Tag: Herdsmen attacks

  • Herdsmen attacks: Police recover 10 bodies in Benue communities

    The Benue State Police Command confirmed yesterday it had  recovered 10 bodies of villagers killed by herdsmen in Tse-Audu and Enger villages in the Gwer West Local Government Area of the state.

    Spokesman for the command, Moses Yamu,an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP),  said the bodies were victims of the Thursday attacks on the villages.

    He said they had been found by the mobile police contingent deployed in Naka, the headquarters  of the local government area.

    He attributed the deaths to armed herdsmen, claiming that the police had in their routine surveillance, also encountered the herdsmen.

    “Eight dead bodies were found in the bush around Tse-Audu and Enger villages in the Gwer West Local Government Area.

    “This is in addition to the two bodies that were removed from the same area on the same day,” he said.

    The police spokesman, however, assured residents of the communities of the safety of their lives, pointing out that a detachment of police team on counter insurgency had been deployed to the area.

    He advised members of the public to promptly report any suspicious movements to security agencies for immediate action.

    The member of the House of Representatives from the area,Dickson Takighir,said on Thursday that at least 24 persons were killed in renewed attacks by suspected herdsmen in various communities in Benue State.

    He said the killings were carried out  between April 2 and 4.

    The killer herdsmen, according to him, attacked seven communities in the state and were  also laying siege to some others.

    He said:”They (the herdsmen) are right now stationed at the Nzorov council ward, ready to attack Gbajimba in the Guma Local Government Area. There are others in Nasarawa, ready to attack Udei and Daudu with over 14 people killed in the last four days.

    “Similarly, Sengev, Mbakyondo and Mbapa areas of the Gwer-West Local Government Area are currently under siege by armed herdsmen.

    “In Tsegaase, two people have been killed; one person is missing in Zwatema, two killed in Tse Adeke, one killed in Tse Adudu with one missing in Tsekelefu.

    “So far, we have yet to confirm the casualty level in Enger. On April 3, four people were killed in Anyebe and one person at Mbavihi, both in the Tonbo ward of the Logo Local Government Area.”

  • Edo communities protest herdsmen attacks

    Edo communities protest herdsmen attacks

    Residents of Odighi and Odiguetue communities in Ovia North East yesterday protested to the palace of Oba Ewuare II of Benin, following incessant attacks by Fulani herdsmen.

    They also said men of the Edo State Police Command have been raiding and arresting members of both communities over the alleged killing of three Fulani herdsmen.

    A protester, Madam Martha Odion, sister of former Edo State Commissioner for Information and Orientation, Louis Odion, said they fled into the bush on Wednesday night when policemen stormed the communities.

    Madam Odion said doors and windows to their family home were shattered by the police and that they were yet to return home.

    She said: “I am 70 years old. We can no longer go to the farm. Any time we go to the farm, we always run back home. We ran away when the police came to arrest people int the village. Our doors and windows were broken.”

    The protesters said the Fulani herdsmen warned them not to enter the bush for any farming activities this year.

    Placards carried by the protesters read, “Fulani herdsmen have made us orphans”, herdsmen have ?driven us from our communities”, no farm for Odiguetue people”, “Obaseki must come to our aid and herdsmen must go”.

    Their spokesmen, Mr. Osaro Ademoyo, said their protest was to let the world know about their suffering in the hands of herdsmen and the police.

    “We came here in respect of what is happening in our community by Fulani herdsmen. We in Odighi and Odiguete communities, which are neighbours; they have raped our wives and killed our farmers; taken over our land and their cattle eat our crops.”

    Also speaking, another protester, Mr, Omozusi Peter, said: “We want the government to hear us now as this is very hot because there is a cloud changing now.

    “They are killing our people but if you kill one of their cows, the whole world will hear. The people they are killing from us the whole world is not hearing. Are we not one Nigeria? Are we not serving the same country?

    “The governor of this state said we need agriculture. This is agriculture we are talking about now. if you want to load plantain in my community, you will load eight trucks a day but today we don’t have any plantain again. They destroy pineapple, cocoyam; they will root off your cassava and give the tubers to their cattle. What they are saying is that they will not feed their cattle with elephant grass, that plantain is better than elephant grass.”

    Louis Odion said he was shocked that the police raided his community and alleged that a conspiracy was unfolding.

    He said: “I spoke with the commissioner of Police to protest the humiliation meted to our people who heeded an advice by the DPO at Ekiadolor to go to the Police Command in a Benin City to formally lodge a complaint against the invasion of the community by Fulani herders firing AK 47 rifles resulting in some fatalities.

