Tag: herdsmen

  • Policemen deployed in Ogun community as herdsmen kill farmer

    Policemen deployed in Ogun community as herdsmen kill farmer

    Armed policemen yesterday took over Imeko-Afon Local Government Area of Ogun State, following the alleged killing of a farmer by suspected herdsmen on Thursday.

    Few hours after the Ogun State Government took proactive measures to prevent clashes between herdsmen and farmers in the state, people suspected to be herdsmen have hacked a man to death on his farm.

    The farmer identified as Adetona Owolabi was allegedly killed on his farm at Afon, a community in the council area.

    The incident happened a few hours after the state government took proactive measures to prevent clashes between farmers and herders in the state.

    The Nation gathered that Adetona  was working on his farm situated a few  meters away from the  Afon bridge along Owode/Abeokuta road when he observed that herds of cattle were  grazing on the farm ravaged his  cassava, yam and vegetables.

    It was learnt further that herdsmen attacked him with machetes for daring to challenge them for leading their cattle to his farm to eat up his crops.

    The victim, who was in his mid-60s, it was learnt, suffered machete cuts on his body leading to his death before he could get help while the perpetrators escaped.

    The spokesman of Ogun State Police Command, Mr. Abimbola Oyeyemi, an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP), told The Nation that two persons have been arrested in connection with the killing.

    He said the Commissioner of Police, Mr. Ahmed Iliyasu, had instructed the suspects be moved to the Homicide Section of Ogun State Police Command, Eleweran, for discrete investigation.

  • Herdsmen kill farmer in Ogun

    Herdsmen kill farmer in Ogun

    Suspected herdsmen have hacked a farmer to death on his farmland in Ogun State.

    The farmer identified as Adetona Owolabi was allegedly killed on Thursday in his farm at Afon, Imeko-Afon local government area of the state.

    The incident occurred few hours after the Ogun State Government took proactive measures to prevent clashes between herdsmen and farmers in the state.

    The Nation gathered that Adetona was working on his farm located few metres away from the  Afon bridge along Owode/Abeokuta road when he observed that herds of cattle were grazing on the farm and ate his  cassava, yam and vegetables.

    Eyewitnesses said the herdsmen attacked him with machetes for daring to challenge them for allowing cattle into his farmland and destroyed all the farm produce.

    The victim, who was in his mid-60s, suffered cuts all over his body and bled to death before help could reach him.

    The attackers fled the place after the incident.

    The state Police Public Relations Officer, Abimbola Oyeyemi, said he was yet to be briefed on the incident.

  • Tinubu on herdsmen, farmers crisis: enough

    Tinubu on herdsmen, farmers crisis: enough

    All Progressives Congress (APC) stalwart Asiwaju Bola Tinubu yesterday said herdsmen attacks on farmers festered because past administrations did not deal decisively with the problem.

    He said the crisis had assumed dimensions that troubled the body politic because it had not been addressed.

    “Now, the current administration is moving to arrest the lethal situation,” Tinubu said.

    The former Lagos State governor, who spoke at the 15th Annual Daily Trust dialogue, believes that the nomadic way of life is fast becoming obsolete.

    According to him, large scale nomadic practice does not belong in this day and age.

    “Thus, herders have no right to cling to this way of life by killing others. Government must stop their violence but also offer them a viable new way of life by moving them toward more modern, non-nomadic cattle rearing,” he said.

    Tinubu, who spoke on the theme:  Nigeria and the Challenges of 2019: This is not a game, was represented by one-time Lagos State Commissioner for Finance Mr Wale Edun.

    President Muhammadu Buhari was represented by Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) Boss Mustapha. There were key speakers, such as former Jigawa State Governor Sule Lamido and the representative of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Prince Soyebi, among other eminent Nigerians.

    The APC chieftain described the crisis as “evil”, which did not suddenly appear as Nigerians have been “living and dying with this lethal situation for many years”.

    “We should have been agitating in this manner five, 10, 15 years ago. Lives would have been saved. For reasons I cannot completely fathom, we have come late to the point of strong, collective outrage at this bloodletting.

