Tag: herdsmen

  • Killer Herdsmen: Impunity Rides Again – Wole Soyinka

    Killer Herdsmen: Impunity Rides Again – Wole Soyinka

    It is happening all over again. History is repeating itself and, alas, within such an agonizingly short span of time. How often must we warn against the enervating lure of appeasement in face of aggression and will to dominate! I do not hesitate to draw attention to Volume III of my INTERVENTION Series, and to the chapter on The Unappeasable Price of Appeasement. There is little to add, but it does appear that even the tragically fulfilled warnings of the past leave no impression on leadership, not even when identical signs of impending cardiac arrest loom over the nation. Boko Haram was still at that stage of putative probes when cries of alarm emerged. Then the fashion ideologues of society deployed their distancing turns of phrase to rationalize what were so obviously discernable as an agenda of ruthless fundamentalism and internal domination. Boko Haram was a product of social inequities, they preached – one even chortled: We stand for justice, so we are all Boko Haram! We warned that – yes indeed – the inequities of society were indeed part of the story, but why do you close your eyes against other, and more critical malfunctions of the human mind, such as theocratic lunacy? Now it is happening again. The nation is being smothered in Vaseline when the diagnosis is so clearly – cancer!

    We have been here before – now, ‘before’ is back with a vengeance. President Goodluck Jonathan refused to accept that marauders had carried off the nation’s daughters; President Muhammed Buhari and his government – including his Inspector-General of Police – in near identical denial, appear to believe those killer herdsmen who strike again and again at will from one corner of the nation to the other, are merely hot-tempered citizens whose scraps occasionally degenerate into “communal clashes” – I believe I have summarized him accurately. The marauders are naughty children who can be admonished, paternalistically, into good neighbourly conduct. Sometimes of course, the killers were also said be non-Nigerians after all. The contradictions are mind-boggling.

    First the active policy of appeasement, then the language of endorsement. El Rufai, governor of Kaduna state, proudly announced that, on assuming office, he had raised a peace committee and successfully traced the herdsmen to locations outside Nigerian borders. He then made payments to them from state coffers to cure them of their homicidal urge which, according to these herdsmen, were reprisals for some ancient history and the loss of cattle through rustling. The public was up in arms against this astonishing revelation. I could only call to mind a statement by the same El Rufai after a prior election which led to a rampage in parts of the nation, and cost even the lives of National Youth Service corpers. They were hunted down by aggrieved mobs and even states had to organize rescue missions for their citizens. Countering protests that the nation owed a special duty of protection to her youth, especially those who are co-opted to serve the nation in any capacity, El Rufai’s comment then was: No life is more important than another. Today, that statement needs to be adjusted, to read perhaps – apologies to George Orwell: “All lives are equal, but a cow’s is more equal than others.”

    This seems to be the government view, one that, overtly or by implication, is being amplified through act and pronouncement, through clamorous absence, by this administration. It appears to have infected even my good friend and highly capable Minister, Audu Ogbeh, however insidiously. What else does one make of his statements in an interview where he generously lays the blame for ongoing killings everywhere but at the feet of the actual perpetrators! His words, as carried by The Nation Newspapers:

    “The inability of the government to pay attention to herdsmen and cow farming, unlike other developed countries, contributed to the killings.” The Minister continued:

    “Over the years, we have not done much to look seriously into the issue of livestock development in the country….we may have done enough for the rice farmer, the cassava farmer, the maize farmer, the cocoa farmer, but we haven’t done enough for herdsmen, and that inability and omission on our part is resulting in the crisis we are witnessing today”

    No, no, not so, Audu! It is true that I called upon the government a week ago to stop passing the buck over the petroleum situation. I assure you however that I never intended that a reverse policy should lead to exonerating – or appearing to exonerate – mass killers, rapists and economic saboteurs – saboteurs, since their conduct subverts the efforts of others to economically secure their own existence, drives other producers off their land in fear and terror. This promises the same plague of starvation that afflicts zones of conflict all over this continent where liberally sown landmines prevent farmers from venturing near their prime source, the farm, often their only source of livelihood, and has created a whole population of amputees. At least, those victims in Angola, Mozambique and other former war theatres, mostly lived to tell the tale. These herdsmen, arrogant and unconscionable, have adopted a scorched-earth policy, so that those other producers – the cassava, cocoa, sorghum, rice etc farmers are brutally expelled from farm and dwelling.

    Government neglect? You may not have intended it, but you made it sound like the full story. I applaud the plans of your ministry, I am in a position to know that much thought – and practical steps – have gone into long-term plans for bringing about the creation of ‘ranches’, ‘colonies’ – whatever the name – including the special cultivation of fodder for animal feed and so on and on. However, the present national outrage is over impunity. It rejects the right of any set of people, for whatever reason, to take arms against their fellow men and women, to acknowledge their exploits in boastful and justifying accents and, in effect, promise more of the same as long as their terms and demands are not met. In plain language, they have declared war against the nation, and their weapon is an undiluted terror. Why have they been permitted to become a menace to the rest of us? That is the issue!

