Tag: herdsmen

  • Suspected herdsmen abduct two Taraba undergraduates

    Suspected herdsmen abduct two Taraba undergraduates

    Two students of the Federal University Wukari, Taraba state were abducted on Monday night in Wukari by suspected herdsmen. The

     institution’s Chief Security Officer,  Sule Gani, confirmed the incident on Tuesday. 

    He said the victims graduated but stayed behind to remedy some of their courses. 

    Read Also: Suspected herdsmen kill 10 in Benue community

    According to him, the incident occurred around 11 pm around the school premises. 

    Gani said: “They carried him and one a lady. They are spill-over students. He came out to buy something and some suspected herdsmen took them away.”

    Efforts to reach the Taraba police spokesman failed. He was yet to pick calls to his mobile as of press time.  

  • Suspected herdsmen kill five farmers in Benue community

    Suspected herdsmen kill five farmers in Benue community

    Five farmers were on Sunday morning killed by terrorists masquerading as herders at Udedeku community in Maav-Ya, Mkoonmom district,  Mbaikyor Council Ward of Turan Jato-Aka Kwande Local Government Area of Benue State.

    An eyewitness, Terlumen Kwaghbee, who escaped the attack told The Nation on phone that the attackers stormed the community under the guise of grazing and immediately opened fire on harmless farmers who were back from church service.

    “Five people were killed at the spots, many others sustained various degrees of injuries while houses were set ablaze,” said Kwagbee.

    According to him, the bodies of those killed have been deposited at a morgue in the area.

    Read Also: Oronsaye report: Labour cautions Fed Govt against job loss

    For over a decade, five council wards in Turan and three in Ikyurav- Ya, all in the Moon district of Kwandel Local Government Area, have been   occupied by herdsmen.

    Condemning the latest attack, the federal lawmaker representing Kwande/ Ushongo Federal Constituency, Terseer

    Ugbor, said the people of Udeku village, Mbaikyor council ward of Turan were peace loving.

    He said his people were more concerned with their farming activities, calling on the security agencies to fish out the perpetrators.

  • Three herdsmen apprehended for allegedly killing pastor

    Three herdsmen apprehended for allegedly killing pastor

    Three suspected herdsmen have been arrested in connection with the killing of a pastor in Ogbomoso, Oyo State.

    The Nation gathered Evangelist Adegboyega was allegedly killed by some people suspected to be herdsmen in Ogbomoso.

    The deceased was said to have been killed in the Gege area along Ogbomoso-Iseyin road when he challenged the herdsmen who invaded his farm with their cattle to graze his crops.

    Read Also: Herdsmen kill 10, kidnap scores in Benue community

    The Nation learnt that the three suspects were apprehended by the villagers and immediately taken to the palace of Soun of Ogbomosho, Oba Afolabi Ghandi Olaoye.

    The suspects were subsequently handed over to the police for investigation.

    The body of the deceased had been deposited in a private mortuary.

  • Herdsmen kill 10, kidnap scores in Benue community

    Herdsmen kill 10, kidnap scores in Benue community

    Ten persons have been brutally murdered by suspected  herdsmen at Mchia in Logo Local Government of Benue State.

    The attack occurred on Sunday at about 8:30 pm.

    An eyewitness, Terlumun Unande, told our correspondent that the attackers were armed with sophisticated weapons.

    “They moved from house to house, killed their victims, removed intestines and placed them on their bodies.

    Read Also: Emefiele: EFCC to appeal against N100m fine

    “Ten persons including a woman were killed.”

    Unande also said they kidnapped unconfirmed number of persons.

    A traditional ruler in the area, who pleaded anonymity, said: “Soldiers and SWAT stationed in Anyiin were alerted.”

    Victims who escaped from the attackers, appealed to security personnel posted to the area to save them from the suspected herdsmen. At press time, Benue State Police Command said it was yet to get a report of the incident.

  • Suspected herdsmen attack Enugu school bus, kill student

    Suspected herdsmen attack Enugu school bus, kill student

    Bandits suspected to be Fulani herdsmen have attacked a coaster school bus belonging to a Catholic school, St Paul’s College, Eke, in Udi Local Government Area of Enugu State, killing a female student.

    The bandits, suspected to be the brains behind kidnapping activities in the area, also left several other students with severe bullet wounds.

    The Nation learned that many of the victims with bullet wounds are currently battling for survival in an undisclosed hospital.