    “Yet, all in all, late is better than never in this regard. This spirit of compassion and care must be enshrined in our political culture because it is integral to national greatness and democratic progress.

    “True patriotism requires that you love more than the concept of Nigeria. You must love the people who comprise this nation, whether they worship in a church, mosque, and shrine or not at all.”

    Tinubu believes too much political and economic power resides in the hands of too few, resulting in unemployment, inadequate infrastructure, too little food and too much poverty.

    “For the debate needed on how best to tackle these structural problems, 2019 must not be a game between players similar in every way save the political party costume they wear.

    “The election to come must be a contest of different visions for the nation’s present and future.

    “As a progressive, I believe we must transform the nation by embarking on deep and impactful reforms, by creating more jobs, providing social policy initiatives and building an infrastructure befitting a leading nation.

    “Social services must become a reality close at hand and not a vague dream lying in the distance,” he said.

    Tinubu called for a reform of the fuel subsidy regime, saying it causes more problems than it cures.

    “It sweetly profits the elite who manipulate the programme to their own advantage. We need to allow market forces to more directly determine price.

    “We need to open the now closed market to more suppliers. In this way, we may better harmonise supply and demand, where they do the most sustainable economic good,” he said.

    Tinubu advocated a repair of the social safety net in the interest of old people, whom he believes are shortchanged and forced to live in penury despite their past labours.

    He noted that longstanding arrears of pension payments and retirement benefits to public sector workers remain outstanding.

    “I maintain the unshakeable belief that smart, progressive governance can bring prosperity, tranquility and justice,” he said.

    The frontline politician and strategist praised the Federal Government for successfully beating Boko Haram into a retreat, and for progress made in the fight against corruption.

    “As progress is being made on these fronts, Nigeria also must face its biggest structural problem: our imbalanced economy and the poverty and misery it has caused,” Tinubu said.

    Ahead of next year’s election, Tinubu said the battle waged during one election cycle was not enough.

    “Curing the ills that plague our house will require many years of outstanding governance,” he said.

    According to him, it is imperative for Nigerians not to allow “politics as usual” to claim the 2019 election season.

    “We must insist on the principle that elections do not return to being games played by well-heeled elite while the rest of the nation is left to struggle and starve.

    “The people must resist all appeals to unthinking passions and old prejudices. We must adhere to what our conscience reveals as the best path to good governance for all.

    “For me, that path has always been a progressive one that harks to the need to materially transform the power relationships upon which this political economy is based,” he said.

    Tinubu would like to see a national industrial policy that will create jobs, a national infrastructure plan, economic stimulants, accessibility of credit, government-backed home mortgage system, and a return to commodity exchange boards so farmers can secure good prices and hedge against loss.

    “To achieve better levels of overall governance, we need to re-balance the duties between federal and state governments by giving states more power, authority and resources.

    “The challenge we face leading into 2019 is not to fall backward in governance and development as we move forward in time. Reform and change are difficult because they are always and everywhere resisted by those who benefit from the old order.

    “But we must insist on a better life for our people. As such, the electoral politics of 2019 cannot be played as if a game that has no end other than itself.

    “Here again, we must insist on politics having a nobler and larger goal than just registering certain people into the fraternity of officeholders. People must not only aspire and hold office; they must seek to govern prudently from that office,” Tinubu said

  • Farmers/herdsmen clash: Lessons from Kano

    Last year I travelled to Kano. It was actually my second time and the circumstances were a bit different. In the first instance, I was passing through to another state in the north, and for anyone who has read T.S. Elliot’s Journey of the Magi, this journey was like a death: we had spent the whole of the day driving to Kano from Benin and only to arrive by dusk when the sights and sounds of this famous city were already being overtaken by the dark. My plan to get early to this famous city and perhaps to see something of the relics of this town: the dying cotton fields, the Kano city walls and all other monuments which I read about in school faded into the horizon. My friends had told me that Kano is to northerners what Lagos and Onitsha is to the Southwest and Southeast respectively.

