks they presently dwell in, thereby enhancing their quality of life. Furthermore, ranches will allow the herdsmen to be integrated in the society, instead of being strangers in the community they live. As for the farmers, the removal of the perennial threats to their crops and even their lives will encourage them to cultivate more crops and heed to President Buhari’s call for Nigerians to embrace agriculture and diversify the economy.

    You talked about schools for herdsmen and their children. What about the nomadic education programme?

    Whoever that conceived the idea of nomadic education might have had a good intention but the implementation has been a complete failure and a colossal waste of public funds. Can anyone produce evidence of the graduation of the products of these nomadic schools? How many have gone to secondary schools, let alone tertiary institutions? How many of the children have been trained as veterinary doctors? The programme must be scrapped. These children, like other Nigerian children, should be given the opportunity to attend schools and explore their potentials to the fullest. We must look forward to the day when the children of herdsmen will become vet doctors in their families. Through ranching, the livestock industry can be built in Nigeria.

    What is your message to the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association and the farmers’ association in Taraba State?

    My personal observation is that most of the elite involved in livestock business have ranches. What is good for the elite should be good to the ordinary herdsmen. So, I wish to appeal to the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association to educate their members on the benefits of modern methods of cattle breeding, which is ranching. The resources spent on buying sophisticated weapons to guide their livestock should be deployed in setting up ranches and stocking them with improved breeds of animals. The leadership of the farmers’ association should also educate its members on the symbiotic relationship that farmers need to cultivate with herders in the interest, peace and development of the state.

    Most of the herdsmen, particularly Fulani herders, have always said nomadic life is their culture and ranching will disturb their traditional way of life.

    At our independence in 1960, the population of Nigeria was about 70 million. Today, I am told our population is over 180 million and by the year 2030 we may clock the 200 million mark. On the other hand, our land mass has remained constant with desertification, gully erosion and the drying up of the Lake Chad basin. These have considerably reduced arable and grazing land. If we must survive, we have to adapt to the changing times. Culture is to serve the people and must be dynamic. Those aspects of any culture that do not impact positively on the lives of the community must be discarded. A good example is the abolition of annual Sharo celebration by the Bororo herdsmen. This has not made them to cease being Fulani. Nigerians have moved over into the 21st century and we cannot afford to allow herdsmen to continue to live in the 19th century like their ancestors in the name of culture.

    Besides the Anti-Open Grazing law, what other specific areas do you think Governor Darius Ishaku has impacted on the people of Taraba State?

    Given the paucity of financial resources in the country now, I will commend Governor Ishaku in many areas. He is up to date in the payment of workers’ salaries, which many governors across the country are finding hard to meet up. Taraba is basically a civil service state. Any month that salaries are not paid, economic activities in the state are paralysed. Since becoming governor, it has been to his credit that workers in the state have been regularly paid. I will also applaud him in the area of water supply. I can recall that during his campaign tour for the governorship election, Darius Ishaku wept when he saw women and children struggling with pigs and other domestic animals for drinking water. Right then, he vowed that when elected, he would tackle rural water supply as a top priority. So, in his first 100 days in office, he was able to provide over 100 boreholes across the state where the need for potable water was critical. In Jalingo, the state capital, he has increased water supply from 25million litres to 75million litres daily. With his slogan, “give me peace and l will give you development,” Governor Ishaku’s efforts in peace building are commendable. He inherited a state torn apart with ancient grudges. He has been a model in the process of confidence building and reconciliation. In the critical areas of agriculture, he introduced the Green House Project, the first of its kind in Nigeria, employing well over 200 youths. The Green House produces vegetables like cucumber, cabbage, lettuce, tomatoes, carrot etc., capable of generating $50 million annually, according to experts from NEPAD office in Abuja. Apart from the economic value, the project is serving as a training centre for students of colleges of agriculture in Nigeria. Similarly, in collaboration with the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) Taraba State Government has increased the production of rice in Gassol and Karim-Lamido local government areas from 50,000 metric tons to well over 150,000 metric tons in the last cropping season. In the agro-driven industrial sector, he has reactivated the moribund Highland Tea produced in Kakara on the Mambilla Plateau and has explored markets for this high quality tea in Germany and the Middle East. Through his relentless effort, Taraba is set to supply Nigeria with at least 50 percent high quality tea. Taraba State Government under Ishaku has embarked on aggressive road construction programme. Some have been completed within these two years while others are ongoing. Air transport is not left out as he revamped the Jalingo Airport, which is now functional with three scheduled flights weekly from Abuja. I wish to also appreciate him for the construction of 5000 unit houses going on in Jalingo. This will go a long way to alleviate the acute accommodation problems in the state. Now, with the anti-open grazing law ending farmers/herdsmen crisis and paving way for sustainable peace, Taraba State will witness more devel

  • Benue’s open rearing and grazing law

    SIR: The Benue State law prohibiting open rearing and grazing of livestock unarguably marks a watershed in the historic struggle to halt the age long crises between farmers and Fulani herdsmen over land.

