Tag: herdsmen

  • Herdsmen foul holidays

    Herdsmen foul holidays

    Happy New Year, dear readers! As I wrote last in 2017, the Christmas holidays usually have no dull moments for me. Thankfully, the roads are better, so I drove without much hitch all the way to Enugu, on December 21. Last two holidays, travelling was hellish, while last year, I left middle of December, before the rush.

    The Onitsha-Enugu end of the expressway, neglected under former President Goodluck Jonathan’s government, has one track rehabilitated, thanks to President Muhammadu Buhari, and Minister for Works, Power and Housing, Babatunde Fashola, SAN. The Ore part, in Ondo State, has also been rebuilt; so it is again possible, to travel from Lagos to Onitsha, in six hours, without over speeding.

    We entered the village, on the 23rd, and that’s when the party started. Well, not party in a Lagos sense. But in terms of hearty welcomes, expansive smiles, unencumbered playing space for the children, and excited well-wishers and umunna, who came to sample my initial offerings, for their keeping the home front, since the last holidays. By next day, the village was filled up.

    Same 24th, with my adorable spouse, Rita, I went to Amaokpara, Ihitenansa, Orsu, Imo State, to witness the installation of my friend, client and model mentor, Chief Gabriel Onyema, as a High Chief and Ohamadike of Orsu clan. At that ceremony, the entire ndi-eze, in Orsu local government area, stated that after a careful sifting, they selected Gabriel and one other compatriot for the special recognition for 2017.

    Reading Chief Onyema’s profile, was Honourable Jerry Alagbaoso, of the House of Representatives; a distinguished recipient of the rare honour, some years ago. Gabriel’s profile lit large. A devout catholic, chartered accountant, tax consultant, business mogul, distinguished Rotarian, patron of tens of association, with several chieftaincy titles; his most adorable quality, was his humility and extravagant charity.

    Back home, the Christmas Day, was also for the local church bazaar. You must shed material weight to gain spiritual height. Feasting with the Lord must precede the communal commensality. Most likely, the local church leaders, after several failed bazaars, decided to host the bazaar on Christmas day, so as to pry the purse of returnees. Predominantly a catholic community, Ogwofia’s sons and daughters, usually gather in several hundreds, at St. Patrick’s Catholic Church, Ogwofia.

    The fruit of that gathering is an ultra-modern church both in aesthetics and comfort. With altar calls for variants of the blessed and the willing worshippers dancing in thanksgiving to the altar, the Christmas lunch is delayed. But only the younger generation complain. For the older generation, they savour the opportunity to see friends and relations, who they may not meet again until the next cycle.

    My siblings and I agreed to dedicate 26th, (hopefully annually) to honour the memory of my parents. In memorial, we inaugurated Michael and Bernadette Amalu Foundation, at a Mass in the local parish. The foundation will offer charity, trainings, and scholarships, to the best of our ability. As I said last time, my siblings and I are of modest means, so the budget isn’t huge. However, the parish priest, Reverend Father Bob, was elated at our modest efforts, and during the homily, espoused the philosophy and theology of charity.

    After mass, the ceremony continued at our family home. With food, drinks and music, our guests and some of the beneficiaries, who could come were entertained. We also gave a few gift items to those present and for those who are unable to come, through the leaders of the local Saint Vincent the Paul, the society that selected the beneficiaries.

    The 27th was designated Ogwofia day, by HRH, Igwe Tom Inyiama, Ogwugwu Ebenebe 1 of Ogwofia, and the Ogwofia Development Union (ODU), led by its President-General, Dr. (Engr.) Hilary Okafor. The ceremony was to celebrate culture and raise funds for security. With a bounty promised by Chief Chris Okafor, (Ogbakokpo), retired central bank denizen, a few of the community musical groups entertained.

    In his address Dr Okafor, listed the achievements of the union, and their challenges, particularly security. The funds is to support the local vigilante. As I advised, the Divisional Police Station, for the old Imezi-Owa, and the neighbouring Obelagu, should enjoy some support, as the federal government underfunds police, even as it vehemently resists state police.

    The Igwe gave a rundown of the many achievements that has been recorded under his reign. From a block of classroom, to a town hall, to quarters for the medical personnel, the achievements are quite impressive. He also transparently explained his role in receiving and disbursing the compensation paid for the community land, appropriated by the state for a Free Trade Zone.

    However, between the state actors and their imposed consultants for the community, there is a huge gap between what was allegedly paid as compensation, and what was transmitted to the community account. Various representation by concerned community leaders, indicate the need for them, to account. As many pointed out, the alleged missing money, is too huge to ignore. So I am hoping they will give a transparent account, without much push.

    I reserved the 28th and 30th exclusively for my brother and friend, Uchenna Eze, who got married to Uchenna Enebe. The first day, we went to the bride’s place, Obeleagu Umana, for Igba Nkwu. The wining and dining came after confirmation of the completeness of the drinks and other items by the bride’s family, vis-à-vis the list earlier forwarded. With satisfaction etched on their faces, the ceremony started.

    The 30th was preceded by a church service, at the Assemblies of God, in New Haven. In his homily, the reverend thanked God that at the appointed time, and for the appointed damsel, our friend and brother is on the wings of cupid. The reception which I had the honour to chair, was few in words, but heavy in dancing and feasting. Uchenna’s mother, who had waited anxiously all the while, took gold amongst the dancers.

    On the 29th, I hosted the executive and some members of the All Progressive Congress (APC), in Imezi Owa Ward II. The chairman, Anthony Onu, and the local government leader, a former chairman of Ezeagu local government, Chief Joe Mmamel, were present. Good-will messages, came from leaders of the senatorial zone, including former Governor Sullivan Chime. I thanked members, and encouraged them to engage in politics for development, and not for personal aggrandizement. The 31st and the New Year, were for family engagements and village meeting respectively; and by the 2nd, I was on our way back to Lagos.

    Regrettably, my crossover excitement was marred by the unconscionable, inhuman and despicable slaughter of Nigerians, in Rivers and Benue states by callous cultists and herdsmen. Of course the federal government must bring the herdsmen to account, as they did to the cultists from Rivers. After all, the primary essence of government is the protection of lives and property.