    Apart from the fact that I was already in Abuja before I set forth, I was mindful that this journey could be another death for me if I did not set forth before dawn. And so that was what I did. As I rode on, I marvelled just as I did the first time I travelled up north, at the vast expanse of land Nigeria is blessed with, and which could translate to zillions and zillions of football fields. This time however, it was not the thought of football fields which took hold of me but the arable-ness of that vast landscape.

    The Kano city I saw is a clean city with a cosmopolitan muscle. And if I have any thoughts of going up north to live anytime soon, Kano it would be. But take it or leave it, the average northerner is a farmer, and a very good one at that. Very good evidence for this assertion is the disappeared cotton fields and the groundnut pyramids of the early 50s and late 60s.

    And at this point, I crave readers’ indulgence to relate my experience with my former principal in my place of primary assignment during my NYSC years. It was the beginning of the planting season and just about when anyone with any modicum of self-respect was already planting – tomatoes and beans, I was lazing around. As I took in this agrarian activity one morning, my principal sidled up to me to ask why I was not planting beans like everyone else. I told him that where I come from, yam, rather than beans was a man’s crop. I had cause to regret in three months when I found out that find my youth corps members who heeded that call to farm around the premises harvested about two to three bags of beans.

    I recall that as I got within the precincts of Kano, what was dry and very coarse landscape suddenly began to transform into fields and fields and fields of sorghum, maize, millet, rice and corn. The only other place where I’d seen anything of this nature was in 2008 in the North Rhine-Westphalia in Germany. For the North Rhine-Westphalia, I know something of the processes which the Germans put in place to be able to cultivate their seeds all year round and then roll up the hay or alfalfa hay with maize, sorghum or millet to be used for feeding livestock – cows, sheep and what have you – all year round. I also know of a fact that that hay is a component of the mishmash of cow dung and genetically modified seeds fed into gigantic silos from where the gas residue sidles easily to most German homes.

    But where or what system sustains agricultural production in the north up till the harvest and harmattan season? As I looked around, the answer struck me in the face: forgive me but I cannot remember the actual name of the massive EU funded irrigation project which drives the agricultural economy of the north. But there is one as a matter of fact.  And this is actually the crux of this discussion. After 73 Benue citizens were mowed down about two weeks ago allegedly by Fulani herdsmen, I have tried to make any meaning for the reasons for the killings. It is said that Fulani herdsmen are unable to graze their cattle because of the dwindling mangroves vegetation in the north on which they graze their cattle.  Therefore, it is said that they have no choice but move to people’s farms and graze their cattle. But I find this theory to be specious and spurious and very difficult to accept and believe. Know why? If the cows in Europe are no different from the cows in Nigeria, I see no reason why they cannot be fed on hay like the cows in Europe. And as a matter of fact, fodder and roughage to feed cows is plenteous in the north from maize, millet, sorghum harvest residue to the extent that I believe that that chap asking us to import hay/grass to feed our cows is the most unserious Nigerian alive today.

    Two things stand out therefore: one, if the Kano government has over 17 dams in place with respect to its irrigation programme, I do not see why all the other governments in the north are not establishing dams and providing water and grazing fields for their cattle. If they are not doing so, it may therefore mean that certain aspects of the rumours making the rounds as to the true intent of the proposed grazing colonies may be true.

    Countries and peoples have fought wars over water holes and grazing fields. Yet, Nigeria does not need a war now or in the future and we do not need to be colonized a second time to know what to do. In a book I am reading now, The Anatomy of Resource Wars, Worldwatch Institute, 2002, the authors have said that many resource-rich countries like Australia and Botswana have not fallen prey to violence. Where conflict does break out, it is the result of a combination of factors – political, social, economic and military (note this last word), – that makes for weak, though typically repressive and undemocratic states and vulnerable economies. The cold-blooded murder of 73 persons in Benue State under the guise of grazing field or colonies therefore brings us to the question of climate change. It is real to the extent that we must now begin to realize that it is what is responsible for desert encroachment, desertification and droughts. If we have no plan in place to mitigate these climate change precursors, then we open ourselves up for unscrupulous individuals to cash in to prosecute a personal agenda and vendetta.