    Permit me to remind you that, early in 2016, an even more hideous massacre was perpetrated by this same Murder Incorporated – that is, a numerical climax to what had been a series across a number of Middle Belt and neighbouring states, with Benue taking the brunt of the butchery. A peace meeting was called, attended by the state government and security agencies of the nation, including the Inspector General of Police. This group attended – according to reports – with AK47s and other weapons of mass intimidation visible under their garments. They were neither disarmed nor turned back. They freely admitted the killings but justified them by claims that they had lost their cattle to the host community. It is important to emphasize that none of their spokesmen referred to any government neglect, such as refusal to pay subsidy for their cows or failure to accord them the same facilities that had been extended to cassava or millet farmers. Such are the monstrous beginnings of the culture of impunity. We are reaping, yet again, the consequences of such tolerance of the intolerable. Yes, there indeed the government is culpable, definitely guilty of “looking the other way”. Indeed, it must be held complicit.

    This question is now current, and justified: just when is terror? I am not aware that IPOB came anywhere close to this homicidal propensity and will to dominance before it was declared a terrorist organization. The international community rightly refused to go along with such an absurdity. For the avoidance of doubt, let me state right here, and yet again, that IPOB leadership is its own worst enemy. It repels public empathy, indeed, I suspect that it deliberately cultivates an obnoxious image, especially among its internet mouthers who make rational discourse impossible. However, as we pointed out at the time, the conduct of that movement, even at its most extreme, could by no means be reckoned as terrorism. By contrast, how do we categorize Myeti? How do we assess a mental state that cannot distinguish between a stolen cow – which is always recoverable – and human life, which is not. Villages have been depopulated far wider than those outside their operational zones can conceive. They swoop on sleeping settlements, kill and strut. They glory in their seeming supremacy. Cocoa farmers do not kill when there is a cocoa blight. Rice farmers, cassava and tomato farmers do not burn. The herdsmen cynically dredge up decades-old affronts – they did at the 2016 Benue “peace meeting” to justify the killings of innocents in the present – These crimes are treated like the norm. Once again, the nation is being massaged by specious rationalisations while the rampage intensifies and the spread spirals out of control. When we open the dailies tomorrow morning, there is certain to have been a new body count, to be followed by the arrogant justification of the Myeti Allah.

    The warnings pile up, the distress signals have turned into a prolonged howl of despair and rage. The answer is not to be found in pietistic appeals to victims to avoid ‘hate language’ and divisive attributions. The sustained, killing monologue of the herdsmen is what is at issue. It must be curbed, decisively and without further evasiveness.

    Yes, Jonathan only saw ‘ghosts’ when Boko Haram was already excising swathes of territory from the nation space and abducting school pupils. The ghosts of Jonathan seem poised to haunt the tenure of Mohammed Buhari.

  • Two policemen killed as herdsmen step up attacks

    Two policemen killed as herdsmen step up attacks

    •Ortom rejects Fed Govt’s cattle colony plan            •Governor meets Buhari 

    Despite killing no fewer than 71 persons in Benue State and provoking a big outrage, herdsmen have continued their bloody campaign.

    Two mobile policemen drafted to the trouble spot were reported to have been killed yesterday.

    Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom alleged that the herdsmen launched attacks from the neighbouring Nasarawa State —a claim Governor Tanko Al-Makura rejected.

    Ortom yesterday rejected the Federal Government’s plan to establish colonies for cattle herders.

    According to him, the only option to solve the farmers / herdsmen clashes is the establishment of ranches as it is being done globally.

    Ortom spoke with State House correspondents after a closed-door meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari that lasted for about two hours at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

    The leadership of the Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore, he said, should also be arrested and prosecuted for alleged genocide. The organisation insists the killings, which have caused over 70 deaths, were not done by herdsmen.

    The governor explained that he had been briefing President Buhari on the activities of the herdsmen right from when they started their onslaught on the state’s people.

    He also disclosed that the militia  opposing the state’s anti-open grazing law, operates from Tonga in Awe Local Government Area of Nassarawa State.

    Due to the sophistication of the herdsmen’s weapons, Ortom said, two Mobile policemen drafted to maintain peace were killed on Monday.

    The governor said: “I am waiting to be briefed about what ‘colonies’ means; I don’t understand it and until I understand it…but like I keep saying, for us, the way forward is ranching and uptill this time, I am talking to you, the way forward is ranching because it’s global best practice.

    “And it is the practice in other parts of the world –  on African soil in Swaziland, South Africa, Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, almost all African countries that rear cattle; they ranch, so why can’t we do the same thing here. For the colony thing, I don’t know what colony is.”

    On how many ranches his administration has created, Ortom said: “It’s not for me to create ranches, I know that as a farmer I have one in my farm and there are several other people who are free. The permits are available for people who want to ranch their cattle to access land and begin to ranch.

    “So it is free for everybody and that is the right way to go. And since we started the implementation, there has been relative peace amongst farmers and herdsmen. They were doing well until this militia coming from this Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore came and attacked us.

    “And they are known; we know where they are. As I talk to you, they are in Tongua in Awe Local Government (Nassarawa); that is where these people are camped and coming to attack people.”

    On whether he had been briefing the President, he said: “I had earlier briefed Mr. President when this incident took place on the 1st of January. After staying back on the ground to do the needful to ensure that we restored normalcy I said it was important for me to come personally and brief him and that has been done.