    “I am simply unable to understand why people should now be afraid in their ancestral land because cows must graze. Guess what, those who went to the police command spent the whole day at the CID more or less detained and were asked to sign an undertaking to be of good behavior. Can you beat that? The victim/complainant becoming the accused/defendant at the police command.

    “I protested this to the Commissioner of Police. He sounded nice and officious. I perfectly understand he has a job to do. He said they had information that four Fulani herders were killed.”

    The Police CP could not be reached for comments

  • Time is up for herdsmen attacks – Buratai 

    Time is up for herdsmen attacks – Buratai 

    Chief of Army staff, Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai, has disclosed that time is up for herdsmen attacks.

    He said the attacks led to displacement of over 25,000 farmers in Nasarawa state alone.

    The chief of Army staff stated this Tuesday in Lafia when he paid a courtesy call on the governor of the state, Umaru Tanko Al-Makura.

    He said that the army has identified the routes used by the herdsmen in carrying out the killings on the Nasarawa/Benue border and have deployed well-armed officers to man those areas, adding that the military has also arrested some herdsmen who are currently undergoing interrogation.

    He said the operation cat race launched in Benue state will be extended to Nasarawa, noting that within six weeks of its operation, normalcy and peace will return to the affected areas.

    He promised to restore security and maintain peace in areas where the herdsmen menace is on the increase.

    Speaking earlier, Governor Al-Makura said the presence of the military in the affected areas has helped in no small way in restoring peace in the state.

    He promise to give the security agencies the necessary support to clamp down on the herdsmen in order to restore permanent peace and allow the displace persons return back to their homes.

    Governor Al-Makura equally donated the sum of N200 million to the military to help complete the army barracks in Doma local government area of the state.

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  • Herdsmen attacks: Victims’ blood will fight back, says Fayose

    Herdsmen attacks: Victims’ blood will fight back, says Fayose

    Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose has said the blood of victims of herdsmen attacks in Benue State will fight both the attackers and their sponsors.

    He spoke yesterday when he visited the grave of the 73 people killed by suspected Fulani herdsmen on January 1.

    Fayose prayed for the repose of their souls.

    Governor Samuel Ortom called for the arrest and prosecution of Miyetta Allah Kautal Houre who he said are behind the attacks.

  • Herdsmen attacks: ‘Two killed, 30 primary schools shut in Ogun’

    Thirty primary schools and several health centres have been closed in Ketu communities of Ketu Local Council Development Area (LCDA) in Ogun State, following attacks by suspected Fulani herdsmen in the last five months.

    Also, two persons – Mr. Olabisi Tangu Afolabi and Adegoke Olude – were reportedly killed and seven, including four women, injured in attacks on Ketu villages by suspected herdsmen between last December 10 and January 30.

    In a statement yesterday in Abeokuta, the capital, by leaders of the community, Mr Michael Abiose and Mr Williams Olayode, the Ketu Advancement Forum (KAF), speaking for indigenes, regretted that Governor Ibikunle Amosun’s administration has failed to protect them.

    Titled: Do Our Lives Matter to Ogun State Government? over “repeated murder of Ketu people and destruction of their means of livelihood by marauding Fulani herdsmen?” KAF noted that while Ketu residents and the police were working together on the matter, the residents could not remember any step the state government had taken to protect the people and their means of livelihood from the attackers.

    The forum wondered if their lives mattered to the governor.

    KAF said it remained resolute that “there is no land for open grazing in Ketu LCDA,” adding that the herdsmen have proved to be deadly and incapable of co-habiting with their host community amid shortage of farmlands, since the government has allegedly taken the chunk of their land for forest reserves.

    The statement reads: “For us, as Ketu people located in Ogun State by God, the present administration under Governor Amosun, as the Chief Security Officer, has failed us.

    “We (bear) great frustration and agony in our hearts because neither the governor nor his officials has done anything to rescue us from the renewed siege of Fulani herdsmen, who started (attacks) on our communities in October, 2017.

    “Without going into the hostilities of over 15 years, all of which the state is well aware of, we like to tell the world that most communities in Ketu Local Council Development Area (LCDA) have come under renewed siege of Fulani herdsmen in the past five months.

    “Our farmers have been sent away from their farms, over 30 primary schools have been shut down, health facilities closed and economic activities paralysed.

    “The climax of it started on December 10, last year, when innocent aged women were attacked and macheted in-between Moro and Eegelu villages for their refusal to submit themselves to be raped by heartless herdsmen.