    There has been an unending struggle by farmers to protect their farmland and crops from being forcefully taken over or destroyed by cattle in the name of grazing. On the other hand, the pastoralists have over time suggestively claimed the right of access to any land, especially in the lush green vegetation, whether farmland or not, to graze their animals without recourse to the permission or opinion of the land or crop owners.

    While the herdsmen seek protection under the constitutional provision of citizens’ right to free movement and settlement in any part of the country, the farmers are quick to point out that the same constitution criminalises trespass and encroachment on other people’s property including land.

    The result is the incessant avoidable crises between herdsmen and farmers.

    The crisis is worse in Benue State where the last 10 years have witnessed sustained ferocious attacks on farming communities by marauding herdsmen who move about with sophisticated weapons unchallenged.

    From Agatu to Gwer West, Gwer East to Makurdi, Guma to Buruku, Logo to Ukum, Tarka to Gboko, Katsina-Ala to Kwande, the blood of the innocent have been spewed and the landscape has been a picture of blood, tears and sorrow.

    Efforts by past administrations and well-meaning stakeholders to find lasting solution to the seemingly intractable problem over the years have not achieved the desired objective. This is why when Governor Samuel Ortom, on assumption of office, began to champion the campaign for ranching of cattle and all other livestock, instead of open-grazing, he had the support of majority of Benue citizens most of who are directly or indirectly victims of the unwarranted attacks on communities of the State by herdsmen. The consensus is that once cattle are ranched, as is the practice in the other countries of the world, farmlands will no longer be encroached upon and crops no longer destroyed.

    And it follows naturally that once there is no encroachment on farmlands and destruction of crops, there will no longer be crisis and people no longer have to be attacked and killed by the Herdsmen.

    This is simply what the Prohibition of Open Rearing and Grazing of Livestock Law 2017 is all about. Only those who may perhaps have been benefitting from the crises in the past are, or can be against the law which has put paid to such benefits from the blood and toil of Benue people. It is only in this light that we can attempt a comprehension of the recent outburst and threats by the Cattle Breeders Association under the aegis of Miyetti Allah Cattle Kautal Hore over the law which has criminalized the penchant of some of their members to play God over people’s lives and property.

    The outburst of the Group and its threats to fight the Law should worry all well-meaning Nigerians because the posture is not only provocative but offensive to the spirit and letter of the constitution which empowers state Houses of Assembly to make laws for the well-being of their people as long as such laws are not in conflict with the provisions of the constitution.

    Kautal Hore’s claim that Fulani herdsmen were the first to occupy the Benue Valley is not only erroneous and fallacious but also a brazen attempt to re-write history! Benue indigenes must remain one on this issue because the threat by the herdsmen organization is a direct challenge to their existence.

     

    • Igba Ogbole,

    Makurdi.

  • Bayelsa urged to stay action on land allocation for grazing

    A group, Ijaw Professionals Association (IPA), yesterday urged Bayelsa State government to stay action on its plan to allocate 1,200 hectares to herdsmen for grazing.

    Mr. Iniruo Wills and Mr. Elaye Otrofanowei, the homeland chapter president I and president in charge of Lagos chapter, in a statement in Yenagoa, enjoined Governor Seriake Dickson to put the decision on hold until after stakeholders’ consultations.

    They condemned the attack by suspected members of Bayelsa State Volunteers on a group of Ijaw stakeholders during a peaceful protest in Yenagoa

    The IPA decried what it called “the hypocritical role played by security agents and top public officers” who supervised the alleged assault on the protesters.

    It wondered why such violence would be unleashed on the stakeholders, who protested peacefully on February14 in “The Jerusalem of Ijaw Nation”.

    “This is a most dangerous and grossly undemocratic practice that must not be allowed in Ijaw land or indeed in Nigeria.

    “The peaceful exercise of fundamental rights to freedom of assembly, expression and peaceful protest under the law, should not to be forcefully denied or suppressed, whether by official or unofficial forces,” the organisation said.

    It advised the governor to “urgently conduct a wide consultation to get further insights on the subject by allowing stakeholders to express their views and allay the deeply held apprehension.”

    IPA urged the National Human Rights Commission and the Inspector-General of Police to order an independent investigation into the February 14 incident.

    It said the probe would unravel the truth and ensure redress for the victims, adding that culprits would be brought to justice.