    It was further gathered that the gunmen had shot at the school bus in an attempt to stop the vehicle and abduct the students.

    But the driver braved it without stopping.

    The kidnappers, however, abducted a traditional ruler from nearby Affa along Eke-Egede-Affa Road while he was returning from a security meeting with the chairman of Udi Local Government.

    A viral video sighted by our correspondent displayed the lifeless body of the victim, as well as some of the survivors of the attack.

    A voice in the video narrated thus: “Herdsmen attacked our students, they were going home after school; one of them was shot dead; four students were shot, one died instantly; they have done enough.

    “See the corpse of the little student they have murdered; this one is unconscious, (pointing at another victim) we are praying that God will sustain her; she sustained four bullet wounds.

    “This was done by the herdsmen operating at Eke-Egede Road; these are the ones that survived; the government should come to our rescue. Our place is now a death zone.”

    The principal of the school, Rev. Fr. Frank, in a phone interview with newsmen, confirmed the attack.

    “It is true; we closed by 3:30 pm yesterday, as the students were going home, the bus they were in was attacked by gunmen; some of them received bullet wounds, of which one later died in the hospital.

    “That was between 4:30-5 pm; the gunmen just opened fire on them.

    “We feel so saddened to lose such a promising young girl in this circumstance.”

    Read Also: Afenifere disowns Adebanjo over Supreme Court judgment on Tinubu’s victory

    Meanwhile, other community sources told our correspondent that the area had been a den of kidnappers for years with security agencies unable to stop the activities of the ravaging herdsmen.

    A community leader, who spoke under anonymity, said many victims of kidnap in Udi and Ezeagu areas are kept within the same location until ransom is paid.

    He said those who could not meet up with the ransom demand were usually killed after a few days.

    He said the forest spanning about 15 kilometres, called ‘Ofia-Akwu’, had remained a death zone, with several lives lost in the past in the hands of the herdsmen who were into kidnapping.

    “The security agencies know that they have been occupying that location for several years now, committing all manner of crimes.

    “We don’t know why it is difficult to flush them out from that location.

    “Many lives have been lost to their murderous activities on that Eke-Egede Road,” he lamented.

    Similarly, a famous traditional ruler was also reportedly abducted by the same gang after the attack on the school bus.

    A message made available to our correspondent said the monarch from Affa “was kidnapped along Eke-Egede-Affa Road after a security meeting with chairman of Udi Local Government and men of our high profile neighbourhood watch.

    “We pray for his safe rescue and return in Jesus name. Oh! God, our efforts shall not be in vain,” said Offorkansi Hyginus, PRO, Affa security committee.

    Meanwhile, attempts to obtain a reaction from the Police Public Relations Officer, Enugu State Command, DSP Daniel Ndukwe, but he requested that a text message be sent to him.

    He had yet to respond to the message as of the time of filing this report.

  • One killed as suspected herdsmen take over Benue

    One killed as suspected herdsmen take over Benue

    It was a bloody weekend for Benue Links transport company and its passengers as one was reportedly killed in an ambush by suspected herdsmen and many sustained injuries.

    The unfortunate incident happened on the busy Makurdi- Naka – Adoka federal highway in Benue state on Friday.

    Recently, hoodlums have launched a series of attacks on the Benue state-owned transport company and kidnapped many passengers for ransom.

    An eyewitness who escaped from the scene of the attack Paul Omale told The Nation that the journey from Makurdi to Kula village was smooth, but shortly after the 18-seater bus in which they were traveling came under heavy gun attack.

    ” We heard gunshots from directions spread on our bus,  about two who did not do at the spot while others sustained various degrees of injuries.

    Omale said it was when the bus veered into the bush and grounded to a halt that they discovered that the gunmen had also shot at other commercial vehicles,  and adducted some passengers.

    The Nation learnt that shortly after the attack there was traffic gridlock around the scene as security personnel responded and took the injured to General Hospital Naka,  headquarters Gwer – west Local Government Area for treatment.

    At press time the Benue State Police Public Relations Officer PPRO, Kate Aneene , a SP was yet to confirmed the incident.

    However the Peoples Democratic  Party , PDP, stated that the silence of Benue state Governor Hyacinth Alia , seems to be aiding and abetting terrorist activities in the state.