    “Already, because of the communications we have been having when this incidents started, actions have been taken as directed by him. The movement of the DIG (Deputy Inspector General) of Police, the movement of the IG (Inspector General) now to relocate to Benue State to ensure that this challenge is surmounted was at the instance of Mr. President.

    “Of course, additional personnel of DSS (Department of State Services) and Police have been deployed and even the Army. We have additional personnel on ground now. We have … given them the logistics support to ensure that our people are protected.

    “I had to brief him; he is also doing further investigation to know the next line of action. I believe that my request that the leadership of Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore, who has earlier threatened and I accused them directly; since June last year I have been writing to the leadership of security agencies, that these people are a threat to our collective interest and they must be dealt with. They must be arrested and prosecuted because we cannot allow impunity to continue to thrive.

    “And, of course, threat and no action has resulted in this killing and I think that Mr. President will also do the needful to ensure something is done.”

    On the allegations that he hired mercenaries from Republic of Ghana to fight the herdsmen, Ortom said: “I am not aware of this and I don’t even know about that one. I am hearing it for the first time. If someone has done that, it must be this Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore, that have done it.”

    Asked if he  was blocked from seeing the President, Ortom said: “I have never accused anyone of blocking me from seeing Mr. President. I am seeing Mr. President. I told him when this incident occurred I spoke to Mr. President on phone and followed it up.

    “I know what it entails being a President. Even as governor, most times, I am not with my phone; people cannot access me the way it used to be, talk less of a President.

    “I didn’t say that and I have not said it. The truth is that I have access to Mr. President anytime I want. I speak to him on phone and I see him personally. I requested to speak to him on phone that day because I couldn’t come to Abuja and he gave me the opportunity and today I am here and I have seen him.”

    On the push for military operations in Benue State, the governor said: “Anything that can stop the killings of my people I will go for it; I support it. Any policy or any directive, anything that will help stop the killing of these innocent people who are not armed because this can not continue.

    “We know that the continuity of this will create greater challenges. I don’t want it to continue. We are struggling with economic issues, we are struggling with political issues and we are struggling with several other issues in this country, security issues and all that, Benue State should not be part of this; there is no need for it.

    “The law on prohibition of Open Grazing and Establishment of Ranching was made out of the necessity to ensure that we have peace for herdsmen and farmers and that is what we have done. The law seeks to protect all and as I talk to you, except this Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore, who are instigating people to fight and to kill us, there are Fulani men in Benue State as I talk to you doing their business.”

  • Al-Makura to Ortom: killer herdsmen not in Nasarawa

    Al-Makura to Ortom: killer herdsmen not in Nasarawa

    Nasarawa State Governor Tanko Al-Makura yesterday denied that killer-herdsmen causing havoc in Benue State are in the state.

    Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom, whose state has lost 71 persons to the rampaging gunmen said they were residing in Nasarawa State.

    After meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa yesterday, Ortom spoke about the anti-open grazing law, saying it had brought peace, until the herdsmen attacks.

    “And since we started the implementation, there has been relative peace among farmers and herdsmen; they were doing well until this militia coming from this Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore, came and attacked us. And they are known, we know where they are. As I talk to you they are in Tongua in Awe local government that is where these people are camped and coming to attack people.” he added

    But Al-Makura swiftly denied the allegation, saying his state was not harbouring the killer-herdsmen.

    He said: “I’m really taken aback; this statement is most unfortunate. I will like to use this opportunity to say that there is nothing like that whatsoever. If anything, the Tonga that the governor is talking about in Awe Local Government  is now the safe haven for displaced persons.

    “As I speak with you today, there are more than three IDP camps in Awe local government that quarters and caters for the number of people that have migrated from Benue to Nasarawa.

    “To be specific, they are more than 7,000 people that are camped in Tonga. So it’s very ironical that a place that is supposed to be an area that has become a safe haven for IDPs can now be called where militias are camped.

    “In that case, the militia don’t need to go as far as Benue. They have the prey within the vicinity of Tonga to attack. I think this is most unfortunate.” he said

    He added: “Yesterday, we held over seven hours of rigorous interfacing with seven governors, service chiefs and some ministers and all our security operatives within the states and around Benue, and my colleague could not tell me this, he could not approach me and give me an idea if there is anything that he saw or is worried about.

    “Besides, from all the discussions we had yesterday, there was no concrete security report stigmatising any part of Nasarawa State as habouring people that are coming to attack Benue.

    “I feel what should be of concern to us as leaders is the plight of the people and any of such statement that is inflammatory is likely going to cause more confusion to what is already there.

    “As it is, it is the implementation of the anti-grazing law in Benue that has caused the problem and now Nasarawa State is being infected by the problem notwithstanding that we are being our brothers’ keepers and good neigbhours.

    “I had to cut short my leave and come to find ways of helping my colleague. We have called all our security to meet to find ways and means of helping Benue and if all efforts we have done and with all the relief materials we have given and the protection to the IDPs that were created, that certain parts of Nasarawa State can now be stigmatised with this allegations is to say the least  most unfortunate.”