    “Nine days after, on December 19, last year, the marauding herdsmen were out on their evil mission again, killing Mr. Olabisi Tangu Afolabi and setting his body ablaze at Oosada village. To add sorrow to the Christmas celebrations, they struck again on December 25, last tear, and murdered Mr. Adegoke Olude at Ogunba Ayetoro.

    “However, with the active collaboration of our vigilantes, three of the suspected killers, namely Mohammed Bello (40), Muhammed Momoh (30) and Yisau Umoru (18), were arrested and later paraded by Police Commissioner Ahmed Illyasu with an AK-47 rifle, pieces of 0.8mm live ammunition, 26 live cartridges and two sharp cutlasses, all recovered from them.

    “The world may also wish to note that three days after a stakeholders’ meeting convened by Ketu LCDA on January 25, at the instance of the police commissioner and Ketu Advancement Forum (KAF), which was attended by herdsmen, the herdsmen broke loose again into our farms, hewing down palm and teak trees for their herds to graze on.

    “Surprisingly, when the residents inspected the damage done to their farms, the herders again opened fire on them and many residents sustained gunshots wounds of varying degree. This incident was well documented at the Police Area Command Office at Ilaro.

    “While the residents and the police are working together on the matter, there is nowhere that we, the people at the centre of the assault, have come in contact with what the state government is doing to protect us, no matter how little.

    “And Yoruba elders, in their wisdom, say you cannot shave somebody’s head without his consent and without his knowledge.

    “Presently, the atmosphere is charged as areas, like Ikotun, Ologiri, Akeru, Ilukan, Ijege and Ajibode have continued to come under the influx of herds.

    “Therefore, the governor can no longer continue to turn a blind eye and deaf ears to the tense situation. We insist that there is no land for open grazing in our LCDA…”

    But the state government said it had taken measures to avert clashes between herdsmen and farmers.

    The government also said it had put measures in place to ensure that lives and property in the state are safer.

    According to the government, it has met with leaders of various interest groups, including the Fulani, the Hausa and Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria, in Abeokuta.

    The meeting, it was learnt, was attended by heads of security agencies, such as the Army, the Department of State Services (DSS), the police and the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC).

    A statement by the Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Taiwo Adeoluwa, said Ogun is one of the most peaceful states in the country, despite being home to diverse tribes, cultures and religions.

    The government said it was not unaware of the security challenges in the land and that it was doing all within its powers to prevent a breach of the peace.

    It urged interest groups in the state to always imbibe the spirit of oneness, adding that their businesses can only thrive in an atmosphere of peace.

    The statement added: “Herdsmen/farmers’ clashes are everywhere. We should cooperate to prevent such here. We all have a common interest and that is, there should be continued peace in Ogun State. You should all take this message of peace to your people back home.”

    Also, police spokesman Abimbola Oyeyemi, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), told The Nation that the police hold regular meetings with farmers and indigenous herdsmen to ensure that peace reigns in Ogun State.

    Oyeyemi said indigenous herdsmen were not giving farmers any headache.

  • Herdsmen attacks: OPC calls for lasting solution

    Herdsmen attacks: OPC calls for lasting solution

    The Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) on Monday urged the Federal Government to urgently find lasting solution to the alleged attacks and wanton killings by herdsmen in the country.

    A statement by Mr Yinka Oguntimehin, the Publicity Secretary of the socio-cultural group, described last Sunday’s attack on the farm of Chief Olu False in Ondo State as wicked, rude and shocking.

    Oguntimehin, a legal practitioner, said that such acts were inimical to the unity, love, peace and progress of the country.

    “The attacks were deliberate attempts by the suspected herdsmen to undermine the security of the country.

    “With the recent attacks, it is a strong signal that Nigerians, particularly, farmers are not safe in their farms.

    “And this is not too good for the federal government’s drive and policy on diversification and promotion of agriculture as a major alternative for oil.

    “The attack also came at a time when Nigerians are still mourning the gruesome murder of 73 people in Benue and several others in other states.

    “The Federal government must find lasting solution to the continuous attacks and wanton killings in the country,’’ Oguntimehin said.

    The scribe of the Pan Yoruba group urged the federal government to curtail the herdsmen’s activities and address the present security challenges in the country.

    “As a group that is poised to protect the interest of the Yorubas wherever they live in the country, we believe strongly that it is the duty of security agents to protect the lives and property of the citizenry.

    “We urge the federal government to nip the unwholesomenactivities of these herdsmen in the bud.

    “The herdsmen are not ghosts. They are Nigerians like us and they must be stopped now before it degenerates into further attack and counter attacks.