    • Etemiku is of Africa Network for Environment & Economic Justice, (ANEEJ), Benin City.
  • Suspected herdsmen kill Tiv expectant mother in Ekiti

    Suspected herdsmen kill Tiv expectant mother in Ekiti

    The spate of killings by suspected herdsmen spread yesterday to Orin-Ekiti in Ido/Osi Local Government Area of Ekiti State.

    A Tiv expectant mother was reportedly killed by those residents called “Bororo herdsmen” at the town’s farm settlement.

    Police Commissioner Abdullahi Chafe, who spoke on phone, said he was away from  on official assignment.

    An indigene of the town, who is a former Chairman of Ido/Osi Local Government Area, Prince Sanmi Olubummo, confirmed the incident in a telephone chat.

    He said another victim of the attack was receiving treatment at a hospital.

    Olubummo said policemen from Ido-Ekiti Divisional Headquarters visited the scene of the killing, saying the situation was calm.

    He said: “The incident happened inside the Orin Farm Settlement.

    “Nobody knows what led to the crisis in the early hours of Thursday but our people said the Bororo herdsmen killed the pregnant woman.”

    The latest killing is coming barely four days after a herdsman, Babuga Dengi, was killed by people suspected to be Tiv farmers at a location between Oke Ako and Irele communities in Ikole Local Government Area.

  • Osinbajo heads panel to end herdsmen killings

    Osinbajo heads panel to end herdsmen killings

    *NEC okays 1% monthly allocation for HIV/AIDS funding

    *FG to support states affected by lassa fever

     

    The National Economic Council (NEC) headed by Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Thursday constituted a 10-man working committee to address killings by herdsmen in the country.

    This was disclosed by Kano State Governor Abdullahi Ganduje while briefing State House correspondents at the end of the NEC meeting.

    He was with Ebonyi State Governor, Dave Umahi.

    According to Ganduje, the committee which is headed by Osinbajo, comprises the governors of Kaduna, Zamfara, Taraba, Benue, Adamawa, Edo, Plateau, Oyo,and Ebonyi States as members.

    He said that the committee would collaborate with the Federal Government in addressing impunity regarding killings and violence.

    He also said that the committee will work to ensure that all the perpetrators of violence are brought to book.

    Umahi said that the Council approved the resolution of the 59th National Council on Health that at least between 0.5% to 1% of the monthly allocation to states be earmarked for financing the implementation of the HIV/AIDS sustainability roadmap.

    This, he said, followed a presentation the Minister of Health, Isaac Adewole and Director General of NECA, Olusegun Oshinowo, which urged the Council to consider an update for increase in domestic funding of treatment of persons living with HIV/AIDS in Nigeria.

    According to him, they sought council’s interest of public sector funding for HIV/AIDS services in Nigeria in order to achieve the goal of eliminating HIV/AIDS by the year 2030.

    He said “The increase will reduce depend upon on donor funding for HIV/AIDS services and the attendant development implication.

    “They also called for HIV treatment that will lead to increased life expectancy in the country and the proportion increase in GDP.

    “They added that the need to invest in HIV/AIDS is imperative because donor funding is in the decline due to the global economic circumstances.

    “Reducing the gap between those who require HIV/AIDS care and treatment and those who actually are able to access it, is another reason to investment HIV/AIDS.

    “They ask council to approve the resolution of the 59th National Council on Health that at least between 0.5% to 1% of the monthly allocation to states be earmarked for financing the implementation of the HIV/AIDS sustainability roadmap.

    “Council was also asked to consider and approved universal free ante-natal services and abolition of user fees associated with prevention of mother to child transmission services.

    “Council was also asked to request that the state health insurance schemes include HIV/AIDS as an indicator for both testing and treatment particularly as it relates to community health insurance programmers.”

    Umahi also disclosed that the Minister of Health also presented an emergency situation on Lassa Fever especially in Ebonyi State where some health workers died from Lassa Fever last week.