  • ‘Herdsmen have been pushed to the wall’

    ‘Herdsmen have been pushed to the wall’

    Alhaji Saleh Bayeri is the National Secretary-General and Board of Trustees member of the Gan Allah Fulani Development Association of Nigeria (GAFDAN). In this interview with YUSUFU AMINU IDEGU in Jos, Bayeri bared his mind on why herders and farmers always clash.

    Most states in Southern parts of Nigeria are having problems with Fulani herdsmen. Attacks by armed herdsmen have persisted in Benue State. What do you think is responsible for this?

    The reason for the problem is obvious. Fulani in this country are facing the toughest challenge of their lives, a kind of challenge that makes you to choose between life and death. They are facing serious economic depression. The Fulani herdsmen in Nigeria appeared to have been pushed to the wall and have no option but to fight back. Historically, the herdsmen and their business have been neglected over the years by the people and government of Nigeria. It is, therefore, natural that for people that feel oppressed to want to fight back or resist oppression.

    As far back as I can remember, from 1970 till date, there has been no single government policy geared towards assisting herdsmen in any way. Naturally, the government should know that the Fulani that keep multiplying in human population and in their animal should know that they need a space to occupy. The Fulani are not being allowed any space in Nigeria, and government does not seem to care. So, they have to fight back. There was the issue of grazing reserve, about 413 grazing reserves gazette.  Of that number, you can’t count up to 20 that are functional in this country. But farmers enjoyed and keep enjoying all sorts of assistance from the Federal Government through the same Ministry for Agriculture. Government doesn’t really care when it comes to the issue of herders. The Fulani, you know, are traditionally cattle herders; they don’t have any other business. Cattle rearing is their traditional business inherited from generations to generations. This problem of herdsmen that we are seeing today has been developing but no one seemed to care. This problem has been brewing gradually, but here we are today.

    The population of cows in this country has been put at 20 million; the Fulani population too has grown over that number, yet government never found any reason to provide for their security and welfare. The government itself has said the cattle contributes 17% to the nation’s GDP, yet, nothing has been done to encourage the herders, what we rather see is a trend where states governments are enacting laws to prevent Fulani from grazing on grasses provided free by nature.

    Apart from that, there is the prevailing problem of scarce resources like water and land as a result of global warming. In our own case here in Nigeria, because of the challenge of desertification and reduction in annual rainfall, these have made the northern parts of the country not conducive for grazing of cattle because the North has gone arid. So, the only part of the country the herders can graze their animals is the savanna grass land in the Northcentral and the tropical rain forest in the South. So there is pressure on land and water in this zone already and certainly you expect a clash over natural resources between farmers and herders like we are witnessing in Benue, Taraba, Southern Kaduna, Nasarawa and parts of Kogi State. And when farmers and herders are clashing over resources, there should be amicable solution where the interests of both parties are protected. But when you create law that tends to further subject one group to gross human right abuse, there will surely be resistance.

     

     

    What will you suggest as the possible solution?

    It is already a big problem, it’s like when you allow a wound to fester for so long and it became infected, wider and deeper, it will not be easy to heal like when it was small. This is where I sympathise with the present administration of President Muhammadu Buhari. He was not the cause of these herdsmen problem, but he is now facing the problem of how to solve a problem that has been left to accumulate by past administrations. Grazing reserve was introduced, the farmers rejected it, ranching was introduced, the farmers rejected it; at the same time, the farmers will not want open grazing. And by rejecting all these options, it only means you don’t respect the right of the herders to free movement, you don’t respect the right of the herders to unhindered access to resources that will enhance their livelihood. This is where we found ourselves, and as it is, President Buhari or the Federal Government cannot solve this problem because one of the parties to the conflict would not accept any solution proffered by the President Buhari administration. Therefore, the solution is in the hands of the state governments.

    State governments like Benue, Taraba, Ekiti have come up with laws with which they can manage the problem and prevent clashes between herders and farmers. What is your take?

    You can tell if the new law against open gracing has brought any solution. As at the last report, the casualty from the attack in Benue State has risen to over 70. Is the law worth the blood of over 70 people? Would you say such law has succeeded? The answer is no; if for anything, the law has done more damages than solving the problems. Let us look at the law itself. Is this law practicable? Is it a law enacted on sound moral judgement? Is it a law that is just? You know every state has the right to enact a law for the good of its citizens and for the interests of the state, but there are certain laws that you have to be very careful of its consequences, their anti-open grazing law is one of such laws with dangerous consequences. The Nigerian constitution provides for freedom of movement; there is freedom to exist as a citizen. There is right to access resource and use it as means of livelihood etc; that is the constitution of Nigeria. So, if there is any state law that tends to deny citizens the basic rights provided by the constitution, definitely there will be problem. Like the anti-grazing law in Benue State, everyone knows that that new law is difficult to enforce. If you look at it politically, this is a governor that swore to protect and defend the right of people of his state irrespective of tribe or religion; you just woke up one day, enact a law that deprives a particular ethnic group of their fundamental rights to life and you think the people affected by that law will not fight back.

     

    Why are Fulani herdsmen passionate about their cows?

    The Fulani herders in Nigeria are not doing it for commercial purpose, mostly. They keep the animals as their tradition. For instance, if a Fulani man has fifteen cows and all the cows are worth N10 million, even if you triple the amount, the Fulani man will not sell them, because he inherited them as a tradition from his father and he is expected to hand them over to his own children. These animals have been passed from one generation to another; they are not his own. So, I want Nigerians to know that the Fulani herdsmen in Nigeria are not commercial type. They are not traders, they are not doing business, they are rather sustaining their age long tradition by keeping the cows. No matter how hungry they may be, they will not sell their cows to buy food or shoes; you can see them going about without shoes or homes, they won’t part with the cows for anything because it is a generational wealth they must keep and pass on to the next generation.

     

    What will you suggest as the immediate solution to this Benue State problem with herdsmen?

    I wish to advise that let government look at the land mass of Nigeria. From my record, the size of Nigeria land mass consists of 98.3 million hectares, of which only 82 million hectares is arable land and only 34 million hectares are being cultivated by farmers. So, there are over 36 million hectares of land left for grazing. The Federal Government can look at this data and will have enough space to plan for herders and avoid clashing with farmers. There are places that crops don’t even do well; a research can be done in this area and a solution can be found there. That is where solution can be found, not by enacting unjust laws.