    “It is sending the wrong signals that our security apparatus may have failed in the discharge of their responsibilities,’’ the OPC spokesman added. (NAN)

  • Herdsmen attacks: Be proactive, Ango tells FG

    Herdsmen attacks: Be proactive, Ango tells FG

    ….urges citizens to be vigilant

     

    Spokesman of the Northern Elders Forum (NEF) Professor Ango Abdullahi has called on federal and state governments to be more proactive in protection of lives and property of citizens across the country.

    Professor Abdullahi who is also a one time Vice Chancellor of Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria said there was the need for the authorities to take more decisive steps to restore the security of lives and property of citizens especially those that were currently involved in herdsmen/farmer clashes in Benue, Taraba, Adamawa, Kaduna, Zamfara and other parts of the country.

    He also advised the federal security agencies to step up their statutory responsibility of protection of national integrity.

    While he condoled all families and communities that have lost members and property, the Northern Elder urged the citizens themselves to be more vigilant.

    The Professor said, “Our forum recently met to review critical national developments, particularly as they relate to tensions around national security punctuated by killings in many parts of the country, and we condemned it and called for seriousness on the part of the security agencies in tackling the matter.

    “We condoling all the families and communities that have lost members and assets, and we demand the federal and state authorities to take more decisive steps to restore the security of lives and property of citizens.

    “Also all leaders must observe restraint and responsibility in the manner they exercise their powers to shape opinion and determine the responses of the citizens.

    “All communities must maintain vigilance over their relations with each other, and seek solutions that do not involve conflicts which in the end, leave all of us as losers.

    “We at the Northern Elders Forum will continue to seek all opportunities and avenues to engage leaders, governments and all stakeholders in the search for peace and security in the North and Nigeria”, he said.

  • Way out of herdsmen attacks, by NBA, others

    Way out of herdsmen attacks, by NBA, others

    Farmers and herdsmen have cohabited for ages. Then something snapped and they turned against themselves. Benue State is still reeling from the shock of the killing of 73 people by herdsmen on January 1. The killings were said to have been sparked by protests against the anti-open grazing law. Now, the Federal Government has dumped ranching for cattle colonies. Will this stop incessant killings? asks ADEBISI ONANUGA

    It was a grim task, but one that had to be done. The people of Benue State filed out last Thursday to bury the 73 people killed by herdsmen on January 1 at the Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida Square (IBB) Square in Markudi, the capital.

    The herdsmen invaded villages in Guma and Logo local government areas, killing people on their farms and in their homes. Many bodies were not found until a week later.

    The killings sparked outrage.

    Tor Tiv and paramount ruler of Tiv land, Prof James Ayatse, said the attack was the 47th  in five years by Fulani herdsmen. He likened the killings to genocide.

    He said: “I, therefore, call on the Federal Government to act swiftly by putting an end to these killings; this act of impunity must stop.”

    A former Katsina State Military Governor, Gen. Lawrence Onoja, who also described the killings as genocidal conspiracy against Benue people, said it must stop.

    Onoja said: “Some of us in 1966 fought in the Nigeria civil war. Benue has contributed to the unity of this country. Therefore if the Federal Government refuses to address the killings, we will decide to raise our army as advocated by our elders to defend ourselves, l will not mind to command that army, despite my age.”

    He appealed to the Federal Government to replicate “Operation Python Dance” or “Fulani dance” in Benue as being done in other states. He urged Benue indigenes to support Ortom for the successful enforcement of the anti-open-grazing law.

    A former lawmaker from Benue Northwest, Senator Joseph Waku, said: “It is unfortunate that someone would oppose a law that is legally enacted and begin to kill and the Federal Government would refuse to make arrest in a quest to end the carnage. This is enough provocation; nobody has the monopoly of killing. Therefore, enough is enough”.

    A representative of the United Nations (UN), Dr. Mathins Ejibike, who attended the funeral, condoled with the government and people. He said the situation demanded international attention.

    “We want an enlightened approach to this matter. We should continue to pray. This kind of killings should be the last in the Benue State.”

    How it all started

    On Monday, May 22, 2017, Benue State Governor, Samuel Ortom, signed into law, the Open Grazing Prohibition and Establishment of Ranches Law 2017. The law, which came into operation on November 1, was seen by many as the best solution to the incessant clashes between herdsmen and farmers in the state.

    The law specifically permits grazing of livestock only within ranches and prohibits the movement of animals from one destination to another within the state except by rail, trucks and other vehicles. The law spells out punishment for offenders ranging from imprisonment to payment of fines on conviction by a law court.

    And to demonstrate his commitment to the implementation of the law, Ortom set in motion the machinery to provide land for pilot ranches to assist livestock owners who may find the establishment of private ranches challenging.