    Al-Makura added: “We will still continue to render whatever assistance that we can give to the IDPs from Benue because we have some Tiv people that live in Nasarawa in virtually all the three or four local governments that share boundary with Benue State, we are duty bound as a responsible administration to cater for all.

    “And the Tonga he is talking about is a town within three states, that is Goa in Benue, Shanda, Ibi and there is River Benue besides them. So, anybody can fly through the River to go and attack in Benue. And don’t forget the obscurity of the wilderness and is very porous and anybody can move from any part to any place to attack any place.

    “So, as far as I am concerned, it is unfortunate there is nobody keeping anybody anywhere in Nasarawa State.”

  • Farmers-herdsmen clashes: Army deploys special forces

    Farmers-herdsmen clashes: Army deploys special forces

    The Chief of Army Staff, Lt.-Gen. Tukur Buratai, says the Nigerian Army has deployed Troops to help stem the clashes between farmers and herdsmen across three states and stabilise them.

    Buratai said this at the official inauguration of the Nigerian Army Farms and Ranch and Presentation of Farm Implement to the Army by the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development in Giri on Tuesday.

    He listed the states where the troops had been sent to as Benue, Taraba and Nasarawa, noting that the Army would support the Federal Government to stem the clashes.

    According to him, once the nation attains food security, all other forms of insecurity including insurgency in the North-East, militancy, kidnapping and other forms of security issues would be reduced.

    Buratai said the Barracks Initiative Programme which was initiated by him, was aimed at cultivating the culture of investment in the agricultural value chain by officers and soldiers of the Army and their families, as well as providing jobs for the youth in the barracks.

    “As at today, we have almost 1000 herds of cattle within the Nigerian Army Barracks and formations. This is one of the ranches scattered in all the Nigerian Army formations.

    “We are ready to support the Federal Government to stabilise the farmers’ herdsmen clashes across the country.

    “We are tasking our Special Forces to ensure that everywhere they are deployed across the country at short notice, they stem the conflict.

    “We have properly deployed across Benue, Taraba and Nasarawa States within the axis where we have the conflict. Once there is peace, the development of agriculture will thrive for the good of our country.

    “Areas such as ranching, fisheries, poultry, production of eggs and meat, greenhouses and plantation are now practised in most barracks of the Nigerian Army,’’ he said.

    The Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, commended the Nigerian Army for its agricultural initiative.

    He assured them of the ministry’s commitment toward providing them with farm implements as well as equipment to boost both milk and meat production for their animals.

    “This is can be done because the Army has done it. We can’t thank you enough.

    “I have been telling people that this kind of initiative is a solution to these farmers-herdsmen clashes.

    “We will stand by you; we will plant trees for you. When cows roam in the bush, they come in contact with different diseases.

    “One of the reasons we don’t have enough meat and milk is because our cattle roam. This is something for us to be proud of as a country.

    “We will bring you more machines for making feeds.

    “We will send our team to you to commence artificial insemination to improve the breed of the cattle and milk production.

    “To farmers, politicians, journalists, this is an example to follow,’’ Ogbeh said.

    The minister handed over 25 tonnes of compounded ruminant feed, reaper, crushing machine and pasture seeds to the Army to assist them in the venture.

  • Govt bans open grazing to stop killings by herdsmen

    Govt bans open grazing to stop killings by herdsmen

    Governors offer land for cattle colonies

    40,000 displaced in Benue

    Women protest

    Communique of meeting on killings

    •All animal farmers must ranch their cattle or livestock
    •Livestock farmers to be educated on benefit of ranching
    •Nigerians must avoid hate speeaches

    OPEN grazing of cattle was banned yesterday by the Federal Government – to stem the growing anger sparked by the killings in Benue and other states.

    All herdsmen must henceforth ranch their cattle.

    The decision was taken at the end of a six-hour meeting of a Federal Government delegation, security agencies and five governors.

    Presenting the communique after the meeting, Benue State Governor Samuel Ortorm, accompanied by his Taraba State counterpart, Darius Ishaku, said: “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.”

    Livestock farmers are to be  enlightened on the benefits of keeping their animals in a location.

    The meeting also admonished Nigerians to live in peace, being the only way to resolve the perennial clashes between the herdsmen and farmers.

    It cautioned Nigerians against hate speeches, noting that anyone found engaging in it should be dealt with by the security agencies.

    The communique was agreed upon after a meeting of a Federal Government delegation, top security chiefs and five governors, some of whose states are mostly affected by the herders/farmers clashes met.

    Minister of Interior AbdulRahman Dambazau and Minister of Agriculture Audu Ogbeh met with Governors Samuel Ortom (Benue), Simon Lalong (Plateau), Tanko Almakura (Nasarawa), Abubakar Bello (Niger)  and Nasir El Rufai (Kaduna).

    Also at the meeting were Inspector General of Police Ibrahim Idris, Commandant-General of the Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), Gana Muhammadu, Director General of the Department of State Services (DSS) Mammam Daura, among among others.

    Dambazau said the meeting was to primarily share experiences among the stakeholders and agree on measures to tackle the menace.

    Dambazau said: “the current situation is very dangerous to Northern Nigeria in particular and the nation in general.”