    In a press release signed by the state Publicity Secretary  Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Mr.Bembgba Iortyom, on Saturday and made available to newsmen in Makurd, the opposition party ‘ 24 hours after the attacked and killing on innocent traders on Makurdi – Naka road , Governor Hyacinth Alia was yet to react.

    The PDP statement reads in part;

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Benue State views the policy of silence by Governor Hyacinth Alia over the activities of terrorists in the state as aiding and abetting crime.

    Over 24 hours after reports emerged that suspected Fulani herdsmen laid siege on the Makurdi – Naka Road and killed scores of travellers, Governor Alia, is yet to react to the incident.

    This silence of the governor follows a trend of his attitude regarding such incidents in the state since he came to office, with his media handlers suggesting his approach to tackling insecurity will be devoid of what they term as the “propaganda” deployed by immediate past Governor Samuel Ortom.

    Read Also: Benue Gov, sports minister meet Tinubu

    PDP wonders how the governor intends to root out terrorists without condemning their crimes publicly.

    Are Benue people not entitled to know, even if only for purpose or confidence building, what action plan Governor Alia has to deal with the unending killings and kidnappings by Fulani herdsmen and bandits across the state?

    Is continuous public attention not needed to keep the crimes of those terrorists in the public glare and on the front burner of national discourse so as to speed up counter action from relevant authorities?

    It can be recalled that as governor Ortom was consistent in calling public attention to the scourge of herdsmen killings and destruction in the state, and while that may not have stopped the crimes for the known fact that the criminals enjoyed backing from very high quarters, it mitigated it considerably.

    PDP suspects that Governor Alia’s policy of silence over the atrocities of terrorists in Benue serves a politically convenient purpose for certain interests outside of the state, yet the party cautions him against continuing with the policy which is emboldening criminals and worsening insecurity in the state.

  • Herdsmen attacks: Sad memories of lost loved ones as displaced villagers return home in Nasarawa

    Herdsmen attacks: Sad memories of lost loved ones as displaced villagers return home in Nasarawa

    Huge investment in security by the Governor Abdullahi Sule administration has seen displaced residents of Nasarawa communities returning to their ancestral homes while farming activities are picking up again, LINUS OOTA reports

    Many Nasarawa State communities which became desolate as herdsmen attacks caused thousands of farmers flee have started bubbling with life and normal farming activities.

    Farmers, mostly in Tiv settlements which constitutes about 65 per cent of the Nasarawa South population, have started rebuilding their homes that were burnt down during the deadly clashes.

    In the armed attacks carried out by the herdsmen, buildings and farms in over 400 Tiv communities in local governments areas like Doma, Awe, Keana, Obi and Lafia were completely razed while stocks of harvested foodstuffs awaiting sales were also destroyed.

    In the resulting flow of blood, more than 300 people lost their lives while virtually all the Tiv people in the affected areas turned into internally displaced persons.

    Farmers in the state, particularly those in the southern part, had witnessed some of the most devastating conflicts resulting in vicious attacks on their homes and farmlands by killer herdsmen.

    The persistent attacks sparked concerns of possible food crisis if nothing was done urgently to address the situation because the crisis ridden areas in the state were in a dilemma due to constant attacks by herdsmen which forced many of them out of their farms. Their inability to go to their farms became a major source of concern because of the repercussions it portended for food production in the years ahead.

    With the foregoing in mind, Governor Abdullahi Sule embarked on bold reforms aimed at addressing some of the socio-economic challenges responsible for the insecurity crisis in the state. First, he deployed more security men to the affected areas and ensured that they were better equipped. He also improved local ties to gather better intelligence, and respond speedily to early warnings and distress calls.

    Gradually, the state disarmed the killer herdsmen that were disturbing the peace through diplomatic dialogue, while land borders were closely watched to curb border attacks. The Sule administration also commenced the implementation of the national livestock transformation plan, besides fostering dialogue between herdsmen and farmers by strengthening the mechanism that support peace initiatives at the local level.

    The Sule administration had said that its focus is to ensure that human lives and property are wholly guaranteed in the state; an approach that has helped to calm frayed nerves and ensure the return to normalcy.

    Lately, farmers in state appear to be enjoying a breath of new life as peace appears to have returned to the affected areas. Consequently, a lot of Tiv farmers and widows who lost their husbands in the vicious and savage attacks orchestrated by the herdsmen have returned to their villages.

