Tag: Herdsmen attack

  • Herdsmen killed 24, injured scores in Ogun – Groups

    Herdsmen killed 24, injured scores in Ogun – Groups

    Suspected Fulani herdsmen killed 24 people, injured scores and destroyed farm crops worth millions of naira in several attacks in 13 communities in Ogun State between 2000 and December 2017.

    The affected victims which included husband and wife, hailed from 13 communities of Asa, Agbon – Ojodu, Igbonla, Korole, Ibeku, Moro, Koomi, Ibore, Igan – Alade, Kodera, Owode – Ketu, Adesina Village and Orisade – all in Ketu Local Council Development Area (LCDA) of Ogun State.

    The claim was contained in letters dated December 20, 2017, written by Michael Abiose and Williams Olayode of the Ketu Advancement Forum (KAF) and Ketu Community Development Council (KCDC) and addressed to the Commissioner of Police in Ogun state, on behalf of the affected communities.

    In the letters, KAF and KCDC, urged the police commissioner to ensure speedy and diligent investigation and prosecution of suspected herdsmen for attempted murder in Oja – Odan in December last year.

    They said the call became necessary given the dozens of people killed in the past and the resolve of the herdsmen to sustain their murderous act

    The groups said they were appalled and horrified by the December 19 gruesome murder of one Mr. Olatunji Tangu Afolabi at Orisada village, who suspected herdsmen killed and burnt.

    They also listed their people who were killed by suspected herdsmen in the last eight years to include  Adegbola Ajibiaran (Agbon-Ojodu, 2000), Ayinde Korole Korole (2002), Mr. Soji Aretola (2004), Mr. Oga Aja  (Asa, 2006), Mrs. Oga Ruth (Asa, 2006), Prophet Orisade (Igbonla, 2006), Mr. Adewale Adekunle (Asa, 2006), Mr. Dele Akintan (Ibeku, 2006) Mr. Joseph Oga (Igbonla, 2007), Mr. Moses Oga (Igbonla (2007), Mr. Ajana Ogunlana (Moro, 2007) and Mr. Abisekan Femi (Koomi, 2008).

    Others were – Mr. Femi Oladokun (Koomi, 2008), Mr. Sunday Idosu (Asa , 2008), Mr. Gbenga Durosinmi (Iboro, 2008), Mr. Yomi Akinola (Igan-Alade, 2011), Mr. Ogunjobi Dotun (Kodera, 2011), Mr. Ogunyomi Ige (Igan-Alade, 2011), Mr. Phillip Akan-an (Owode-Ketu, 2011), Mr. Amosun Olofinjin(Ogbon-Ojodu, 2012),   Mr. Akinola Dayo Tunde(Agbon Ojodu, 2012), Mrs. Semitan Agbaosi (Adesina Village, 2013), Mr. Opeita Ayo       (Agbon Ojodu, 2017) and  Mr. Olatunji Tangu Afolabi,  (Orisada, December 19, 2017).

  • Women Farmers Raises Alarm over Herdsmen Attack

    ·        Begs FG for intervention

    Women farmers under the aegis of Association of Women Rural Farmers yesterday appealed to the Federal Government to provide adequate security for their members while in farms.

    The women made the call during a briefing organized by Women Advocates Research and Documentation Center (WARDC) yesterday in Abuja.

    Head, Enugu State Chapter of the women farmers, Mrs. Cecilia Ndu noted that herdsmen crisis has discouraged farmers from visiting their farms.

    She raised the alarm following persistent herdsmen attacks in the nation.

    “I don’t know if the government can provide security for us because in my state, we don’t go to farm again due this herdsmen and cases of rape.”

    Earlier, the Founding Director of the initiative, Dr. Abiola Akiode-Afolabi urged the federal government to implement policies that would support climate resilient agriculture in the country

    She said the policies would boost rural women small holder farming, thus address the menace of hunger and poverty in Nigeria.