    The minister said threats to peace and public safety in any form at any location in the country will not be tolerated.

    ”It is the responsibility of governments at all levels to provide, unconditionally, sustainable peace and public safety within their territorial boundaries. Against this background, the meeting is convened to primarily bring us together to share our experiences on the aforementioned security challenges. The meeting will then agree on necessary measures to be taken and apportion responsibilities.

    ”The immediate repercussion of this menace includes hunger due to acute shortage of food, diseases, criminal activities and deepening animosity between ethnic and religious groups. Knowing that general elections are fast approaching and considering the history of political and election violence in Nigeria, all necessary steps must be taken to ensure that the recently witnessed crimes and violent conflicts are curtailed with utmost dispatch.”

    Ogbeh said the inability of government to pay attention to herdsmen and cow farming, unlike other developed countries, contributed to the killings.

    The government, however, expressed concern that the trend of clashes between herdsmen and famers is dangerous for the development of the country.

    Ogbeh said: “Over the years, we have not done much to look seriously into the issue of livestock development in the country. People ask the question; why should government get involved, why shouldn’t the herdsmen manage their own livestock? I am sad to tell you that in the last 50 years, until recently, we may have done enough for the rice farmer, the cassava farmer, the maize farmer, the cocoa farmer, but we haven’t done much for herdsmen and that inability and omission on our part is resulting in the crises we are witnessing today.

    ”In Europe, every cow that is farmed gets a subsidy of six Euros per day, we have done next to nothing for the cattle rearer and, as a result, his operation has become a threat to the existence of our farmers. That is what this communiqué will seek to resolve.”

    The minister added  that the Federal Government was “planning a programme called cattle colonists, not ranches but colonists where at least 5000 hectares of land would be made available, adequate water, adequate pasture would be made available.

    ”We also want to stop cattle rearers  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 for rustlers to enable them live a normal life. This has been done elsewhere in India, Ethiopia and even Brazil.”

     

  • Obiano to herdsmen: desist from attacks or face our wrath

    Obiano to herdsmen: desist from attacks or face our wrath

    Anambra State Governor Willie Obiano has warned cattle breeders in the state to refrain from acts capable of disturbing public peace or face the wrath of the law

    The warning followed last week’s clash between farmers and herdsmen in Aguleri, Anambra East Local Government Area.

    Obiano spoke at the weekend, during a reception organised by his kinsmen, after he was bestowed with the title of Ebubedike Aguleri.

    He vowed that cattle herders, who carry dangerous weapons like AK-47, would not be allowed in Anambra.

    The governor, however, said that he was on top of the Fulani cattle menace experienced in some parts of the state. He promised to ensure the matter is quickly resolved amicably.

    Obiano said he has been briefed on the current situation between farmers and herdsmen, adding that the government has taken actions to forestall actions which may cause mayhem.

    His words: “Part of the measures taken to address the menace was sensitising both the host communities and the Fulani herdsmen of the existing agreement that any party that attacks or destroys property of the other will pay and also be prosecuted.”

    He reassured farmers in the affected communities that the government would tackle the invasion of their farms by cattle.

  • Killer Herdsmen: Fed Govt set to establish Cattle colonies

    Killer Herdsmen: Fed Govt set to establish Cattle colonies

    In order to check herdsmen farmers persistent clashes, Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development, Chief Audu Ogbeh, has said the  Federal Government is ready to establish cattle colonies.

    The initiative is expected to provide sustainable solution to the herdsmen/farmers killings across the country.

    Ogbeh disclosed this yesterday during a 2-day retreat organised by Synergos for special advisers and directors in the ministry in Abuja.

    He assured that needed facilities and supports such as water and grasses would be provided for the herdsmen and their cattle.

    The Minister explained that the cattle colony project would commence immediately following the offer of five hectares of land from  16 state Governors in the country.

    He added that President Muhammadu Buhari has promised to help the ministry with needed fund for the project, adding that no other sector is capable of creating jobs for the unemployed.

    While he debunked claims that 4 million jobs were lost last one year, Ogbeh argued that over 6 million jobs were created in the agric sector only, adding that Hibiscus also known as Zobo earned the nation’s farmers about $35 million last year as demand continues to increase.

    “On the issue of cattle we have to start immediately, 16 states have given us land to work on. The programme is not going to be cheap. Mr President has personally informed me that if we seek help from him he will give it to us over and above the budget we have, and when that budget is released I plead with all of you to come on board to work hard to achieve results.

    “We are talking of cattle colonies not ranches so to speak, where we will provide water, grass, training for herdsmen, cattle breeding and insemination.

    “We have to deal with an urgent problem, cattle rearing and the conflicts between farmers and herdsmen, and actually bring it to a halt. I know that some people argue that the culture of open grazing is our culture, but when a culture begins to develop dangerous trends leading to warfare between people and bloody clashes and death that culture is due for re-examination; if it is harmful we reform it.

     “Nigerians are getting extremely uncomfortable with these killings and we may make political statements and issue palliatives and ask the police and army to go after killers. Let us do our own duty by eliminating the conflict by creating cattle colonies.”

    According to the Minister 2018 Frontiers for the sector will focus on new plantations for cashew nuts, also relaunch of cocoa that will move the country up from number seven to number one in the next five years, improve fertilizer blending, which micro nutrients will be included.