    He inaugurated the livestock guards and advisory committee charged with enforcement of the act across the State.

    With the promulgation of the law, relative peace returned to the communities while farming and other socio-economic activities resumed.

    But one interesting aspect of the law was that it also protects livestock and ranches as it stipulates severe punishment for any person convicted of cattle rustling or any other animals kept in ranches.

    Miyetti Allah kicks

    However, a group, Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore, a Fulani socio-cultural association, faulted the Anti-Open Grazing Law, describing it as obnoxious and a recipe for anarchy.

    The National President of the organisation, Alhaji Bello Abdullahi Bodejo, said the Land Grazing law of 1960 is what they know and is subsisting. He advised Governor Ortom to learn from former Governor Jonah Jang of Plateau, who, according to Bodejo, tried to decimate the Fulani for eight years but failed. He expressed worries that their human right to free movement was being violated as a result of the restriction placed on their animals by the law. He accused the governor of committing illegalities by trying to deny them their means of livelihood. Bodejo noted that pastoralists have same legal rights like every Benue State indigene. He said: “Governor Samuel Ortom is asking pastoralists to leave Benue State; that cannot happen. How can a Nigerian ask other Nigerians to leave a place they are constitutionally entitled to be?”

    However, the orgy of violence and killings by suspected herdsmen have not been limited to Benue. In Taraba State, about 27 people were also killed.

    Other states’ experience

    Over the past decades, the nation has witnessed increased violence between farmers and herdsmen leading to the death of innocent souls. Open grazing has been seen by some as an outdated form of cattle rearing and a source of anarchy and confusion in various parts of the country.

    To curtail the clashes, many states have had to enact anti-open grazing bill to protect themselves and to arrest the situation threatening peaceful and mutual co-existence in many communities.

    Taraba

    For instance Governor Darius Ishaku of Taraba State, on May 7, 2017, proposed an executive bill to the state House of Assembly to prohibit open grazing. The bill is entitled, “Anti-Open Grazing Prohibition and Ranches Establishment Bill 2017”.

    The bill prohibits open rearing and grazing of livestock and provides for the establishment of ranches and the Taraba State livestock and ranches administration and control committee and for others connected thereto.  Like in Benue, the bill was intended to bring lasting solutions to the killings and destruction of property in the state as a result of herdsmen and farmers’ clashes.  Weeks after, precisely June 12, the Maiyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association protested against the bill. Its members beseiged the state House of Assembly to stop it from being passed into law.

    Maiyetti Allah, Taraba State Chapter Chairman, Alhaji Sahabi Mahmud Tukur, said the bill was “inimical, ill-intended, discriminatory and a misplaced priority”, adding that the association rejected the bill. To them, “grazing, like any other occupation, is cultural.”

    However, while many states are battling with killings and wanton destruction of properties by alleged herdsmen, Plateau, Bayelsa and Anambra are some of the few states that are free from such attacks.

    Plateau

    Although a youth group in Plateau State presented a bill seeking to ban open grazing, a majority of herdsmen in the state opposed the bill as they saw it as an attempt to run them out of the state. Instead of an anti-open grazing law, Plateau State has been implementing a ranching policy. Last Thursday, Governor Simon Lalong told State House correspondents, after a meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, that one of the things that sustained peace in Plateau was his consultations with the people on the ranching policy. He said the majority of Plateau citizens have bought into the idea and voluntarily donated land for the pilot scheme to take off. He said consultations allowed the people to understand and buy into the concepts.

    Bayelsa

    In Bayelsa, the relative peace enjoyed in the state is due to the decision of Governor Seriake Dickson to make available the state-owned Palm Estate, Elebele, spanning about 1,200 hectares of land, for grazing. Since the government came up with the policy of restricting the herdsmen and their cattle to this area, the state has not recorded any violent clash between herdsmen and local farmers to date.

    Anambra

    There is no anti-grazing law in Anambra State. However, Governor Willie Obiano adopted a policy for peaceful coexistence between the people of the state and cattle rearers. He set up a joint task force comprising security operatives, herdsmen, host communities and state officials in all areas where herdsmen operate. However, in the early stage of the formation of the task force, a few clashes were recorded. It was reported that the herdsmen violated the policy 11 times, but following the quick intervention of the state government, the issues were resolved.

    Ekiti

    On August 29, 2016, Ekiti State Governor Ayodele Fayose signed an anti-grazing bill into law to curb herdsmen’s activities.

    He threatened to charge any cattle rearer found  carrying arms while grazing with terrorism.