    He said “So, the honourable minister briefed that it was agreed that the federal government was going to intervene very quickly in the cases of Ebonyi State and Ogun States where this epidemic has developed.”

    The Council was also given an update on Economic Recovery Growth Plan

    “The honourable Minister of Budget and National Planning informed the council that the federal government is addressing economic situation in Nigeria through the ERGP covering between 2017 and 2020. The key execution praxis of the plan are:

    “To stabilise the macro-economic environment; To achieve agriculture and food security; To ensure energy sufficiency in power and petroleum products; To improve transportation infrastructure and To drive industrialisation focusing on small and medium scale industries.

    “Government needs to back up efforts to deliver the ERGP targets within the three years left to achieve and focus within the six sectors to deliver quick and fast results on investments and job creations. The sectors are: agriculture and transport, manufacturing and food processing, power and gas. The investments are meant to achieve two principles:

    “Investment for critical projects; Resolution of complex inter-agency problems that impede private sector investment.

    “Council agreed that each state will have a contact point which means that we will have 36 states plus FCT that will now start the process to implement these programmes with the Honourable Minister for Budget and National Planning.”

    The minister told the council that the criterion for disbursement is tied to government fiscal sustainable plan which the NEC and state governors had already approved.

    Ganduje said Council was also given federation Account balances.

    According to him, Minister of Finance Kemi Adeosun, reported that the balance in Excess Crude Account as at 15th January, 2018 stood at $2,317 billion, Stabilisation account: N9,730 billion, Natural Resources Development Fund stood at N115,108 billion

    The council was told that so far Budget Support Loan Facility disbursed to 11 states of the federation that has met the requirements stood at N700 million and the states that are having outstanding payments are required to meet and complete the necessary obligations before the disbursement is effected.

  • ‘Politicians have hijacked cattle herdsmen/farmers crisis’ – Miyetti Allah National President

    ‘Politicians have hijacked cattle herdsmen/farmers crisis’ – Miyetti Allah National President

    The National president of Miyetti Allah , Kautal Hore, a Fulani socio-cultural Association, Alhaji Bello Abdullahi Badejo, yesterday in Kano, raised the alarm that the cattle herdsmen/farmers  crisis, ravaging some parts of the country have been hijacked by politicians, who want to take the advantage to prosecute the 2019 campaign agenda.

    Badejo, who spoke to reporters in Kano, said the worrisome trend, over the rampant killings has now taken a frightening dimension in which the politicians are cashing in on to create a division in the minds of the people by branding the Fulani herdsmen as ‘killers’.

    According to him: ”politicians are interfering in the Fulani herdsmen/ farmers crisis. They are trying to create a division, as well as divide the minds of the people. Politicians are punishing farmers, including Fulani cattle herdsmen because they want to use the face-off as a basis for 2019 politics.”

    The Miyetti Allah national president, argued that fulani are peace loving people, who have a unique identity, different from other races, so for people to now label Fulani, of carrying AK 47 Assault rifles to kill is totally false, insisting that fulani worldwide are only engaged in cattle rearing and nothing else.

    ”They plan to create 5,000 hectares of land to be used as cattle colonies in some states. It is a welcome idea, but if the Benue State Governor, Samuel Ortom had agreed to create the proposed cattle colonies, rather than the grazing law he enacted, it would have not degenerated the current controversy but address the face-off.

    ”But this Ortom’s law is by no means favourable to the Fulani, that is why are vehemently opposed to it. So, the proposed colony will serve as an enduring solution to the lingering Fulani herdsmen/farmers crisis. And as such, we are in support of the Federal Government’s agenda to create the colonies.”

    The Miyetti Allah boss therefore called on the Inspector General of Police, Ibrahim Idris to seize the opportunity of his relocation to Benue State to establish the truth, as to who is attacking who and at the close of the day, prosecute, whoever is found guilty,  insisting that the fulani have been and are still peace-loving people.