    She explained that the call is coming on the heels of the International Day of Rural Women celebration themed: “Challenges and opportunities in climate-resilient agriculture for gender equality and the empowerment of rural women and girls.”

    “The International Day for Rural Women is set aside to give special focus to the critical place occupied by rural women in the struggle to reduce poverty and improvement of food security especially in developing countries of Asia and Africa.”

    Afolabi noted that in spite of their role women not only lack access to Agricultural inputs and finance, but also less than 14 percent land holding rights.

    She said these among other factors, “have negative implications for basic food production and the eradication of poverty.”

    She stressed the need for the government to ensure that policies are responsive to women and state budget support eradication of hunger and poverty.

  • Police probe alleged herdsmen attack in Ondo

    Police probe alleged herdsmen attack in Ondo

    The Ondo State Police Command has pledged to apprehend the killers of a farmer, Linus Ogheh, at the weekend on Kajola Farm at Igbatoro, near Akure, the state capital.

    It also said investigation had begun into last week’s alleged attack on the farm of the Former Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Chief Olu Falae, by suspected herdsmen.

    The command refuted the reports that the herdsmen chased policemen deployed to check incessant invasion of Falae’s farmland.

    It was learnt that some herdsmen stormed the Olu of Ilu-Abo’s farm at Kajola in Igbatoro area last Thursday.

    The farmland was in the same vicinity where the late Ogheh was killed at the weekend by suspected herdsmen.

    The herdsmen were said to have attacked the policemen deployed in the area, after Falae called them to intervene.

    The incessant invasion of the farm of the elder statesman and its destruction by some herdsmen led to his kidnap and killing of one of his security men in September, 2015.

    The recent alleged invasion prompted reactions from the police command.

    Police spokesman Femi Joseph, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), debunked the report that the herdsmen exchanged gunfire with the police team.

    He said the police commissioner ordered a thorough investigation into the matter and the recent that led to the death of a non-indigenous farmer.

    But a group of herdsmen, under the aegis of Miyeti Allah Cattle Rearers, absolved their members of complicity in the alleged attack.

     

  • Rumour of possible herdsmen attack unfounded, say police

    Anambra Commissioner of Police, Sam Okaula, has assured residents of the state of peaceful Eid-El-Kabir celebration.

    Okaula made the promise in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Awka yesterday.

    He said adequate measures had been put in place to prevent breakdown down of law and order during the festival.

    He described as baseless, speculations of a possible herdsmen attack on the state during the period.

    The commissioner of police said there would not be any of such an attack.

    “We have held a meeting with the Fulani leaders in the state and we all agreed that there is no threat to peace in the state.

    “We do not envisage any problem in Anambra during the ceremony and even after the ceremony because we have put measures in place to have peace.

    “We have intelligence reports all through the state and all indices point towards a peaceful celebration,’’ Okaula said.

    He urged residents of the state to go about their lawful businesses without fear, saying that the police would provide adequate security.

    Okaula said that the flash points at Ufuma, Awgbu and Umunze had been guarded.

    Vice President of the Supreme Council for Islamic in Affairs in Anambra, Alhaji Dauda Ajagu, has called for sober reflection during the festival.

    In a statement in Awka, Ajagu said that Nigerians should reflect on their lives with a view to finding solutions to Nigeria’s challenges instead of blaming President Muhammadu Buhari for the current economic downturn.

    He urged Fulani herdsmen to be careful with their cows to forestall invasion and destruction of peoples’ farmlands.

    “We have fought a tribal war before; we do not want to fight again. All we need at this point in time is absolute peace,” Ajagu said.

  • ARG condemns herdsmen attack

    ARG condemns herdsmen attack

    Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG) in Ekiti State has condemned the invasion and killing of two indigenes of Oke Ako in Ikole Local Government Area.

    The suspected herdsmen attacked the locals at 8pm last Friday.