    The Ekiti State Anti-grazing Law has six main features:

    Grazing must be from 7am to 600pm daily.

    Anyone caught grazing on portions of land or any farmland not allotted by the government shall be apprehended and made to face the law.

    Any herdsman caught with firearms and any weapons during grazing shall be charged with terrorism.

    Any cattle confiscated shall be taken to the government cattle ranch at Erifun and Iworoko Ekiti community in the state.

    Any farm crop destroyed by any apprehended herdsman shall be estimated by agricultural officers and the expenses shall be borne by the culprit.

    Any herdsman who violates any of these rules shall be imprisoned for six months without fine.

    To further enforce the law, the governor on October 26, 2016, inaugurated the Ekiti Grazing Enforcement Marshals, with the warning that cattle found grazing after 6pm would be confiscated by the state government.

    He also said the state government would collaborate with the police and other security agencies to tackle armed herdsmen, saying marshals are not to carry arms and, therefore, would rely on agencies empowered by law to carry arms to tackle armed cattle rearers.

    To demonstrate that he meant business, two herdsmen Momodu Rebo (19) and Isiaka Idris (22), arraigned before a magistrate court, were remanded in prison custody on August 29, 2017 for violating the state’s anti grazing law.

    The defendants were ordered to be put in prison for destroying a farm land at Apoto Farm Settlement in Eporo, Emure Local Government Area on January 11, last year.  The court was told they unlawfully allowed their cattle to graze on farmland not designated as ranches, but belonging to Akinwale Bisi, Agbelegbe Dare and Paul Salami, damaging their crops worth N850,000, he said.

    Last Wednesday, Fayose also met with hunters in the state and urged them not to allow herdsmen to kill the people of Ekiti. He raised an alarm that some Fulani herdsmen have started a surreptitious move into the outskirts of Ekiti to kill and maim people.

    Fayose said the move was targeted at rubbishing his anti-grazing law, but assured that the invaders would be met with stiff resistance from the people. He charged the hunters from the 16 local governments areas, during a meeting, to secure the state against the herdsmen.

    However, an association of Fulani herdsmen from Ilorin, who live in Ekiti faulted the state’s anti-grazing law.

    The herdsmen, under the aegis of Jamu Nate Fulbe Association of Nigeria, said the law contradicted the Terrorism (Prevention) Act, 2011.

    Speaking through their Legal Adviser, Mr. Umar Imam, they argued that herdsmen who carried light weapons , such as cutlasses, knives, catapult and arrows within the time stipulated by the new law, could not be charged with terrorism.

    Fed Govt’s response

    Last Tuesday, President  Muhammadu Buhari gave clarifications on why the Federal Government never challenged anti-open grazing bill signed into law by the Benue State government.

    According to a statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, the government is to hold a stakeholders’ conference on infrastructural and agricultural development to give the state government an opportunity to halt the senseless killings by the herdsmen. He said the move was to proffer short and long-term solutions to the frequent clashes between farmers and cattle rearers. The conference, Shehu said, is to draw up a 20-30 year development plan that takes cognisance of environmental impact. It said Buhari had been concerned about these conflicts.

    The statement reads in part: “He is equally worried about some public pronouncements and finger-pointing that are, in most cases, very unhelpful to peaceful coexistence of our people.

    “The President is conscious of his duty to Nigerians, not the least because he is accountable to everything that goes wrong. He deeply sympathises with the families and all the other direct and indirect victims of this violence. He is determined to bring it to a permanent end.

    “While there are many Nigerians who see the conflict between the nomadic herdsmen and peasant farmers as an ethnic problem, others point to religious differences and agenda. The President does not subscribe to such simplistic reductionism.

    “President Buhari holds the view, as do many experts, that these conflicts are more often than not, as a result of major demographic changes in Nigeria.”

    His explanation, however, was received with criticisms, that he was slow in responding to the killings in Benue State and for reducing the dastardly act of the herdsmen to “ethnic problems”, “religious differences and agenda” and “demographic changes”.

    How to handle the killings

    The Federal Government has announced the ban of open grazing to stem the growing anger sparked by the killings in Benue and other states. But beyond the policy statement, how can such threats to peace and public safety be checked? Is a national anti-open grazing law needed? Should states be mandated by law to provide land for cattle colonies and ranches? Most importantly, what are the legal steps that should be taken to prevent a recurrence of the recent killings?

    A Nigerian Working Group on Peace Building and Governance in a paper released on January 7 took a cursory look at the crisis of the herdsmen and recommended solutions that ranged from the creation of new grazing resolves and deployment of modern technology like an electronic chip to track animals.