    A visit to most of the villages revealed that the affected farmers and widows are already rebuilding their destroyed homes and preparing for the ongoing farming season. Our correspondent, who interacted with some of the farmers and widows, got a day-to-day account of life in the settlements.

    The trip to the affected communities involved a tortuous ride on a commercial motorcycle for many kilometres on winding narrow roads in a downpour that made it very difficult for the tyres of the motorcycle to grip the road surface.

    Notwithstanding their precarious situation, the returnee farmers were full of hope as they picked up the pieces of their fractured lives. The local markets too have resumed operation; an important step towards reviving their economy.

    One of the widows, 31-year-old Janet Ate, who hails from Kardoroko, a Tiv community, said she was five months pregnant when the marauding herdsmen attacked and sacked her community, killing many people, including her husband.

    She recalled that during the attack, the invading herdsmen tried to catch her while she was trying to escape until she managed to reach an IDP camp where she took refuge.

    Cuddling and breast-feeding her newborn baby as she recalled the ugly experience, she said:

    “The herdsmen came while we were working on the farm. They attacked us and killed my husband, leaving me with the little kids.

    “Many other neighbouring farmers were killed in the attack while many others managed to escape. I begged and told them that I was pregnant and they pardoned me.

    “I had been in the IDP (internally displaced persons) camp in Makurdi since then.

    I suffered a lot in the IDP camp. So when some people were returning, I decided to join them so that I can do some farming for my survival.

    Read Also: How NNPP, gov’s supporters drove us out of Kano – Tribunal Judges

    “It  has not been easy for me, but thank God for Governor Abdullahi Sule for bringing peace back to the land “

    In the face of the emotional strain on the returnees, the lucky few were able to reunite with family members. However, for many widows and orphans, the memory of the massacre of their husbands and parents in the razed villages returned forcefully as they beheld their devastated homelands, especially as they have to start life afresh.

    As would be expected, abandoned farms have resulted in food shortage on account of which malnutrition has manifested among the children.

    Many farmers in the villages our correspondent visited were seen rebuilding their razed homes with local materials.

    Yakubu Pande, a farmer in Obi, who was seen applying fertilizer to his yam farm, expressed gratitude that peace has finally returned to the land.

    Pande said: “We have been away for a long time. Herdsmen chased us out for years and burnt down our houses. But all thanks to God, we have returned to regain our land.

    “You can see my yam farm growing. There is no more encroachment on our farms. We thank God for Governor Sule”

    Terlumun Agbe, another farmer, told our correspondent in Kiena that the last time he farmed in his village was three years ago when Fulani herdsmen invaded his large farmlands and ate up all the crops, leaving him with nothing

    “My rice and yam farm witnesed the brutality of the herders and left my family to hunger. They did not stop at that, they burnt down our houses and chased us away. But thank God, we are back due to the peace efforts of Governor Sule.”

    Mr Francis Upave, a farmer in Awe Local Government Area, told our correspondent that “we are family people with a lot of dependants, so we must go to the farm or we won’t have any means of survival.

    “Our livelihood depends on farming and local business which was collapsed and our farming too was threatened.  But thank God for Governor Abdullahi Sule who did his best to ensure that we return to our ancestral homes and peace returned.”

    The Chairman, Nasarawa State Farmers Association, Mr Samuel Meshi, commended Governor Abdullahi Sule’s initiative in bringing an end to the persistent crisis between farmers and herdsmen in the state.

    Speaking exclusively to our correspondent on the return of peace in the state, Meshi said Governor Sule’s timely intervention combated the situation that had inflicted hardship on the farmers economically and socially.

    He said: “We are peace loving people and our main occupation is farming. But the farmer/herder crisis rather took us backward.

    “Our farmers were not able to go engage in farming activities. But we thank God that normalcy has returned and our farmers have gone back to their farms.”

    The State Chairman, Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN) Nasarawa State, Bala Mohammed Dabo, expressed satisfaction that the Sule administration has returned peace permanently to both farmers and herders and assured that whatever happened in the past now belongs to the dustbin of history as a new chapter of peace has opened

    “As you can see, there is no more killings of either Fulani herders, cows or farmers. There is no more grazing on farmlands as both farmers and herders are maintaining their boundaries,” he said.

    Dabo called on his members to desist from any act that could dent the image of the Fulani or frustrate the peace efforts of Governor Sule. He said the two ethnics groups have been living in peace, and his leadership has been sensitising herders on the need for peaceful co-existence between them and other tribes.