    However, he dismissed as false, insinuations that the Federal Government is grabbing the land to hand it over to the Fulani, saying: ”Only desperate politicians are opposed to the creation of cattle colonies for fulani herdsmen. These issues have been politicized.”

    In addition, he stated that anyone armed with AK 47 Assault rifle cannot be rearing cows, adding that such a person must be an armed robber from somewhere, disguising as a Fulani Herdsman and carrying weapons, as well as wearing Fulani attire to deceive the public.

    To this end, he said he is surprised about the rampant attacks occurring between farmers, communities and Fulani cattle herdsmen in Plateau and adjoining states, adding that if any fulani man invades somebody’s farm and steal, let the Fulani man be arrested and called to order rather than not only politicizing it but blowing it out of proportion.

  • How to end herdsmen/farmers clashes – Falana

    How to end herdsmen/farmers clashes – Falana

    Lagos lawyer, Femi Falana (SAN), on Tuesday advised the Federal Government to disarm the herdsmen as a way of ending the incessant violent clashes between them and farmers in the country.

    He also threw his weight behind calls for establishment of cattle ranches in different parts of the country.

    Falana made the calls in a statement titled: “How to end violent clashes between herdsmen and farmers.”

    He said: “With ranches and abattoirs established in a few states, meat would be prepared in large scale and distributed throughout the country and possibly exported.

    “Once ranches and abattoirs are established in Nigeria, all controversial anti- grazing laws would become spent while Governor Ayo Fayose would not have any basis to risk the lives of the hunters in Ekiti State by mobilizing and equipping them with local guns to confront AK 47-bearing herdsmen!

    “That is what has been done in Botswana which is the largest producer and exporter of meat in Africa. That southern African country of 2.2 million people with a cattle population of over 3 million has successfully stopped violent clashes between farmers and cattle herdsmen.”

    Falana regretted that the federal government has all along been giving the impression that the armed herdsmen were nationals of Senegal, Mali, Niger and Libya.

    He noted that it was not until the Miyetti Allah recently announced that it decided to launch reprisal attacks in Benue and other states wherever the Fulani people are attacked that it became clear that the herdsmen are not nationals of Senegal, Mali, Niger and Libya.

    He added: “But whether the herdsmen are Nigerians or foreigners, it is indisputable, as Prof. Biodun Jeyifo has observed, that this is the first time in the history of Nigeria that any armed group has been allowed to possess arms and ammunition and attack law abiding citizens without any challenge from the neo-colonial State.

    “Of course, the Buhari regime is right in saying that the herdsmen were not disarmed by previous regimes. But having crushed other armed groups in the country the Buhari administration cannot justify the decision to treat the armed herdsmen like sacred cows.”

     

  • Adams urged to protect Yorubaland from herdsmen

    Adams urged to protect Yorubaland from herdsmen

    Peoples Democratic Party’s (PDP’s) candidate in Akinyele/Lagelu Federal Constituency, Oyo State, in 2015 general election, Yusuff Kunle, has congratulated Otunba Gani Adams on his installation as the 15th Aare Ona Kakanfo of Yorubaland.

    He urged him to ensure protection of Yoruba territories from Fulani herdsmen and others.

    Yusuff said the installation of Adams was timely and significant for unity and protection of Yoruba nation.

    The politician, who is the chairman of Trustee Concern Initiatives for Community and Social Development, a non-government organisation (NGO) caring for the less privileged across the six geo-political zones, especially Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) in Borno State, who traced the history of past Aare Ona Kakanfo to the time of Latosa, said the Fulani could have invaded Yorubaland, but for the efforts of the then Aare Ona Kakanfo.

    The PDP stalwart, in a statement by his media assistant, Olamilekan Oke, said the choice of Adams as Aare Ona kakanfo was an indication that the Alaafin of Oyo, Oba Lamidi Adeyemi II, appreciated hard work, self-sacrifice and commitment of Gani Adams to the development and unity of Yoruba nation.

    He noted that as the leader of Oodua, Aare Onakakanfo fought battles on behalf of the Yoruba and enjoined Adams to sustain the legacies.