    Speaking in Ado-Ekiti yesterday, the ARG Publicity Secretary, Adeleye Akintola,  said: “We are warning about the consequences of meeting terror with terror should these unprovoked invasions by these marauders persist.

    “We also call on the Federal Government to intervene before the invasion is allowed to snowball into a full blown crisis.”

     

     

  • Herdsmen: When reasoning goes on break

    Herdsmen: When reasoning goes on break

    By Abdulmalik Inuwa Suleiman

    We are again at crossroads as a nation with the farmers/herders’ clashes being the latest test facing us as a people. We are daily confronted with gory pictures coming from Benue, Nassarawa, Plateau most recently Enugu State while other States have reported incidences.

    Given our diverse identities, reactions have been polarised along ethnic and religious lines and several of the interventions border on the extreme with the like of Ekiti State governor, Ayo Fayose threatening that the water sources in the State would be poisoned to deal with the herdsmen.

    Online, people have been coming up with contents that could only serve to aggravate an already bad situation. One report spoke of how women in a particular community sprinkled chili pepper on their farms to deter cattle from destroying their crops leading to the death of some of the herds that ventured into the farms. Some blogs have even gone to the extreme of instigating reprisals; some persons of northern origin have relocated from a few southern towns and cities over this.

    The extreme ones among these interventions are condemnable with the only excuse for them being that those behind them mostly reacted from the sheer shock of the gruesome images of death they saw prior to stating their positions. But there are those contributions that were driven less by human reaction to terror but propelled by greed as they sway the situation only from the prism of “man must wack” and immediately see potential for blackmail or at least make some money from the highest bidders.

    Among these unpatriotic entities was one that took the cake for its daring attempt of making fools out of Nigerians. Anyone not familiar with Dr. Peregrino Brimah’s antecedents could be forgiven for thinking that his recent piece, “North`s Fulani Denial: Did Arase And Buratai Negotiate With Terrorists?” was well intentioned and that he genuinely loves Nigeria.

    His dubious antecedents aside, the premise postulated in the questionable write up are full of holes that should alert the discerning to his true intentions. While I am not a mind reader, Brimah’s true intent is one of two things: he is either out to arm-twist Nigeria’s top military brass as has always been his desire or he is out to prove himself a loyal attack dog to his Iranian masters. Either way, the write up marks a new low for a confused being that is too disoriented to realise he should stop digging deeper into infamy after hitting rock bottom.

    For those who don’t know much about this Iranian mercenary, he is the same chap that wailed he was the loudest online about what he termed the Nigerian Army’s “disproportionate” response to the apparent threat to life of the Chief of Army Staff, Lieutenant General TY Buratai with officers and men on his convoy. This was the fellow, who in a deranged fit of sponsored activism, virtually demanded that Nigeria ceases to exist to make way for a Shiite operated racket that answers to the Islamic Republic of Iran because this was what his recommended inaction on the part of the military would have amounted to.

    This same character went on about how those that died in the resulting military operation were buried alive, or where still alive when buried. At the risk of trivialising this piece, Brimah’s assertion about burying deceased persons alive – between 24 to 48 hours after the operation easily reminds one of that spoof headline that read “Man commits suicide, runs away”. The idea is to show his lack of clarity in thinking through his allegation and overall stand and position.

    In all his intervention for the Islamic Movement of Nigeria (IMN), he never accepted for once or even gave any hints that his clients have a history of violence and visiting oppression on the residents of Zaria, Kaduna state put up with for several decades. He never let on that members of IMN have been radicalised to the point of extremism and that the combatant training they have received – evidenced in video released online by the same sect – has positioned them as the replacement for Boko Haram as Nigeria’s new terror nightmare.

    He also did not address security analysts who expressed concerns that IMN militants could infiltrate the ranks of aggrieved herdsmen or even Boko Haram to realise their desired goal of destabilizing Nigeria to entrench Shiite rule. What matters to Brimah was for Nigeria to allow the IMN extremism to fester.