    He commended Governor Abdullahi Sule for initiating a peace process which, he noted, has brought calm to feuding communities in the state.

    Speaking while leading a delegation of the entire Tiv community to appreciate Governor Abdullahi Sule for returning peace to the local farmers, the President of Tiv Development Association, Nasarawa State, Comrade Peter Ahemba said the effort of Governor Sule had yielded desired results.

    Ahemba said: “Your Excellency, members of the Tiv Community under the umbrella of Tiv Development Association (TIDA) are here before you to register our gratitude for the demonstrated commitment of your government in dealing decisively with security threats and ensuring that our people, who were displaced by herders attacks on the southern part of the state, have returned to their places of abode to continue with their farming activities.

    “Indeed, your efforts have yielded the desired results as evident in the relative peace being enjoyed in our communities and the bumper harvest that has continued to be recorded by our farmers.”

  • Woman, two others feared killed as herdsmen attack Enugu community

    Woman, two others feared killed as herdsmen attack Enugu community

    Suspected herdsmen have killed three people, including a woman in an attack on Opi Agu in Nsukka Local Government of Enugu.

    This came barely two days after another three in Agbada Nenwe community were killed by masked gunmen, who invaded the community.

    It was gathered the assailants in Nsukka launched the attack Monday at Enya Uhuchiri village.

    Village sources said the herders had arrived about  4pm on Monday with their cattle in the farms of the villagers.

    Read Also: Enugu Assembly approves governor’s N58b supplementary budget

    One of them said: “We are now living in fear. I just confirmed the death of our brother who they killed yesterday night at Enya Uhuchiri.

    “I also learned about the deaths of two others, including a woman. This is so sad”.

     “It happened that when they came with their cattle, the cattle started eating and destroying crops and vegetables planted by the farmers, some of who were still in their farms. They (farmers) reacted and chased the herders with their cattle away and warned them never to return to the farms anymore.

    “They actually ran away with their cattle and nobody suspected anything until in the dead of the night when they invaded people’s houses and inflicted deaths and deep cuts on the people”.

    Spokesman of the police command, Daniel Ndukwe, said he is yet to be briefed on the incident and promised to react as soon as he has the information.

  • Women seek govt’s aid over herdsmen attack, rape in Delta

    Women seek govt’s aid over herdsmen attack, rape in Delta

    Scores of protesting women from Ekakpamre community in Ughelli South Local Government of Delta State have called on the federal and state governments to save them from incessant attacks and “rape” by suspected herdsmen on their farms.

    The protesters, mostly aged women, displayed fresh leaves and placards with inscriptions such as: “We don’t want cows in our bush, they graze on our land,” We are being raped and chased from our farms.” They accused security agencies of supporting the herdsmen against them. 

    Speaking to reporters yesterday, the women leader, Mrs Loveth Boyi, said: “For over three years now, herdsmen have been troubling us, chasing us from our farmlands.

    “Just last week, five women were raped on their farms and as a result, we can no longer access our cassava farms, either to plant or harvest. 

    “The herdsmen will harvest our cassava and other farm produce and give to their cattle, our husbands are not going to the bush. Hence we are calling on the state and federal governments to rescue us from the herdsmen in the community.”

    Read Also: Woman kidnapped by herdsmen rescued in Ebonyi

    An octogenarian who had a fractured knee due to the herdsmen attack, Mama Blaccky Raymond, said she could no longer access her farm after she was chased away.

    The President General of the community, Edafe Kpohraror, called on President Bola Tinubu and Governor Sheriff Oborevwori to come to their aid, alleging that a certain religious leader was intimidating residents of the community with security agents.

    “There is one Imam in the community that is using the police and army to intimidate us, and as result, many people have fled the town because of possible arrest.

    “We are appealing to the state governor, Rt Hon Sheriff Oborevwori and President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to rescue our community from the attack of herdsmen,” Edafe said.

  • ‘To secure, we have to love: herdsmen, kidnappers, Boko Haram and the climate of fear’

    Text of a lecture delivered by Chairman, The Nation’s Editorial Board, Sam Omatseye at the Annual lecture of the Faculty of Arts, Ekiti State University, Ado-Ekiti.