  • Herdsmen want compensation for members affected in crisis

    Herdsmen want compensation for members affected in crisis

    The Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN) has appealed to the Federal Government to pay compensation to herdsmen affected by all forms of crisis in the country.

    The National Secretary of MACBAN, Alhaji Baba Ngelzarma, made the appeal while briefing newsmen in Abuja on Sunday on the position of the association to the crisis between farmers and herdsmen across the country.

    Ngelzarma said the decision was the position of members reached at the end of its National Council meeting.

    He said that no fewer than 1,000 of its members including women and children have been killed and 20,000 cattle rustled between June 2017 and January 2018 during crises in various states.

    The National Secretary called for the setting up of a Federal Judicial Commission of Inquiry to access the killings in order to unravel the truth and offenders.

    “We call on the government to pay compensation to victims of all crises to reduce their level of suffering.

    “If the government accepts that, it is left for them to establish a committee that will go and assess the level of damage.

    “We have a document of members that were affected by the pastoralists in the North-East but what we discovered is that none of them were captured in the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) programme because they are not sedentary.

    “Let the government compensate. That will help calm the situation very well,’’ he said.

    Ngelzarma, who said the association had over 20 million registered members and no fewer than 50 million cattle, regretted that they were the most neglected farmers in the country.

    He appealed to the Federal Government to set up a Federal Ministry of Livestock Development to attend to the multidimensional needs of the industry.

    Ngelzarma said the association welcomed the current resolve by the Federal Government to address the lingering crises, adding that dialogue was the solution to the tackling the menace.

    “We submit ourselves for any positive participation to restore mutual and harmonious relationship in the country.

    “We dissociate ourselves from any other group or individual that is out to foment trouble in the country.

    “We demand for immediate disarmament of all illegally armed militias across the country in the interest of peace, security and stability,’’ he said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Ngelzarma was accompanied to the briefing by the National President, Alhaji Muhammadu Kirowa and other members of the association from different states. (NAN)

  • Herdsmen killings: ECWA prays for Nigeria

    Herdsmen killings: ECWA prays for Nigeria

    Following killings by suspected Fulani herdsmen across the country, the Evangelical Church Winning All (ECWA) Kaduna South District Church Council on Sunday held special prayers for the peace, unity and development of Nigeria.

    The church said it will continue to pray for God to expose, unseat and judge any leader behind the killings going on in the country.

    Secretary of the church’s council, Reverend Enock Joshua Bitiyong while condemning the herdsmen attacks in some parts of the country, called on the Federal Government, security agencies and all relevant authorities to intensify security in the affected states and also do more in tackling the menace.

    According to him, “If all is not well with Nigeria and Nigerians then nobody is safe and we all know the evils that are happening in this country, nobody is happy. It takes only a crazy person to be happy with the present state of our country Nigeria.

    “I wonder if our leaders, President Muhammadu and all Governors go to bed and sleep while innocent people are being killed every day.

    “Look at what is happening in Southern Kaduna, Benue, Taraba, Adamawa and other states of the country and yet no serious action is being taken to end the killings. As a Nigerian and as a Pastor, I am not happy when I see people crying, when I see children being massacred.  I am not happy when I see parents being killed, when I see caskets and mass burial taking place all over. Yet we have President, we have Governors, Senators and other lawmakers. Nigeria must change.

    “As Christians and as a Church, we will continue to pray. I call on all Christians to intensify prayers and I tell you we will continue to pray for God to unseat and reveal any leader who is behind these killings.  We will ask God to judge between us and our leaders over what is happening

    “It is the responsibility of government according to Nigeria’s constitution to provide security of lives and property of its citizens, but what we see in Nigeria is only when people are being killed before security is provided. I think something is wrong somewhere

    “This was not what we know Nigeria to be in the past. Our Leaders must do something to restore the lost glory of this country, he said.

    In his own remarks, Chairman of the council, Reverend Iliya Yunana said the present economy and security challenges facing the nation calls for prayers.

    He said, religious, traditional and political leaders must rise to their responsibility of educating the citizens on the need to live in peace with everyone irrespective of ethnic, political or social differences.

    According to him, “Government should do all within its power to fish out those involved or sponsoring the kidnappings, armed robbery and the frequent attacks in communities across the country.

    The prayers which is part of the church’s Annual Consecration week brought many clergy men and members of the Church together to seek God’s face in the year 2018.

  • Herdsmen attacks: Transcript of Oyedepo’s warning

    Herdsmen attacks: Transcript of Oyedepo’s warning

    Transcript of message for the nation by Bishop David Oyedepo of Living Faith World Outreach aka Winners Chapel.

    Prophets have a duty to warn people, nation against impending danger.

    I am sent as a prophet to the nation and God grants me access to divine confidentialities of nations.

    I have this wake up call for a nation in a state of slumber.

    Insurgency is spreading across the country under the guise of Fulani herdsmen. Danger is looming.

    For example, how many of these killers have been brought to book since their campaign of carnage, death and destruction began, one may ask?

    A nationwide crisis is in the offing than may be worse than anyone around knows.

    Tell me the morality behind some strangers who are doing their business as cattle rearers overrunning  your farm with your labour and graze  their cattle on your crop and when you challenge them, they kill you.

    Where are the leaders of thoughts in Nigeria? Where is the government and that continues unabated. We are sitting on a keg of gun powder. There is volatile reaction coming and God revealed this to me as far back as 1992, clearly written in my diary.

    Nigeria shall not be destroyed. God shall trouble all that trouble the peace and progress of this nation.

    The destiny of our nation has never been under the threat of survival as it is today. People may soon be forced to take the law into their hands. The security apparatus of the country has obviously failed to defend the property and lives of these poor farmers.

    While we are claiming to be curtailing Boko Haram, we are on the other hand aiding and abetting herdsmen and their murderous acts.

    Nigeria is a nation at war with ourselves.  No external aggression from aggressors, no ethnic crisis, no natural disaster, yet we are doing mass burial. What a nation in a state of slumber.

    Hear the voice of God through this prophet, the soul of Nigeria is near the point of death.

    Citizens of these nation are fast becoming endangered species, God have mercy.