    Now, compare the “peace loving” Peregrino Birmah (MD or PhD?) to the ranting loose cannon that is angry that efforts are on to stop further loss of life in the farmers/herders clashes that has sparked off a regime of tit for tat killings. In an analysis that would be unbecoming even for someone just discharged from a psychiatric facility, Birmah labelled the move as “negotiate(ing) with terrorists”. Anyone familiar with his style will realise that he was expressing his preference for a massacre on ethnic basis and the target was meant to be persons of Fulani origin.

    The marauding herdsmen that unleashed death on several communities have been severally labelled as Fulani in a controversy that has proven to be highly divisive. I think the true identity of these attackers would be known when the security agencies, which have been ordered by President Muhammadu Buhari to end the herdsmen’s reign of terror, start making progress in apprehending these killers. Like the Boko Haram horror, we may later find out that those behind the attacks are not limited by religion or ethnicity and possibly not by occupation. Birmah’s sick suggestion to massacre Fulani would thus be as crass as asking that the Kanuris be exterminated to rid the nation of Boko Haram because the group operates in their ancestral home.

    The writer’s shallowness was further exposed when he concluded that the mere fact that legitimate groups held press briefings to highlight what angered them as an association is the same as their being responsible for the killings of entire villages. He possibly has never come on the concept whereby the same people affected by and agitating for the same thing adopt different approaches – one choosing persuasion and dialogue while the other opts for violence, killing and depression – while neither is able to prevail on the other to change tactics. This does not rule out the side that favours dialogue from those perpetrating violence in the name of the same struggle. If the writer of that poisonous piece knows half of this perhaps he would have adopted a different approach to deliver the slave’s errand he was running for his paymaster.

    To accuse the north of propping up the herdsmen to carry out attacks portrayed desperation to pitch one region of the country against the other in addition to the equally grievous and treacherous crime of pitching the nation’s over 250 ethnic groups against the Fulani. There has been no verifiable document to prove that our Dr Peregrino Brimah is a pyromaniac that enjoys explosions and conflagrations for the kicks of it so something else must be driving this desire to see Nigeria burn. Could this be the actual brief from his client that he has been unable to achieve with IMN’s militarisation?

    Unfortunately, the average criminal in the world and especially Nigeria will today claim persecution for being an activist when legitimately arrested for a crime. But for this, one would have prescribed that Brimah be invited or extradited to explain what he knows about mercenaries being hired by the herdsmen. Could he have added outsourcing IMN militants to herders to the long list of nefarious things he does to pick his bills? With the veiled threats he had issued severally in defence of extremism this cannot be put past him.

    While the foregoing are credible possibilities, they could also be giving too much credit for the capabilities of Dr Peregrino Brimah, who is living a false life style in a foreign land and is thus under pressure to do whatever is necessary to survive. Driven by hunger and want, he is prepared to mortgage the wellbeing of the rest 170 million of us to get his mess of pottage and that is what riles me. I will not sit by and stomach what I find it sickening, which is that in this contemporary time, in 2016, some self-acclaimed activist is trying to bamboozle us into rising up against an entire ethnic group over the crime of a few persons of that extraction; he is trying to pitch the north against the rest of the country at a time when right thinking citizens mention their nationality first before ethnicity or geo-political zones.

    We should all be equally outraged that this character tried to diminish national institutions to achieve these nefarious goals by accusing the Inspector General of Police and the Chief of Army Staff of negotiating with terrorists.

    The IGP and COAS must dismiss Birmah as what he is, a fifth columnist already paid upfront to sabotage Nigeria and consign his ranting to the dustbin where they belong. They should disregard this apparent attempt at blackmail – either for money or for the security bosses not to be able to deal with the rampaging herdsmen as they see fit. If he is no longer able to ingratiate himself to his paymasters with his outbursts he will likely be compelled to seek other revenue sources aside blackmail and being paid to destabilize our country.

     

    Suleiman is a public affairs commentator,

    Writes from Dutsima,

    Katsina State