    Barely ten years ago, the Nigerian geographic sweep did not weep with bumps or deeps, except the physical ones. When we traversed the country’s landscape, death traps were open to the eyes. They were the Lucifer without spirits. The death traps materialised as craters on highways, sharp, precipitous drops  like cliffs. We know why. They arose from near illiterate survey works, and corruption that deprived some roads of enjoying the full weight of expenditure, according to the budget. They were unmistakable as gullies, unnatural valleys, potholes, sharp bends, erosions, and more. They accounted for fear on the highways. You didn’t have to drive slow, or speed to the death to die. As a character in Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night put it, “care is an enemy to life.”

    Citizens died from collisions. They were of a variety sometimes craved now as the preferred option in a nation of sanguinary compulsions. Car-to car crashes, car-to-crater tragedies, trailers tumbling over fragile sedans, cars or buses sliding on mud-spattered paths into roadside ditches or bushes, or vehicles ramming into trees accidentally felled across the road, and so on.

    A few years back, a certain minister visited the Ore-Benin highway and she staged a rage of public tears. She bewailed the antediluvian atrocity of the structure. Humans – that is fellow citizens – found communion with wounds and fatal finalities on that fabled highway. I am referring to the former minister of oil, then of works, Diezani Allison-Madueke.

    Priests and imams prayed for wayfarers not to encounter death by the demons of bad roads or an ancient infrastructure.

    Today, it is a different story. Those plying some of the roads encounter bumps and deeps, but not just of the roads but of a vital part of their bodies: the heart. It is called palpitation. Death traps do not appear until you know them. Death traps are ghosts or spirits, bearing deaths and kidnapping. The highway menace is now two-fold. We fear the roads, the gullies, the valleys, et al. Now, we fear something infinitely more deadly: the brigand. We now fear and tremble, with bumps and deeps of the heart.

    Ten years ago, in another irony, it was safer when travelling from north to south. The traveller could sleep pacifically in the northern half of the trip, having no premonitions about highway robbers or killers or kidnappers. Now, the fear is more potent in the northern part than in the south. Once the travellers crossed the Middle-belt southwards, and entered such states as Edo, Nasarawa, Kogi etc, the eyes pop out in impotent vigilance. At night, the eyes are owlish. During daylight, the eyes are like owls in daytime. They are wide open but see nothing, until danger, ever lurking, pounces on them from the shadows. It does not pay whether you set out in the morning or at night. The journey will benefit from the prayer of one of Soyinka’s poems, that says, “You must set forth at dawn/ I promise marvels of the holy hour.”

    No holy hours now in the land. Demons frisk about at day, and like in Shakespeare play, Hamlet, “we are doomed for a certain term to walk the night.” The brigands who murdered sleep have murder and rapine awaiting the traveller every hour and at any turn.

    So, where did we get this problem, how did we become a nation that was not contented with the fatalities of the underdevelopment but now embrace the more spiritual, moral fatalities that some have now characterised as herdsmen clashes.

    Some have said it is a problem of ethnic suspicion. Some have chalked it up to poverty. Others said, it is merely the function of porous borders. A few have said it has been coming to us for decades, and the fatal ship only just arrived after a storm-tossed voyage. A few others say we have had religious fervour turned upside down, and that is what we get when we believe because, sooner or later, faith collapses into fanaticism.

    For those who say it is an issue of ethnic suspicion. They have their reasons. For instance, the Muhammadu Buhari administration has done little to project itself as an enclave none other than of tribal irredentists. Appointment after key appointment seems to present him as blindsided by his Fulani fidelity. His Kanuri appointees are seen not as Kanuris at heart but Fulani everywhere except in name and origin.

    But in spite of the outcry, it seems he hears only what his heart tells him. His heart beats only to the rhythm of his northwest origins, according to many of his critics. But it has been a nation of ethnic disloyalty, a fear of Nigeria as a nation. That accounts for why we hide under what the Yoruba call “Tiwa ni tiwa.” Our is ours. Let us recall an interview published in an online publication called The Niche with Professor Anya O. Anya, on the struggle for the June 12 actualisation.

    In the interview, Professor Anya recalled how the Yorubas and the Igbos had a handshake across the Niger, and formed what was known then as the Council of Unity and Understanding. Some of the key players included the great Pa Adekunle Ajasin, Ayo Opadokun, Segun Osoba, Ayo Adebanjo, and others from the southwest. From the east were persons like Ebitu Ukiwe, Professor Anya, and others.  The CUU did not anticipate the turbulence of the June 12 struggle and the maelstrom of the National Democratic Coalition or NADECO struggles.