    Let me ask these pertinent questions that borders on the conscience of a nation and its leaders.

    Is cattle business government business?

    Should farmers be killed for Fulani herdsmen to live?

    Should all the farmers leave their farms today for fear of Fulani herdsmen?

    As the last time I knew, Nigeria still produces less than 20 percent of what it consumes and ask me what it the contribution of herdsmen to the GDP of this country. What is come to this country?

    There is more to this low response of government to addressing this issue which is definitely a time bomb

    Does Nigerian land belong to Fulani herdsmen?

    There has never been this kind of assault on the intelligence of the people like we are having now.

    Should you allocate my father’s land to Fulani herdsmen? No.

    Are they now the customary land owners of every state, town, cities, villages and hamlets in Nigeria?

    There is danger in the offing; every community may soon set up their own security system to defend themselves against the insurgency of the Fulani herdsmen.

    Can the citizens still trust the security agencies of this nation to protect them? You will be vulnerable for life.

    When citizens cannot trust the security a state of anarchy is in view. Insurrection may also be on the way. These largely unchecked activities of the Fulani herdsmen may eventually choke the soul of Nigeria to death, God forbid.

    Is Nigeria project still working?

    Without justice there cannot be peace. You don’t step on my toes and say let’s have peace. We can’t have peace but exchange of blows.

    Caution, let politicians be warned, don’t sell off the destinies of men for your ambitions.

    True leaders mind the coming generations. Nigeria is rescued.  Let no religious bigot say to me what is your concern?. By the grace of God, one out every 150 Nigerian is under my apostolic coverage. You are not a leader by elective office; you are a leader by the number of people you have responsibility for.

    I am answerable to God on what happens to them. You can’t kill their fathers and mothers in the name of being in power. It is enough. When prophets speak God confirms it. These wicked forces will be visited by vengeance.

    Is our sense of value for human lives still alive? I don’t know.  What I know is that it is not alive.

    Today human lives are now being slain for cattles without any drastic interventions from relevant security agents.

    Should men and women continue to lay their lives down for cattles ?

    There is no nation on the earth where the defense of cattle is more than the defense of human lives.

    How are these killers making away with their murderous acts? They must have the backings of some powers that be. Any right thinking Nigerian will speculate same.

    Is Boko haram not spreading strategically across the nation?

    How many cows will a Fulani man sell to buy a AK47? which now cost about N3m a piece.

    A cow, the fattest is N180-200,000. To buy five riffles, equals N15m.

    You don’t hire security guard in a room and parlour. Some fellows supply these guns and you cannot tell how much stockpiles of arms they have.

    Nigeria is becoming an endangered nation where any group of persons may attempt to overrun the nation. Caution, Caution, Caution Caution  to everyone responsible for the affairs of this nation.

    God has sent me to warn this nation, a flood of evil is at the door.

  • Herdsmen of the Apocalypse

    Herdsmen of the Apocalypse

    Finally, one can put an ethnic tag to the mysterious militia murdering people at will and disappearing into the vast shadows in the agrarian nerve-centres of the nation. It is a Fulani death squad. The unspeakable has finally arrived at the gate of the unmentionable.  These are extremely dangerous times in Nigeria. Apocalypse has never been closer to our shores.

    In an extreme manifestation of what we often describe in this column as an organic crisis of the state, everything seems to be coming together all at once for Nigeria—in a manner of speaking.  Even for the strongest and most durable of nations, when a persisting political and economic crisis suddenly joins forces with ethnic and cultural hostilities fuelled by ancestral resentments, it is a perfect storm.

    But we must avoid alarmist and hysterical railings at one another which only raises the national temperature without providing a way out. To move back away from the minefield requires extreme caution. To move forward requires unusual determination.  Any miscue at this point may unleash dangerous forces of disintegration.

    It is important to advise President Mohammadu Buhari that the same stubbornness and obstinacy which might have served him so well as head of state during the military epoch of Nigeria’s post-colonial transition can no longer be regarded as political virtues in a post-military era of acute political, ethnic and economic polarization of the nation.

    Before he is successfully branded as an enemy of his people, it is necessary to remind General Buhari once again that you cannot step into the same river twice. Whatever his natural aversion and distaste for politics, he ought to know that once he chose of his own free will to vie for elective office, he has chosen to play politics and not military war games and destabilising psych-ops against sections of the country.

    We must repeat that these are dangerous times for the nation. We appeal to patriots who are disgusted and affronted by the politically-challenged antics of this government and its dangerous mind-set that one does not have to belong to General Buharis’s party or be a member of the cabal he is reputed to surround himself to offer the way out of the genocidal maelstrom threatening to engulf the nation. Genocide is an equal opportunity terminator which does not have the time or the patience to finesse multiple identities and party affiliations.

    Yet the irony of it all is that it is only now that we have been able to put an ethnic tag to the mysterious and ghoulish militia murdering and maiming its way through a huge swathe of the nation’s territory that the problem of restitution really begins. But this ethnic categorization and the clarity it brings to the resolution of the crisis has come at a stiff price.  Rather than bringing shame and remorse to the guilty party, it has led to a stiffening of resolve and a shameless bravado which have in turn provoked remarkable sabre-rattling and war-cries on the plains of the Nigerian middle belt.

    Readers of this column would have noticed a studied reluctance to put an ethnic label on the nomadic terrorists. In fact, this is the first time, the column would do so.  There is a deep and touching cultural resonance to this reluctance which had been widespread up till this moment. It is a sign of the rustic goodness and goodwill among native Nigerians which is customarily mismanaged by government and those who believe that they are bearers of a superior culture which exempts them from native norms.

    The usual narrative is that the normal Fulani herdsmen that people have grown up to sighting in the deep forest or grasslands do not behave in this bloodthirsty and fiendish manner. They came across as shy, friendly, kind and honourable people, polite and self-effacing almost to a fault. Nobody wanted to disturb or disrupt this placid and idyllic picture of the peaceful and kind Fula herdsman even when emergent realities from the forests were pointing at some diabolic developments.