    The Permanent Secretary in the ministry, Dr. Bukar Hassan, in his remarks revealed that Nigeria will soon export organic fertilizer to Europe in February 2018, Hassan made this known while he called on ministers’ aide and civil servants to work together, because the ministry has enormous work to deliver Buhari’s change agenda before 2019 elections.

    In his remarks, the Synergos Country Representative,  Adewale Ajadi, called on directors and political advisers in the ministry to synergise and work assiduously and not to allow politics distract what has commenced.

    Ajadi urged the federal, state and local governments to work together and have proper coordination of activities and policies in the sector.

  • Herdsmen, Cattle Rearing, Manslaughter: The plight of the Nigerian child

    Herdsmen, Cattle Rearing, Manslaughter: The plight of the Nigerian child

    Section 44 of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria explains that every citizen of Nigeria is entitled to move freely throughout Nigeria. However, in any case, where there is a restriction on the movement of a person, then there is a violation of the person’s right.

    It is also very true that the constitution allows the free movement of Nigerians, as persons, I do not think the constitution allows any freedom of movement rights on animals or cattle owned by Nigerians.

    Even at that, they have the constitutional right to move, to live and to carry out any legitimate activity in any part of the country, freely as guaranteed by the land. But what do we say of a movement that infringes another human right, the right to life?

    It is true that the constitution outlaws anyone or assemblage from disallowing anybody’s movement from one part of the nation to another. But where it encroaches on another right, what does the constitution say? Section 45 of the Nigerian Constitution clarifies that the freedom of movement of any citizen of the country can be delimited based on convinced conditions.

    It says if the movement of a citizen within the country threatens public or private safety, then that movement can be constitutionally abridged. This means that every Fulani herdsman, for instance, who rears his cattle on foot across communities, puts the lives and source of revenue of agriculturalists at risk.

    It is already a common knowledge that the Fulani herdsmen have become a major threat to the rights and freedom of others in Nigeria. These nomadic herdsmen have put so many communities in unparalleled destitution and have turned citizens into expatriates in their own fatherland.

    Thousands of Nigerians have lost their lives to the herdsmen and many more have been evacuated from their homes and communities for fear of death.

    I have read on the national dailies and seen broadcasted on national television channels about minor and major cases of deadly clashes between local agronomists and the cattle breeders, which often draws the attention of the security agents. Some of these Fulani herdsmen even invade the farmlands of these farmers, destroying their farm produce and possibly causing bloody clashes.

    Most of the clashes have resulted in bloodbaths, manslaughter, slayings, and several scenes of carnage. Sometimes, these cattle breeders go as far as forcefully having sexual intercourse with the wives or daughters of the farmers, and if there is any resistance from the women or their husbands or their sons, these herdsmen murder them in cold blood.

    I do not think that there is any community that has not had its own stake of these ferocious and brutal doings of the Fulani herdsmen. However, the annoyance of the locals is that the government has deafened their ears to this atrocious manifestation, leaving the peasants to their Providences.

    It is very sorrowful too, to mention that while the cries of grief as the episodes of manslaughter, theft, rape, damage, and abduction by the cattle herdsmen on citizens lingers, these cow rearers still confidently parade their cows on streets and farmlands, shore of compunction and fear.

    This is because nothing concrete has been done by the government to curb this defilement of the fundamental human right to life. This is a government that was voted into office to protect the lives and properties of her citizens.

    This insurgency by the herdsmen has become an eye of life in some areas in Nigeria, as inhabitants cannot sleep with their eyes closed anymore. Startling to me, is the fact that these herdsmen are well equipped, with fortified and sophisticated weapons for their operations. They use these weapons not for self-defense but to threaten and most times harm the innocent farmers in their farmlands.

    Reports have it that, since the invasion of about 12 Agatu comminutes in Benue State, where about 600 villagers or more were slaughtered; holding to an unacceptable reason that likens the lives of cattle with those of human beings, livelihood has been awful. Up till now, the nomads have not been held accountable nor have they been held responsible for their actions.

    Why would they not plot another massacre? The government and its security representatives have chosen to remain mute in the face of atrocities and calamities befalling the electorates.

    If something is not done permanently to check this aberrant act of killings and desertion of villages or towns by the surviving members of the communities, Nigeria might be disintegrated and is very much capable of setting Nigeria ablaze in relations of ethno-religious crisis; which is not the prayer of Nigerians at this trying time of our history.

    The locals are aggrieved knowing that the herdsmen, calculatedly, let their cattle trespass on cultivated lands and refuse to give recompense to agriculturalists whose crops have been destroyed. Should they be grieved? Yes, they should. It can be very hurting to see your labor go down the drains by people who do not respect your right to life. But should they retaliate? No, they shouldn’t. Rather the government should respond very quickly to sabotage the growing animosity within the people.

    I can remember gaudily, in the past, people used to live with the herdsmen and even purchase their products. They were the group of people one would ordinarily hire for a farm job, and at the end of the work, a satisfactory outcome is projected. But I do not think anyone would want to employ them for anything again, knowing that, in recent times, the Fulani herdsmen have turned out to be a group that everyone gets frightened of across the country.