    The signatories to the report include public policy experts, academics and diplomats: Ibrahim Gambari, Martin Luther-Agwai, Jibrin Ibrahim, Attahiru Jega, Chris Kwaja, Fatima Balla, Nguyan Fesse, Aisha Muhammed–Oyebode and Y. Z. Ya’u.

    The group, according to Premium Times, suggested that experts should be assembled to map out the duration, strategy and timelines for the transition plan. As there is no miracle model for solving the problems, the plan should simultaneously pursue a number of models .

    The group noted there are discordant laws and regulations on legislate livestock production and pastoralism at the regional, national and state levels. It noted that some of the newly emerging laws such as the “anti-grazing” state laws appear to contradict the principle of free movement enshrined in the Constitution.

    It, therefore, recommended the harmonisation of relevant laws and policies that governs grazing reserves. It specifically said the 1965 Grazing Reserve Law could be revived based on Section 315 of the 1999 Constitution in the 19 northern states and complemented with a national review and protection of traditional stock routes; it advised that regional instruments governing pastoralism should be protected and above all domesticated. It said in addition to the laws, consultative process between farming and pastoral communities are required to review the effect of statutes and regulations on routine practices of animal husbandry.

    According to Premium Times, the group, among others, recommended ranching  as one of the possible models in areas with lower population densities in the Northeast (Sambisa Game Reserve in Borno State) and Northwest (Gidan Jaja Grazing Reserve in Zamfara State);

    Semi-intensive systems of animal husbandry,  accompanied with requisite investment in infrastructure, training, extension, marketing and animal health service delivery in conjuncture with the private sector;  the traditional form of pastoralism should continue for a period to be agreed upon with some improvements (in the form of coordinated mobility between wet and dry season grazing areas and effective management of farmers and pastoralists relations) among others.

    The group also suggested the establishment of grazing reserves provides the opportunity for practicing a more limited form of pastoralism and is therefore a pathway towards a more settled form of animal husbandry. It noted that Nigeria has a total of 417 grazing reserves out of which only about 113 have been gazetted.

    The group noted that pastoralism has developed into a national crisis that is leading to increased violence and that a legal approach alone cannot resolve the issue. It said it is therefore important to negotiate a national policy framework that would protect the interests of both farmers and herders. The group emphasised that the federal government should take the initiative of negotiating a consensual policy framework that would address the issues.

    It suggested a comprehensive approach to address the growing crisis associated with violence affecting pastoralism and farmers in Nigeria. It advised that the federal government should commission a large-scale research endeavour to carry out in-depth study to understand the reasons for the escalation of violence, key actors, motivations and agency fuelling the crisis among others.

    According to the group, cattle routes should be restored and significant investment made in restoring traditional conflict resolution mechanisms. As massive corruption has accompanied the increased presence of the police and courts in matters affecting farmers and herders, there should be advocacy and administrative guidance to return to traditional methods of conflict resolution. There should be capacity development of farmers and herders associations so that they play a more positive role in the process.

    Lawyers’ views

    In a statement, the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) through its General Secretary Aare Isiaka Abiola Olagunju, urged the Federal Government to activate all constitutional measures to urgently douse mounting tension in affected areas.

    “The NBA also calls on all parties in the crisis to desist from further use of negative languages that might escalate the already tensed situation in the country.

    “No nation under the rule of law would stand by and allow mindless criminalities and wanton destruction of lives and property to go on unchecked as this would be an open invitation to anarchy.

    “The  President of the NBA shall within the shortest possible time lead a high powered delegation of the NBA on a fact finding mission to Benue, Taraba and other states affected by similar crisis in order to further parley with the affected communities in finding a common solution to the invasion and or clashes and prevent future occurrences.

    “The NBA urges the media to show restraint in their reportage of the clashes in order to prevent further escalation to other areas,” the association added.

    An Abuja-based lawyer, Mr Ocholi O. Okutepa, said herdsmen attack does not require the drafting or passing of more laws.

    “It does not also speak of the weakness of existing legislation. The issue is one we have decided not to address. It is the failure of the government to give effect to extant provisions of existing laws.

    “Having faced grave danger and unfortunate killings, Benue State enacted and passed to law its anti-grazing law in 2017. However, as already noted, law in itself is dead without the political will and relevant structure to give effect to it. So the ban on open grazing itself is no solution,” he argued.

    Okutepa suggested that each state should make relevant laws for the protection of its citizens as regards the issue of grazing. This will enable each state make laws on their perculiar circumstances.