    In a society conditioned to a high degree of inter-ethnic harmony and peaceful co-existence among the various ethnic groups, the pictures of death and gory dismemberment coming from the field represent a radical rupture of perceptual habits. The possibility of the peaceful Fulani herdsman being responsible for the gory massacres was too horrendous to contemplate.  At a point, we even had to resort to an invention of mysterious militiamen from the Middle East via the porous Maghreb. These are the symptoms of a society in a state of traumatic transition.

    For most Nigerians as well as the denizens of the old world and its archaic values, the tendency is to live in denial; a collective state of child-like daydreaming and regression into a  phantasmagorical world of delusion and deception in which uncomfortable truths and reality are pressed out to be replaced by saccharine versions.  This strategic elision of the truth as a way of evading social responsibility and confrontation with evil is a function of societies rooted in ritual and magic as the order of existence rather than hurtful science.

    But we cannot run away from modernity forever. There must come a time when emergent realities collide with the old ways of doing things, when a society descends into critical and even mortal disorder as old modes of reproduction enter into dangerous contradictions with new imperatives of productions and when all this lead to a momentous restructuring of personalities in line with new dictates of  civilization.

    Societies which refuse to offer their own terms and template for modernization are often at the mercy of its hostile forces which then proceed on their own terms and temperament. The murderous confrontation between sedentary farmers and nomadic herdsmen in Nigeria in all its bestial savagery and apocalyptic violence is a function of this encounter between a hapless society in a state of chaotic flux and the forces of involuntary modernization. But it can get worse if the necessary precautions are not put in place.

    It should be recalled that despite critical pressures on land occasioned by farming and grazing, the old Central African kingdoms of Rwanda and Burundi under the ruling kings or Mwamis existed in a state of relative peace, stability and cohesion until the forces of involuntary political modernization in the guise of adult suffragette and electoral democracy arrived to disrupt the idyllic coexistence among the Tutsi overlords and the Hutu, Twa and pigmy tribes.

    Even at that, studies have shown that this development could have been traditionally managed but for the arrival of disaffected Belgian colonial officers who insinuated the bitter class divisions in their own country into the politics of the colonized territory. The result was genocide and an apocalyptic meltdown which became the closing shame of the twentieth century.

    This is why General Buhari has to be cautious in the political choices he makes in the coming months. Although clashes between sedentary farmers and Fulani herdsmen preceded the current incumbency of the retired general and have been with us for close to a decade and half, it is in the last two years that they have assumed a frightening and alarming proportion.

    However tenuous and weak the link may be, there are those pressing the claim of a link between the rise in the murderous menace of Fulani militiamen and the resurgence of Fulani political supremacists around the presidency of General Buhari. Disaffected critics and analysts point at the lopsided appointments which continue despite heavy criticism and the fact that the retired general reacts with a disproportionate sledgehammer and proactive violence to the least ethnic provocation from other parts of the country while treating the menace of the Fulani herdsmen with cavalier cool and even towering indifference.

    Perception may eventually approximate to reality, in which case General Buhari may go down as a tragic impostor. No amount of good he would have recorded in other departments such as the fight against corruption, the incipient agricultural revolution and the return of fiscal and electoral sanity to the nation could offset the political villainy of condoning ethnic cleansing. In some extreme quarters, there are even whispers that the retired general may yet have his date with the World Court at Hague once his tenure is over.

    This is not the way to build a nation. In fact, it is the surest way to ruin it and terminally too. Away from raw and primitive anger, let us return the discourse to the template of objectivity, science and modernity. There are two things responsible for the dark development between sedentary farming and nomadic cattle rearing. First is the increasing desertification or sahelization of the northern parts of the country which puts the pressure on herdsmen to roam further and further afield which then launches them on a collision course with farmers tending the land.

    The second development is the worsening economic situation in the country which has led to a dramatic rise in incidents of cattle rustling and coordinated armed attacks on herdsmen. Unlike before when herdsmen used to be armed with long sticks, cattle rustling and encounters with armed robbers have led to a weaponization of the trade on a scale which could not have been imagined.

    So, while dwindling grazing opportunities removes the customary Fulani reserve and sensitivity from the herdsmen, encounters with miscreants have toughened them to a point where they have scant regard for human life.  As a Fulani elder and celebrated ethnic jingoist puts it: “ If a Fulani herdsman takes a particular route this year and he returns by the same route the following year and you say there is no way through, then there is bound to be trouble”.

    What we can see in all this is a clash of civilization, of culture, of mutually unintelligible modes of production and a crisis of economic values accentuated by dwindling opportunities and increasingly scarce resources. In the past, these contradictions could be absorbed by the oceanic plenitude of farmlands and limitless grazing opportunity as well as by the profound economic possibilities of a nation with a great future ahead of it. Alas, all that has ended in a bonfire of vanities leaving in their wake mutual recrimination and savage anger about the state of the nation.

    In the light of this, the establishment of grazing “colonies” may solve the problem in the short run but not as a long term solution. Grazing colonies can only produce colonized cattle. What is playing out with all these “solutions” and the semantic games we play with them is a fundamental evasion of social responsibility and concomitantly of the subsisting National Question. The question is: what are those herds boys doing roaming the forests with AK47 when the dictates of political modernity and economic modernization suggest they should be in school?

    When the question is posed this way, the uncomfortable political and economic truth begins to stare us in the face and we can as well conclude that the herdsmen have been training their guns on the wrong people. That may be why they are sent out farther afield in the first instance.  Despite its political hegemony, the north is sitting on a political and economic box of explosives which may yet consume the whole of the country if care is not taken.

    But since this is a profound matter of political habitus and cultural peculiarity, it demands considerable sympathy and sensitivity.  As it has been famously noted, no matter how much we try to ignore history, history in all its alienating necessities will not ignore us. Once again, the Fulani herdsmen tragedy has shown us why we can only postpone a radical restructuring of the country’s political architecture at our own peril.

    Restructuring is inevitable once Nigeria failed to throw up a radically nationalist and modernizing military class which would have forcibly homogenized and ground into conformity the contending cultural, political, economic and spiritual peculiarities. In the process, some core values would have been distilled willy-nilly for the nation.

    In the face of this missed opportunity, only a radical restructuring which allows key ethnic and cultural components of the nation to resolve their contradictions on their own terms will do even if this were to eventuate in a confederal arrangement for the nation. With gargantuan contradictions which continue to dog and hobble our match to authentic nationhood, confederalism which guarantees stability and relative prosperity may well be the nation’s saving grace.