    The reason it is nerve-wracking is primarily that it is inviting an imminent hatred for this group of people; which definitely is not good for nation building and national unity. The government needs to act fast.

    I think there should be a permanent pasture area where these Fulani herdsmen can feed their cows and when the piece of land no longer provides food for the cows, they can be allowed to carry the cows in a lorry to another piece of land; owned by the government possibly.

    We need functional cattle estates in every state, if possible. This will reduce the daily parading of cows on our streets and major roads; then life threatening occasions can be controlled.

    There are even a lot of diseases in the society we live in. Parading of cows about can even expose cattle to the whims of ailments, viruses, and natural diseases in the communities. No one knows what the cows eat from these grazing forests and lands.

    There was an information that went viral, some time ago, in the media, that these Fulani nomads sexually commit themselves to these cows; with the intention of infecting them with HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases so as to transfer the viral diseases to those who consume the extract from their cows. How despicable this could turn out to be. If the government provides a place for them, I am convinced that the death rate of humans; which might come from the consumption of unhealthy and contaminated cattle parts, would be reduced.

    I am also very sure that our laws prohibit civilian citizens to own unauthorized armaments of any kind. But it has been noticed that these nomads, with unfathomable impunity and liberty, flaunt around dangerous and sophisticated arms; generating strains and tensions on harmless and vulnerable Nigerian farmers. I think since private citizens are not allowed to handle such arms, the nomads too should not be allowed. If a member of the public can be penalized for owning any arms, then the nomads too should be checked, at least no Nigerian is above the law; unless if that has been reformed.

    It is very true that the Fulani herdsmen are vital members of Nigeria, as they play crucial roles in the provision of meats for human consumption. When you go to the market places today, majority of the meat sellers are Fulani men. But there is a great need for them to realize the fact that their present actions of taking the lives of people is totally unmanageable and is threatening the unity of Nigeria as a nation.

    The citizens of Nigeria are complaining, as this very act is becoming unbearable to all and sundry. They need to collaborate with the government and end this unnecessary killings, manslaughter and assassinations in our communities.

  • Save us from herdsmen

    Mr. President,

    Sir, permit me to begin this letter without the requisite official protocol due to the urgency of its thrust.

    I write you today with a bleeding heart knowing full well that last year and indeed the Yuletide period was a total waste for the people of Benue State as regards the relationship between farmers and herders in spite of the effort of Governor Samuel Ortom.

    Before I will draw your attention to the bloodbath by the Fulani herdsmen and the incessant/senseless killings of our people permit me to remind you of the following sir:

    *Sir, you came into office on the drum-beat of change.

    *We exalted you without blemish, and invested in you, what I love to call “Messianic Investment” this I believe was what saw you through the many unsuccessful campaign attacks; ranging from dictatorial past, extremism, and certificate saga etc. We created a mime and sang “Even if Buhari presents a NEPA bill, we will still vote for him.”

    Majority of us just wanted change at the federal level, believing that if Buhari controls affairs at the centre things will get better. All we wanted was for government to work for us or at least what most of us expected: transparency, prudence, probity and responsiveness. To us that still believe, hope and pray for a better Nigeria we knew and trusted that you were ready and capable to usher in a new Nigeria.

    As an agent of change and a patriotic citizen, I have been having sleepless nights the way and manner my people, our people are been killed since you took the baton of leadership.

    Mr. President Sir, Since the inception of your administration more than 500 Nigerians have reportedly been massacred by suspected Fulani herdsmen in Benue State alone. Also, during this festive period a fresh clash between the Fulani herdsmen and local farmers has resurfaced and has left no fewer than 100 people dead. While it took President Muhammadu Buhari less than 24 hours to condemn the January 2 genocide in Benue, many Nigerians read you condemn the attack in Rivers and Kaduna States respectively on your twitter handle.

    Mr. President so many Nigerians have lost their lives over this time in their homelands, and the president is yet to address this. This has only served to fuel claims that the president’s response to crimes committed by the herdsmen is controversial and highly condemnable.

    Many Nigerians have said the sole reason why the Fulani herdsmen are killing our people is because “the herdsmen want the land, they want to push our people away, so that they can get the land and rear their cattle as they want, that’s all.” Nigerians hope that you react to the news of these herdsmen, there is need to understand that your silence comes with many direct and indirect implications, most of which threaten Nigeria’s unity and breed instability.

    Here are some of the implications of the president’s silence: it may fuel ethnic conflict since the President has not mentioned anything on an incident that left over 500 persons dead. These criminals may find it hard to understand the gruesomeness of their acts. Also, this could lead to deadlier reprisal attacks and, in this way, Nigerians are further divided along ethnic lines.

    Also the president will continually look biased: Just as the president continues to talk tough on the secessionists and militants, the Fulani herdsmen from his own ethnic division are ‘spared.’

    It is also surprising that the weakness of the security forces is further exposed and show they are in disarray. A few believe that this is so because you come from their ethnic stock.

    These are the questions many are asking:

    *Why is the president silent on Fulani herdsmen that are killing people? None of them has been prosecuted.

    *Is this a setup or gang up or what? How can the federal government just keep mute about this genocide?