    The group adopted Chief M.K.O Abiola as their candidate, and Theophilus Danjuma was also drafted into the field to include the Middle-belt. But once crisis hit the organisation, identity politics threatened to paralyse the body. It had happened when the body metamorphosed into NADECO after General Ibrahim Babangida annulled the June 12 polls in 1983.

    But the military had turned fierce and even bloody, clamping down on the media, opposition henchmen, civil society warriors, and students on the rampage. In responding to the annulment, the members of the group wanted to draft a statement to dissociate from the military move to nullify a democracy act. The Yoruba in the group thought that such a statement should include an ultimatum to the military government to reverse its position. The Igbo as well as votaries of the Middle-belt like General Theophilus Danjuma, thought otherwise. They saw such a move as perilous. Here is part of Professor Anya’s account:

    “But something happened that was to transform the nature of the NADECO that was formed. At one of our meetings, it was agreed that a statement should be issued, in that statement, there was one sentence that looked like an ultimatum to the government, I remember that Danjuma asked that the sentence be removed, Ukiwe also said the sentence should be removed and our argument was quite simple: that you are dealing with a military government and an ultimatum to a military government is a declaration of war. If they now decide to take you on, do you have the armament? Have you made the preparations?

    “So unanimously we agreed that the sentence should be removed but one of those things that happens in history, when the statement was published in The Punch, that sentence was still there. Of course, it upset some of us. I knew it upset Ukiwe and Danjuma.

    So, what happened? Why was the statement not expunged as agreed?

    “It turned out that after we had met, three people met again, all Yoruba, and decided that the sentence must be there.

    “I can’t speak for Ukiwe and Danjuma but I speak for myself. For me, it was a dangerous signal because what we were involved in, we were now going into a situation where any of us could be arrested, where it is even possible that any of us could be executed, the least you expect is that those people you are working with you can trust them, that whatever was agreed as our collective wisdom will be obeyed. That was dangerous because it means that you can get into an understanding and you go away doing certain things that was agreed and then the results will be different because some people are doing something else. So it undermined trust.”

    By this account, Professor Anya delineates what he saw as the metamorphosis of NADECO into a predominantly Yoruba force. This is the sort of suspicion that has eaten deep into the fabric of cooperation of the matter. In his recent book titled Battlelines, former Ogun State Governor Segun Osoba referred to the group, but he romanticised its virtues as a model of inter-ethnic harmony. But Anya saw it as a paragon of fear and distrust.

    All our stories of disaffection in Nigeria often start with the story telling. Who controls the narrative? Who is the better spinmeister? It is all about class and tribe and interests. The truth often is a casualty. The political scientist Harold Laski once asserted that “they think differently who live differently.” Those who describe Nigeria as a mere geographical expression find refuge in such episodes. The statement is credited to Chief Obafemi Awolowo, also echoed by one-time foreign minister Okoi Arikpo. But the expression is not original to the great Yoruba sage. The leading European Statesman Count Metternich said Italy was a mere geographical expression in 1814. It comprised a series of principalities occupying a space then known as Italian peninsula. This changed in 1870 when it became a single, harmonious nation.

    So what happened to the Igbo and Yorubas in the CUU that harmony melted into mistrust? It is the story of Nigeria. If we believe Professor Anya’s narrative, what shall we say? Was it that the Yoruba in the group thought the Igbo were cowards and did not understand the peril of June 12? Did the Igbo not understand that you cannot fight the military with kid gloves? Was it what the Yoruba were thinking? Were the Yoruba thinking in line with what Nobel Prize-winning novelist and absurdist philosopher Albert Camus enjoined when he said, “Better to die on one’s feet than to live on one’s knees?”

    If that was the position of the Yoruba, what was the need cohabiting with the Igbo? Why meet if they did not think there was a nexus for any such dialogue? Was it a case of Achebe in Things Fall Apart who turned Okonkwo as a tragic failure, who insisted on dying on his feet and lose rather than Obierika who insisted on living on his knees and compromise and ultimately surrender?

    Were the Igbo not right not to distrust a group that agreed during a meeting but went under cover to portray the wrong conclusions of the meeting? Does that portray the Yoruba in the group as capable of any sort of trust, or what the Yoruba call omoluabi? How, as Professor Anya noted, could the Igbo go into a fight with a person or group who jettisoned agreements. Did the Yoruba think the others were lackadaisical about the cause because Abiola was not their son, and so decided early on to conduct the duel with the military without the emotional or intellectual investment of the other tribes?