    For the sake of emphasis, these contradictions include and are not limited to the following: feudal enervation and exhaustion in the face of the dictates of modernity, laissez faire indolence and aristocratic fatigue in the face of aborted modernity, social cannibalism arising from an attempt to run before walking and the ritualization and romanticization of primitive animal husbandry as a way of avoiding and evading the challenges of modernization.

    As we are discovering with the current herdsmen calamity, an organic crisis of the state may take its time to manifest but its fall-out does not waste time in hitting us in the face directly once it reaches full maturity. This is the time to find a solution to a tragedy that may yet consume the entire nation in its next visitation.

     

     

     

  • Govt at sixes and sevens over herdsmen

    Govt at sixes and sevens over herdsmen

    IF any Nigerian has tried to make sense of the federal government’s policies on herdsmen/farmers clash, he will by now be certain that no such policies exist, nor has one been really conceived. If the federal government itself thought it had a policy or policies in respect of the crisis and its resolution, its contradictory and nebulous statements on ranching and cattle colonies give the government away as extremely and deliberately dilatory. What seems to be at play is that the federal government has a soft spot for the herdsmen and has sought to find a policy mix that will favour them without offhandedly offending the rest of the country. It is safe to say that the government is clumsily walking a tightrope.

    Last Monday’s security meeting in Abuja attended by about two ministers and some six governors is the clearest evidence of the federal government’s confusion and lack of sincerity. At the meeting designed to find strategies to end the crisis were the Interior minister, Abdulrahman Danbazzau, Agriculture minister, Audu Ogbeh, and the governors of Kaduna, Nasarawa, Benue, Niger, Taraba and Adamawa states. It is instructive that in one short six-hour meeting, the government managed to send contradictory signals to a distressed and agitated public.

    Before the meeting, the Agriculture minister, who should clearly know the mind of the government, disclosed to reporters that the federal government had decided to set up cattle colonies on 5,000 hectares of land where herdsmen would live and tend their livestock. He added that security and other infrastructure would be provided for the herdsmen. According to him, “We are planning a programme called cattle colonies not ranches, but colonies where at least 5, 000 hectares of land would be made available, adequate water, adequate pasture would be made available. We also want to stop herdsmen from roaming about; the culture of cattle roaming about will be stopped. The cattle will be provided with water and adequate security by the rangers, adequate pasture, milk collection, even security against rustlers to enable them to lead a normal life. This has been done elsewhere in India, Ethiopia and even Brazil.”

    Mr Ogbeh justified this investment on the grounds that for over 50 years, the government had similarly invested in farmers and brought them up to speed in modern farming culture and management. He argued that the government’s lack of investment in the cattle business probably triggered the violence the country was witnessing. It is unclear whether he felt the killings were a justifiable vent for the herdsmen’s pent-up frustrations, for he said nothing about the tragedy of the killings in his own home state. The Monday meeting was held at the instance of the Interior minister who has apparently embraced the red herring of linking crimes and violent conflicts with electoral violence, implying that the country could be witnessing nothing but indeterminate crimes. He did not expressly talk about the bitter struggle for farm lands and pastures.

    However, after the meeting, the Benue State governor, Samuel Ortom, and Taraba State governor, Darius Ishaku, addressed the press on the communiqué and told a totally different story, almost as if two meetings actually held on the same day at the same venue, and at the same hour. Hear Mr Ortom: “The meeting noted that all animal farmers must ranch their cattle and livestock for better productivity. It also observed the existing synergy between the security agencies and between the states and the Federal Government.” Either they used the words ‘colonies and ranches’ interchangeably or, given what the country already knows about the situation in Benue and Taraba, not to talk of their anti-open grazing laws, the communiqué was clear in differentiating between the two terms.

    Some two days later, while addressing the press on the outcome of the Federal Executive Council (FEC) meeting, the Information minister, Lai Mohammed, gave his opinion on the herdsmen crisis. According to him, “What I can assure you is that the government is very, very concerned about the herdsmen and farmers clashes, and it is receiving attention at the highest level. And as to if troops will be sent, it will be a decision after thorough deliberation on the matter…I’m not an agricultural expert. I know that a colony is much bigger in nature than the ranch.” It was obvious that the FEC did not really discuss the Benue crisis and herdsmen attacks, nor did they attempt to formulate the difference between cattle colonies and ranching. In short, if Mr Ogbeh spoke of cattle colonies, he was speaking for himself or simply flying a kite. And if Mr Mohammed explained the difference between ranching and cattle colonies, he was simply being true to himself when he confessed he was not an expert in that field.

    Indeed, it was not until a few more days after the first meeting that Mr Lalong visited the Agriculture minister in Abuja to seek clarification over the cattle colonies matter. The minister happily obliged. Said Mr Ogbeh: “Ranching is more of an individual venture for those who want to invest, but cattle colony is bigger in scope and size. It is going to be done in partnership with states government who wish to be part of it. Already 16 states have volunteered land. Nobody is going to seize land from any community for the project…Cattle colony is not using Fulani herdsmen to colonize any state. It is going to be done in partnerships with state governments that would like to volunteer land for it. Federal government will fund the project and those wishing to benefit from it will pay some fees.”

    Perhaps sometime in the future, he will address why herdsmen either want the government to pave way for their private businesses or claim the right to make way for themselves by force, including seeking to violently abrogate states grazing laws.

    But what the country needs is for FEC to continue to discuss the herdsmen killings at its Wednesday meetings until the matter is resolved, and to also give the country a very clear and precise idea of what it intends to do, whether to ranch or set up colonies. They, however, seem undecided, as the divergence between the Agriculture minister’s view on the one hand suggests, and the communiqué read by Messrs Ortom and Ishaku on the other hand indicated. Surely, there are better and more precise ways to run a country.

  • Buhari must act now on herdsmen’s menace

    It is a pity that here in Nigeria that we love to play politics with everything. When the issue of Boko Haram first came to public knowledge, many of us were satisfied to blame the then President Goodluck Jonathan for not responding with the required speed. As feared, that blunder is still being referred to as one of the major reasons for the eventual growth of the organisation into the monster we all know it to be today.