    *The herdsmen are as evil as Boko Haram. What exactly do they stand for?  Why are they destroying innocent lives and property?

    Why is it seeming as if until you came to power that we never heard of herdsmen? Suddenly, they have become a huge bone on our collective throats. Suddenly, herdsmen have become sub-terrorists fitted with all kinds of weapons including AK 47, GPMG, etc.

    Until now, the herdsmen we knew merely carried short sticks with which they hit and directed the movement of the cows. At other times, they had bows and arrows and catapults with which they warded off wild animals wanting to prey on their cattle. Not anymore. The herdsmen of today are sometimes more armed than soldiers in “Operation Lafiya Dole or Operation Egweka”.

    How long shall we suffer in the hands of these people called Fulani herdsmen?

    For too long, they have behaved as if they own Nigeria, apparently because nobody, not even the military has been able to rein them in. In all the cases of their mindless attacks on innocent Nigerians in Benue State, none of them has been arrested, arraigned or jailed for wanton killing. The security men would rather look the other way while the herdsmen wreak havoc in various communities across the land. Every day, we are assailed with ill reports of how Fulani herdsmen are launching ferocious attacks on our people, sometimes unprovoked, on the indigenes of communities where they graze their cattle. And this is across board. No part of Nigeria (except Boko Haram-ravaged parts) is spared. They operate with vexatious brazenness.

    These same herdsmen are from faraway lands, sometimes even outside Nigeria. So how can the pursuit of their own business interest be used to despoil the future and livelihood of others, while the state watches!

    These herdsmen, who sit atop a billion naira business, do not pay tax to government. But the poor woman who roasts plantain by the road side is harassed by local government tax collectors on payment of all kinds of rates and taxes.

    Without statistical backup, I dare say that Benue State has suffered most in the hands of these herdsmen. It dates back to the days of former governor of the state, Gabriel Suswan.

    Mr President, you must realise that the way you handles the menace of the Fulani herdsmen will eventually become a campaign issue as 2019 beckons.

    • Chir Msugh Iorwase Armstrong Makurdi, Benue State.
  • Benue lawmaker to FG: treat violent herdsmen as terrorists

    Benue lawmaker to FG: treat violent herdsmen as terrorists

    A member representing Logo State Constituency in Benue House of Assembly, Hon. Terna-Kester Kyenge, on Saturday urged the Federal Government to declare violent Fulani herdsmen as terrorists and also treat them as such.

    His appeal was contained in a statement that he issued to The Nation in Abuja, demanding the State and Federal Government to declare a two-day of national mourning of the victims that the Fulani herdsmen allegedly massacred in the state.

    He asked the President Muhammadu Buhari to deploy sufficient security personnel in the effected areas to forestall any re-occurrence of the onslaught and make the perpetrators to face the law. 

    His words: “We are in deed in a State of Emergency and I demand that the Benue State and Federal governments declare 2 days of national mourning and move decisively and with utmost dispatch as directed by President Muhammadu Buhari to deploy sufficient security personnel in the effected areas to forestall any repeat of these attacks and for once arrest and bring perpetrators to justice.

    “We also demand that the Federal Government declare Fulani herdsmen perpetrating violence against farmers across the country as terrorists and treat them as such.”

    Kyenge titled his dirge and tears invoking statement : “May the blood and tears of victims of suspected herdsmen attack in Benue not flow in vain.”

    According to him, like the killers, his massacred people and all humans have the right to live. 

    Calling on the global community to help guarantee the lives of his people, the lawmaker pointed out that their right to live is guaranteed under the Nigerian law and universal charter of human rights.

    He insisted that “We will from this day not hold our peace and die in silence any longer, but will tell to the whole world our agony and the terror visited on us by a force propelled solely towards our destruction.

    “Reason and justice may not appeal to the herdsmen hacking our people to death with such wanton abandon, but we will cry out to the world and show our wounds for all to see. Then, perhaps, then will the blood of our fallen loved ones and our tears not flow in vain.”

    He said that as a representative of his people he appreciates that every single death diminishes them collectively.

    He added that “I am impoverished and have never felt this damned and unsettled as continuously hapless constituents are hounded, villages razed and ancestral farm lands sacked while government gropes endlessly for solutions.”

    The statement reads in part: “From Tse Akenawe, to Tse Verinumbe, to Tse Orveren, to Jootar, to Tyogbenda Anyiin communities in Gambe-Tiev, Logo to Tomatar near Tse Abi, Nongov in Guma Local Government Areas, it has been sustained attacks and killings as the statistics swell with daily harvest of tons of corpses from surrounding environs. 

    “These settlements have been reduced to ghost habitations with huge numbers of displaced old, women and children trekking aimlessly with neither food, water nor shelter. 

    “This is in deed one invasion too many, and the deafening silence hovering over it from the top must be broken now and for good.

    “Once again, as I commiserate with HE Samuel Ortom and the government and peace loving people of Benue State and particularly helpless Logo State Constituents in our season of collective grief and great loss, I pledge on my oath that I will not relent in my resolve to fight to get justice for my constituents. I will continue to collaborate with agencies and actors of government to bring lasting peace and succor to my people.”