    He however disagreed on the issue of cattle colonies, stressing that it would only further the crisis in that those aggrieved by the loss of loved ones would see this as rewarding the accused. “Constitutionally and in our penal and criminal codes, arrests and criminal  prosecution ought to be the immediate response of the government. The government must, therefore, act in the most guided way to forestall the possible worst case scenario.

    “Unfortunately, we must also admit that the Nigeria Police Force, the Nigeria intelligence agency, DSS and SSS, have sadly failed to live up to their responsibilities on the issue. A lot of comentators focus on prosecution but you cannot prosecute without proper intelligence and or investigation.

    “In my view therefore, policy statements and directives are, unfortunately, insufficient to deal with the issue as the mass killings resulting from herdsmen attack in Benue and other states will only go on and become worse until there is the political will to confront the issue and apply extant laws,” he contended.

    A former member of the Ogun State Judiciary Commission, Abayomi Omoyinmi, described as deplorable, the killings in Benue State and other part of the country involving the Fulani herdsmen and its communities. “I believed it is very important for government at both the federal and state to seriously engaged all stakeholders in urgent discourse, to allow tension to cool off. By engaging the stakeholders, peaceful atmosphere will return to the states and communities affected,” he said.

    According to him, a national anti-open grazing law, if enacted, may not solve the problem as recently observed by the incident in Benue State. Modifying of the law as requested by the Miyeti Alla is not necessary since the same law is a subject of litigation before the court of law and my advice in that respect is that they should wait for the outcome of the pronouncement from the court.

    He however pointed out that the Criminal Act occasioned by anyone or group should not go unpunished. He said there are laws in our statute books that provide for severe punishment for anyone found guilty murder. The security agencies must be receptive to their duties by making sure that the criminals that are alleged to have carried out these mayhem be brought to book, and any one culpable is punished as such punishment will send signal of warning to other criminals involved. He reasoned that once there is awareness that the days of impunity are over, people will desist from taken laws into their hands.

    Omoyinmi advised that the provision of land for cattle colonies and ranches should be considered but I don’t think states should be mandated by law. “Perhaps a memo of understanding to be agreed among all stakeholders, including the government, will be a better option which may also vary from state to state,” he added.

    A former Welfare Secretary of NBA, Ikeja Branch, Samson Omodara, said if the reports of threat for modification of anti-open grazing law by Mayetti is true, then, it is not only wrong but highly reprehensible.

    He argued that the Land Use Act vests the land in each state on the governors in trust for the people and the grundnorm also empowers the  Houses of Assembly to make laws for the good governance of the states. He said it was  irresponsible of any group to threaten that a law be amended for its sake without following due process.

    “The full weight of the law be brought against such group to nip in the bud a situation of utter lawlessness. The policy statement of the Federal Government is not enough but a proactive executive and legislative intervention at this critical period. International best practice of animal husbandry should also be considered by the states and the Federal Government,” he advised.

  • Herdsmen: Fake Buhari’s tweet in circulation – Presidency

    Herdsmen: Fake Buhari’s tweet in circulation – Presidency

    The Presidency on Saturday alerted Nigerians about a fake Twitter handle purportedly belonging to President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The President’s Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, said the parody account has been posting spurious messages justifying the attacks by herdsmen, saying they were only defending themselves.

    He said: “Evil doers and enemies of our country are obviously at work, seeking ways to further advance their pernicious acts. The message is denounced in its entirety, and President Buhari stands by his earlier condemnation of the killings in Benue and other parts of the country as dastardly and unacceptable before God and man.

    “Those behind the concocted message are also enemies of God and man, who have no place in a decent society.

    “The President stands by his earlier directives that all those behind wanton killings in any part of the country must be brought to book.”

    NAN

  • Deal decisively with herdsmen attacks, counsels Atilade

    Deal decisively with herdsmen attacks, counsels Atilade

    The South West Chairman, Christian Association of Nigeria, Archbishop Magnus Atilade, has called on the federal government to take decisive actions against the nefarious activities of armed herdsmen across the country.

    Atilade said this in his New Year message to Nigerians, and claimed that churches in Nigeria are praying and working toward ensuring peace and stability in Nigeria.

    He said that the unchecked activities of the armed herdsmen in Nigeria are the greatest threat to peace and stability in Nigeria in 2018.

    He lamented that under the pretence of cattle herding, some armed Fulani herdsmen have legalised killing in Nigeria through consistent maiming, destroying of farmlands, and rendering thousands homeless.

    He advised that the National Assembly and the state assemblies should sit and make laws that will curb the activities of the armed herdsmen.

    He stated further that we need to understand where the attacks are coming from, whether they are internal aggression or external and identify their source of funding.