    Today, the menace of Fulani herdsmen is poised to repeat the national tragedy. As was in the case of Boko Haram, the current federal government, under the leadership of President Muhammadu Buhari, is not being assertive and proactive enough. What we are seeing so far is a government that seems tied by both ethnic and political biases. Why in the world would any sane person not see it clearly that only modernisation of cow rearing method in the country will save us from the looming national bloodbath.

    If Buhari and other policy makers do not know, may I remind them that an average Nigerian believes in the traditional ownership of land, so any law or perceived negotiation that would make cattle rearers to take over peoples’ land would not likely been taken kindly. It will only serve as a tonic to endless confrontations.

    I and many other Nigerians suspect that Mr. President’s hands are tied because he seems to share in the belief of the majority of his people that the interest of his ethnic tribe would be affected negatively if we decide on ranching. As a national leader, I advise Buhari to see beyond this petty view and act now. Herdsmen from northern Nigeria cannot and will never be allowed to come here in the south to take over the peoples’ land. I consider it a divine responsibility that this issue will come up now that he, a Fulani cattle owner, is president. May he be informed that we are all looking at him to take the right step and at the right time. The legacy he leaves today will go a long way to determine his place in history. Nigeria has already had enough bloodbaths.

    –             Augustine Idewoh, an agriculturist, wrote in from Benin, Edo State

     

  • First, disarm the herdsmen (and famers); then work for a just and honourable peace between them

    First, disarm the herdsmen (and famers); then work for a just and honourable peace between them

    Yes, first of all, the killings must stop immediately. The only sure way to bring that about is effective disarming of the armed herdsmen, together with those among farmers and farming communities that resort to arms, either offensively or in defense from the armed, rampaging herders. Then, secondly, the government and all stakeholders must secure a just, honourable and lasting peace. The first task should be relatively easy, on the condition that the Buhari administration has the will, the foresight and the humanness necessary to accomplish the task. The second task – the task of winning and securing peace – is considerably more daunting, at the same time that it is the more necessary or obligatory task. In this piece, I will discuss both of these tasks, but with more focus on the first. Before getting to the details of each of the two tasks, permit me to state with as much emphasis as possible that the second task – winning and securing peace – cannot and will never be accomplished without first accomplishing the first task, that of voluntary and/or compelled disarmament of the herdsmen. For this reason, let us turn, first, to this first task.

    It is nothing short of astonishing to the highest degree that, as far as I am aware, neither the current administration, nor any other federal or state administration before it, has ever expressed the need to disarm the herdsmen (and farmers), let alone act on that need. And yet, it is one of the cornerstones of the theory and practice of governance in all the modern states of the world that the state must have and exercise a monopoly over the means and instruments of violence. The only exceptions to this universal principle of monopoly of the modern state over access to the instruments and means of violence are, compositely, special cases where private companies and individual citizens are allowed or licensed by the state to carry arms for self-protection. Behind this principle is the idea that all citizens and groups agree to give up their right to possessing arms in the expectation that the state, to which monopoly over the means of violence has been ceded, will provide protection for all. And behind everything about this principle is the Hobbesian philosophical idea that since as a species, human beings are extremely prone to violence, only the state can protect us all from violence by maintaining a monopoly over the instruments of violence.

    Of course, we do know that in Nigeria as in many other modern states of the world, both open and clandestine groups buy and use deadly weapons. But such groups do so illegally and for only as long as the state concerned does not move to disarm them. Bearing this in mind, we must recognize here that to date in post-independence Nigeria, only the armed Fulani herdsmen have gone unchallenged by the Nigerian state. Every other group that has resorted to arms in pursuit of their declared and undeclared interests have been confronted with the organized violence of the state, based on that theory and practice of the monopolization of the instruments of violence by the modern state. Permit me to give a concrete historical and anecdotal elaboration of this observation, this claim.

    Thus, I recall here many cases from the first decade of independence to the present period: Isaac Adaka Boro and revolutionaries of the Niger Delta that took up arms against the Federal  government in the early 1960s and were ultimately diverted from their rebellion by the outbreak of the civil war in which they then fought on the federal side; the villagers of Ugep in Cross River State and the rural insurgents of the Agbekoya uprising in the West both of whom took up arms against the state and the military during the civil war and were met with the counter-violence of the state; the Bakolori peasants of Sokoto state against whose bows, arrows and machetes the Shagari administration used maximum state violence; the Niger Delta militants from the 1980s to the present, many of whom have been disarmed and some of whom still remain armed and totally opposed to the Nigerian state; Ibrahim El-Zakyzaky and the Shiites who, against the claims of the Nigerian state that they have resorted to arms, claim that they have never used weapons in their campaign for religious, social and civic rights; Boko Haram; dozens of armed bandits, kidnappers, extortionists and marauders who, from the late 80s to the present have been waging wars of terror, mayhem and extortion in diverse areas of the country, in the rural areas as well as the urban centers. All of these groups and individuals, without exception, have been engaged by the Nigerian state and its police and military institutions. But there is a single exception and it is the Fulani herdsmen.

    The question we, the Nigerian people, must now ask the Buhari administration is why its treatment of the armed Fulani herdsmen is or should be different from all the other cases of the resort to arms by individuals and groups, from the first decade of independence to the present. This is the same administration that in Zaria, in 2015, deployed the full force of the Nigerian military against protesting and demonstrating Shiites, killing more than 300 of the demonstrators and marchers. To this day, against the government’s claim that they were armed, the Shiites claim that they were unarmed. Significantly, the claim of the Shiites has been backed by many independent Nigerian and foreign observers and Human Rights groups. And what of the Nigerian army’s “Operation Python Dance 11” directed against IPOB which, for all its violent and hateful rhetoric and utterances, remains an unarmed group? Why hasn’t there been an “Operation Camel Dance 11” against the herdsmen, why?