  • Govt raises 22-man committee to tackle grazing, rustling

    Govt raises 22-man committee to tackle grazing, rustling

    The Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA) yesterday constituted a 22-man technical committee to curtail cattle grazing and rustling in Abuja.
    FCT Minister Muhammad Bello, who inaugurated the committee, directed them to build on the works of similar committees set up by previous Administrations to begin its activities for immediate impact.
    According to him, their terms of reference of include discussing with the Secretariats, Departments and Agencies (SDA’s) to see what plans are on ground within the FCT Administration for the proper use of grazing reserves, cater for farming communities, as well as the needs of other stakeholders.
    Other mandates of the committee, according to the minister, include: “to study the recommendations of past relevant committees and MDAs and come up with harmonised implementable action plan and template that will guide how the FCT can have a very efficient system that guarantees safe living”.
    His words: “In a way, you will notice that what your committee is doing is being done by similar committees in over the country and particularly a national committee under the Inspector General of Police. So, I expect that you would reach out to some of these committees, especially those within the North Central or even the office of the Inspector General of Police, to leverage on some of their works and some of the information available to them”.
    “At the end of the day, we want a peaceful territory, economically vibrant and a melting pot where everybody comes in and relates freely.”
    The committee is chaired by Uthman Mohammed while acting secretary of the FCT Area Council, Hajiya Amina Abubakar, is Secretary.

  • Dickson donates 1,200 hectares for grazing

    Dickson donates 1,200 hectares for grazing

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson has donated 1,200 hectares of land to herdsmen for grazing and other cattle-related activities.

    The governor said his administration gave out the land to stop conflicts between herdsmen and farmers.

    He warned herdsmen against bearing arms, saying the government would arrest and prosecute any of them found with guns and other weapons.

    The state’s Cattle Ranches Management and Control Committee (CRMCC) Chairman Shitu Mohammed confirmed the governor’s gestures at the weekend when he met with herdsmen, butchers and farmers in Yenagoa, the state capital.

    Mohammed thanked the government for releasing the land, adding that the gesture would aid enduring peace between herdsmen and farmers.

    The chairman said the government set up the committee to foster a cordial relationship between herdsmen and the residents.

    He said the state had not recorded caught any herdsman for rape and killings because the committee worked with the government and security agencies to forestall such crimes.

    Mohammed said the committee put in place a quick response mechanism to address issues between herdsmen and farmers.

    The chairman urged the residents to see government’s provisions of ranches as a good gesture, adding that it would create jobs for the people and enhance tourism development.

    Also, Dickson urged new Police Commissioner Amba Asuquo not to relent in the fight against crimes.

  • Ekiti’s grazing law

    Governor Ayo Fayose of Ekiti State has just signed a law to regulate grazing activities in the state. Titled “Prohibition of cattle and Other Ruminants Grazing in Ekiti 2016”, the law provides for grazing activities between 7am to 6pm on a daily basis while any herdsman caught with firearms or any weapon whatsoever during grazing will be charged with terrorism.

    An offender is liable on conviction, to six months imprisonment without option of fine.Under the law, farm crops destroyed by the cattle of any caught herdsman, shall be estimated by an agricultural officer and the expense borne by the culprit.

    Emerging reactions to the law vary depending on which side of the divide they are coming from. But most reservations have tended to centreround the provisions of the law rather than the propriety of that piece of legislation. But, implicit in those reactions is a seeming consensus that some form of regulation on the activities of herdsmen is imperative.

    The first issue copiously canvassed is the seeming incongruity of aspect of that law as it relates to terrorism with the constitution of the country. Those who canvass this view, contend it is wrong to classify herdsmen carrying weapons including such light ones as arrows, knives, cutlasses and catapults as terrorists because such categorization runs against the spirits of the anti-terrorism law. For this school, the law on anti-terrorism is very clear and nowhere did it classify carrying such light weapons as an offence under it.

    The other strand of the argument is that exceptions should have been made by the law against these light weapons because herdsmen need some of them to ward off criminals and also contend with the vagaries and harshness of the environment in which they conduct their business.

    In this wise, it is reasoned that apart from attacks from robbers, herdsmen confront all manner of animals in the bushes and will be helpless in the face of attacks from those elements in the absence of such light weapons. There is a point here. There ought to be exceptions to the category of weapons the herdsmen could carry since in our daily lives, such light weapons are not against our laws. Herdsmen need some protection against some of the hazards they face while doing their business in the inclement bush environment.

    There is also merit in the argument that by handing down terrorism charge on any herdsman carrying guns and other light weapons, the Ekiti law is bound to come into conflict with the anti-terrorism prevention law. And to the extent that law is inconsistent with the constitution, it stands to be voided by the courts. When this happens, the state government would be handicapped in approximating the goals for which that piece of legislation was made.