    Yusuff said: “Aare Ona kakanfo has always been there for the Yoruba nation in a time of distress. We can imagine what could have happened to Yoruba land if Aare Latosa didn’t perform the role he performed during his time. If he did not secure the outskirts of Osogbo, the Fulani could have invaded Yoruba land and our Obas could have been using the title of Emir now.

    “The role of Aare Ona Kakanfo is very significant and Gani Adams, being a good Yoruba son, at a youthful age, has taken over the challenge of defending Yoruba nation. For recognition of his selflessness and commitment to the Yoruba nation, Alafin Iku Babayeye has taken the right decision by installing Adams as Aare Ona Kakanfo. He is the right choice. It’s an indication that youths can play significant roles if given a chance. My advice to him is to protect Yoruba territories from terrorism, especially from the herdsmen. Our people must be ready to defend themselves from the menace of herdsmen. We are not agents of anarchy, but if you want peace, you must work for it.”

  • NBA flays govt over Benue killings by herdsmen

    NBA flays govt over Benue killings by herdsmen

    The Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) has condemned what it called unwarranted killing of innocent and unarmed Nigerians by suspected herdsmen, saying they were preventable.

    It decried the inability of both the federal and state governments to curb the incessant killings across the country.

    NBA, in a statement by its General Secretary Aare Isiaka Abiola Olagunju reads in part: “The NBA notes with greatest displeasure and serious concerns recent unwarranted killings and carnage in various states of the federation, most especially in Benue, Taraba and Nasarawa states as result of herdsmen invasion

    “The NBA offers its deepest condolences to the governments of Benue, Taraba and Nasarawa states as well as families of those who lost their relations as a result of these unfortunate and preventable incidents.

    “The NBA under the leadership A. B. Mahmoud (SAN) pledges its support for policies, programmes and legislations that would produce permanent solutions to the incessant Herdsmen invasions  across the country.”

    The association 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.

    In a related development, NBA Ikeja branch also berated the Federal Government for “its shoddy handling of the killings”.

    Addressing a press conference in Lagos, the branch Chairman, Mr Adesina Ogunlana, accused the government of promoting anarchy in the state, saying the government has the responsibility of ensuring adequate security for the people.

    Ogunlana said: “The government by its deliberate reaction and silence is promoting anarchy and as such, a self- disturbing agent of itself and the country. The incompetence of government in this matter is deliberate in our view because the capacity is there to deal much better with the situation.”

    He  warned that if the situation persisted, it could constitute enough ground for impeachment.

    Ogunlana said: “Many Nigerians are persuaded that the Buhari government is aiding some groups of people who are kinsmen of President Buhari to take over the lands and properties of other Nigerians by war of conquest and decimation.

    “If the government continues in encouraging, condoning the Fulani herdsmen, there will be massive self-help retaliation against their rapine as the people of Benue, Taraba and other would not forever fold their arms and continue to as candidates for genocide”, he warned.

    Ogunlana said the rise in killings in the North, particularly around the Middle Belt, Southsouth and Southwest, had become of concern to the NBA for many reasons.

    He said more worrisome to the NBA  branch was the  emergence of “a community of armed, murderous killers and ravagers nomenclature “Fulani herdsmen” and the heightening of their activities shortly after the coming into power of the Muhammadu Buhari administration”.

    He said they were also concerned over the wide-scale Fulani herdsmen massacre of people who are agrarians and whose farms, homes and lives have been destroyed gruesomely among other reasons.

    He maintained that the Ikeja bar is unhappy and unsatisfied with the government over its handling of the Fulani herdsmen killing of the Benue people.

    Ogunlana said the recent fuel scarcity experienced in the country had rubbished all the grand claims of the government made in 2016 that it had found a lasting solution to the problem of supply of petrol.

    He said Nigerians were tired of the blame game between the government and independent marketers on fuel supply to the people.

    Pointing out that petrol is crucial to the happiness, comfort, progress and service of the people, Ogunlana advised the government to take proactive measures to prevent a reoccurrence of scarcity of the product in future.