    I mention the case of IPOB and “Operation Python Dance 11” for one particular reason which is this: in spite of the ferocity and the triumphalism of the Operation Python Dance, no one was killed. IPOB and its sympathizers of course claim that there were deaths, but these have not been independently verified. That being the case, I wish to lay emphasis on the fact that it is always possible for the Nigerian or any other state in the world to disarm insurgent or recalcitrant groups and individuals without murdering their leaders and members. In other words, voluntary disarmament is everywhere in the world the normally desired or preferred method. Apart from the significant factor of avoidance of destruction of people, there is the added perspective of giving insurgents or aggrieved groups a chance to settle their claims peacefully by laying down their arms and negotiating peacefully. As a matter of fact, this method or approach has been tried in the Niger Delta, with a measure of success. Why shouldn’t the method be tried with the herdsmen? At any rate, why has virtually nobody, the government and/or the people, raised the necessity of disarming the herdsmen?

    The very idea of disarming the herdsmen immediately raises many important issues. Here is one these issues: there is a possibility that the project will split the ranks herdsmen and their defenders into at least two camps. On one side, there would be those who agree to disarm on the condition that the Nigerian state will provide adequate security for herders from the menace of cattle rustlers; on the other side, there would be those who will on no account whatsoever accept disarming the herders. Your guess is as good as mine: will Miyetti Allah, the powerful cattle breeders association to which Muhammadu Buhari has very strong organizational ties, support or refuse the project of disarming herders?

    A second issue raised by the prospect of disarming herders is the fact that it is about the only guarantee that we have that Buhari is capable of dealing with the standoff between herders and farmers in the same way that he has dealt with El Zakyzaky and the Shiites and Nnamdi Kanu and IPOB. To say the least, the attitude and the pronouncements of the President and his spokespersons on the standoff have been extremely dilatory, if not exactly confusing and    disappointing to most Nigerians. If he and his surrogates keep silent on or dawdle about this demand that the herdsmen be disarmed before any further action and discussion on the matter is launched, then it will become as clear as daylight that Buhari and his administration have no real interest in dealing fairly and even-handedly with the crisis, one of the two or three most urgent and pivotal crises that the president and his administration face at the present time.

    Thirdly and finally, there is the fundamental issue of the Nigerian state and its putative claim to monopoly of the means and instruments of violence. The greatest justification of this principle is the claim that ultimately, the state uses violence primarily to keep in check the violence that can be done – and is often done – by individuals and groups on other people – as individuals, groups or entire communities. Miyetti Allah and sympathizers of the herdsmen’s interests have argued that killings by herdsmen are done as reprisals against cattle rustling, not as aspects of a territorial war for grazing lands and fields. Well, if the state offers effective protection against cattle rustlers as the justification for the herders to disarm, herders who refuse to lay down their arms and surrender their weapons would be demonstrating that punitive action against cattle rustlers is not the real or primary objective of their resort to arms; rather, it would mean that genocide against farmers with the intention to seize and control their lands is the real objective.

    The reader may have noticed that I also say that farmers and farming communities must be disarmed, although I have placed this in brackets in the title of this essay. I am sure that the reason for this is clear, this being the fact that even though some of the farmers are armed, their arms are for the most part primitive weapons like dane guns, bows and arrows and cutlasses. These are dangerous arms, regardless of the fact that as weapons, they are extremely inferior to the AK-47 assault rifles of the herders. But precisely for this reason, everyone knows that it would require far less force to disarm the farmers than the herders. At least for the time being and until the farmers and their supporters and defenders begin to buy and use assault rifles to defend themselves and their communities. For let there be no doubt about the likelihood of this development if the herders are not disarmed and the killings continue. At that point, heaven help us, “Operation Camel Dance” will not be enough and will be too late; the Nigerian armed forces would need combined “Operations Tiger and Lion Dances”.

    As indicated at the beginning of this piece, I bring my observations and reflections to an end with a very brief commentary on the second of our two identified tasks – the task of winning and securing a just, honourable and lasting peace between the communities of herders and farmers. The Fulani (or “Peul” in French) are one of the greatest peoples of Africa, especially in our sub-region of West Africa. It is a great irony that to many Nigerians of diverse ethnic and regional communities, the Fulani today are seen mostly or indeed only in the light of the horrific accounts and stories of the savagery of itinerant herders who are refusing to embrace modernity beyond the AK-47 assault rifle. Many of the Fulani are now more or less permanent settlers and indigenes of diverse states in the North and the South and many are urban sophisticates that cannot be reduced to the caricature of marauding murderers. Let the efforts to find solutions to this crisis embrace and reflect these facts, if only because failure to do so would make a lasting and just peace impossible.

    But first of all, we must disarm the armed, rampaging herders. Without taking this first primary step, all else is deceit, bad faith and treasonous conspiracy against the Nigerian nation-state

     

    Biodun Jeyifo

    bjeyifo@fas.harvard.edu

  • Again, 10 feared killed, scores injured in fresh Kaduna attack

    Again, 10 feared killed, scores injured in fresh Kaduna attack

    Gunmen suspected to be armed Fulani herdsmen unleashed terror in Kaduna on Saturday, when they attacked two villages in Birnin Gwari Local Government area.

    The Nation gathered that 10 people were killed and scores of victims rushed to a General Hospital.

    The suspected armed herdsmen reportedly attacked Dangaji village and Ungwan Gajere on Friday night till Saturday morning.

    The gunmen as gathered by Correspondent burnt down homes of the villagers after the attack, as some of the inhabitants flew to safer communities.

    An eyewitness who is an inhabitant of the community in Birnin Gwari told journalists that “It is unfortunate that since on Friday night we encountered the attack of herdsmen in the village of Dangaji,” saying that “after they penetrated the village they came into other places and burnt down houses”.

    “This early morning (Saturday) they went to another village, Kutemechi in Unguwan Gajere where they entered into the community killing about nine men,” he said.

    According to him, “after they burnt the villagers houses, the last victim was rushed to the hospital, but unfortunately he died on the way to the hospital. Right now, all the villagers have fled and scattered into other communities where they can find shelter”.

    It was also gathered that a week ago, about three people were kidnapped in Dangaji village and six million naira  ransom was paid before the they released the three victims. Most of them are farmers.

    The eyewitness said, “It was after the incident that the herdsmen now attacked the village and killed the 10 people. Many people have been taken to the general hospital in Birnin Gwari. Some were said to have died again in the hospital”.

    He said military reinforcement tried to get to the affected areas, “but before they could get there the herdsmen had disappeared”.

    Meanwhile, Kaduna Police Command PPRO, ASP Mukhtar Aliyu did not respond to calls put across to him.