    At the bottom of this distrust is our perception of history and identities. So, it is such suspicion that has played out even in the resolution of the problem of resolving banditry in the country. But what is more important in the herders crisis is that it began, according to many analysts, in the ungoverned spaces. According to those who know, it is actually a battle between the Hausas and Fulani. This is a duo that have worked as two peas in a pod for over two centuries. It happened in the Zamfara State area where the Hausa, having been oppressed by the more prosperous Fulani, decided to lash back. It became a case of the Hausa who had since 1804 laboured under the lordship of the Fulani now taking back their pints of blood.

    Again we can also take our minds back to when the issue became a debate between those who wanted the herdsmen everywhere and those who did not care if they remained in the north. The argument was that they should be given ranches. You see, the argument for ranches could have been ordinarily unimpeachable. If the herdsmen had ranches anywhere, they would not wander into people’s farms, they would not have a reason to clash with locals because there would be no locals. But the question is not in the ranches. it is in the ranchers. That is our problem. We trust ranches but not the ranchers. If we don’t trust the ranchers, why would we live with their ranches?

    This takes us to our original sin? Distrust. We cannot work together even if we propound the best of ideas. In Plateau State, the Fulani arrived to the gusto of the natives’ welcoming arms. They were few then and that was decades past. They lived in harmony, but the population of the settlers grew. Then came the era of Ibrahim Babangida. He gave them a local government. They crowned their king, and suddenly, the concept of settler versus natives became a question of even constitutional dimension. They now had electoral legitimacy; they could vote and be voted for with enough numbers to tilt the election results against their hosts.

    Again, ordinarily, if we saw each other as neighbours, what was wrong with a people of so large a population seeking electoral legitimacy? After all, they came with their own culture and historical idiosyncrasies. How could they assimilate if the locals welcomed them while each maintained their individual characteristics?  Each group has their own values they compress to form culture. According to French writer and astronomer, Jerome Lalande,  values “most often represent a transition from facts to rights, from what is desired to what is desirable.”

    Remember this is the same Plateau where the popular Cock Crow at Dawn drama series flourished. The executive producer, Peter Igho, an Urhobo from Delta State, noted that the halcyon days that produced the drama no longer exists today. The same hosts now live in adversarial relationship with their hosts and claim proprietary rights over the landlords. That is what Governor Lalong has undertaken to douse by setting a template of harmony among the groups. To his credit, it has worked for most part, although we cannot rule out the eruptions of fifth columnists from time to time as we have seen.

    So, it was not that the Fulani could not have prospered without let. It was that suspicion grew when hegemonic forces came into play. Hegemony also comes because of a consciousness of a different identity from the host, and vice versa. The distrust of the Fulani by the locals grew because of the sense and perception that they (the Fulani) had grown proprietary wings.

    When the concept of RUGA took centre stage, many in the south said no. RUGA means the same as ranch. But it meant, according to those who know, a village in Fulani. It is a semiotic assault. They – that is the southerners – are not seeing them as merely a ranch but as a Fulani ranch. That killed the concept on arrival. The Plateau State Governor, Simon Lalong, tried to defrock it of its ethnic origin, by saying that a ranch by whatever name is a place where you breed animals for meat. That was clever but the politics of it puts semiotics over reality. Semiotics can also be its own reality.

    Yet there is a strong part of the narrative often downplayed in all these. It is the economic imperative. The herdsmen crisis has been posted as an economic issue. After all, the herders are selling animals, the customers are buying, and money keeps changing hands.

    Its supporters say the herder is not just an economic entity but a cultural one. Herding is their way of life. The herder has an almost ineluctable spiritual connection with the cow. So, the cow is not a totem; it has close to a totemic bond with its owner.

    But the economic factor stands. They have to eat to live to care for their animals. The reason the south has to accommodate the crisis in the first place is that if they hate the herdsmen they still love the cows. They need it for meat, for protein, for the big parties and assurance of a healthy life. They love the meat, if they think the herdsmen mean. If they must beef the seller, they must not beef the beef. Here lies the economic dilemma.

    cont’d – ‘To secure, we have to love: herdsmen, kidnappers, Boko Haram and the climate of fear’