    No doubt,Ekiti State government was goaded to classify carrying arms by herdsmen as terrorism given the pattern and magnitude of destruction that occur each time they attack communities. Such attacks usually leave in their trail sorrow and awe on account of the decimation of populations and properties comparable in terms, to terrorism onslaughts. The law would therefore strike as a desperate therapy to a malignant tumour- the objective being to ensure that Ekiti State is insulated from those ugly scenes that have been the tale of communities each time herdsmen strike.

    But this objective could still be approximated without having to enact laws that will at once, come into conflict with the constitution. The same aim can still be realized by making the carrying of dangerous weapons such as the AK-47 rifle and 24 rounds of ammunitionrecovered from a herdsman in Affa, Udi local government area of Enugu state and in other places, a criminal offence.

    The other issue being canvassed against the anti-grazing law is that it should have allowed herdsmen who want to relocate to do so at night. The argument is that it will minimize the disruption of social activities were the herdsmen to do so at night. With the pattern of the attacks by the herdsmen, which usually take place in the night with near invincibility, it will be difficult to persuade anyone with the above argument. Moreover, that will negate the whole essence of limiting herding between certain hours of the day.

    Ekiti State government must have taken into account the reality of the operational strategy of the herdsmen in arriving at the provision requiring all activities relating to herding to commence and end between 7am and 6pm. It would seem that aspect of the law was well designed. There is the need to regulate the movement of herdsmen so as not to give room for any subterfuge by the unscrupulous ones to attack communities while they are asleep.

    The law also struck the right chord by stipulating that herdsmen caught destroying the crops of farmers will have the value of such farm produce assessed by an agricultural officer for the culprit to bear the cost. This is apt given that at the heart of the conflicts between farmers and the herdsmen has been the wanton destruction of the crops of the former.

    This provision is even more germane and as has been argued in several quarters, the herdsmen are also in business and it will be wrong to despoil the crops of farmers or feed their animals with them the way they had hitherto carried on. The realization that crops destroyed by their cattle will have to be paid for, will make them more circumspect in the way they conduct their business.

    That way, a major source of friction between the farmers and the herdsmen would have been considerably reduced. By the same token, the constant friction that usually aggravates attacks by the herdsmen would have been substantially stymied. It is true that Ekiti State is not among the states where the herdsmen have severally wreaked havoc. But it has taken the bull by the horn by coming out with legislation to curtail the menace of the herdsmen.

    It is a step in the right direction. It is a bold statement that the government will not sit-by while its citizens are mowed down by a band that has scant regard for human lives. It is therefore pertinentthat the law should be despite some reservations especially as it relates to trying those carrying weapons and other light arms for terrorism. At any rate, our courts are there to trash out issues relating to the envisaged conflict between the law and the nation’s anti-terrorism law.

    Perhaps,Ekiti may not have gone this farwere the federal government forthcoming in dealing with the menace of the herdsmen. For, despite the serious danger which incessant attacks by the herdsmen portends for national peace and stability, the attitude of the federal government to it has at best, remained largely tepid.

    Even with the directive from President Buhari to the military and police to stop the recurring killings of hapless Nigerians by Fulani herdsmen, no concrete action seems to have been taken in this regard. That is why rather than abate, the attacks have festered. Matters are not helped by the inability of our law enforcement agencies to bring to book the suspects arrested for the dastardly massacre at Nimbo in Enugu State and elsewhere where such attacks had occurred.

    If things continue the way they are, more of the states that have been at the mercy of the insurgents will have no option than to go theEkiti way to protect the lives of their people. That is the unmistakable signal which the law has sent across. The Buhari regime should take vicarious responsibility for any eventual outcome of such conflicting legislations including the increasing lure of self-help to stem the scourge.

  • Create grazing areas, says don

    To stem the attacks by herdsmen across the country, the Head of Department, Pasture and Range Management, Federal University of Agriculture, Abeokuta (FUNAAB), Prof Jimoh Olanite, has called on the government to create grazing areas, where animals will be restricted and promulgate laws that would punish herdsmen that go out of the grazing areas.

    He made this call while presenting the report of a research titled: “Mitigating the impact of pastoral/nomadic grazing on the natural ecosystem and rural livelihoods in Yewa Division of Ogun State”.

    According to him, herdsmen have been living all over Nigeria for several years and inter-relating with the people of their host communities without being troublesome until recently.

    ”Increase in human population has caused an increase in farm size which has eaten into the grazing areas. In order to produce enough food to meet the human needs, these two increases are coming into closer proximity,” he said.

    “This rapid increase in human population has made people to believe that the herdsmen are intruders, who are not wanted, but the people failed to realise that on the other hand, we need the animals and the animal products to complete our protein cycle,” he said.

    For this reason, he added, the only solution is to find a way of accommodating them without causing problems for both parties.

    Olanite said research had shown that most of the herdsmen that cause trouble in the country were mainly the ones, who do not have definite places of abode, but only come to a locality and leave whenever they are through with their business.