Tag: herdsmen

  • Violent herdsmen not Nigerians, says IG

    The Inspector General of Police (IGP), Mr. Solomon Arase at the weekend said most troublesome herdsmen are not Nigerians but foreigners who illegally enter the country with their cattle due to the porous borders.

    Arase stated this while reacting to a question raised by a farmer on “persistent attacks of herdsmen” at interactive section with stakeholders on community policing partnership held in Akure, the state capital.

    He noted that most of these violent herdsmen are either from Mali or Chad, adding Nigerian herdsmen are law abiding.

    He urged the farmers to be careful and take caution in dealing with them.

    The IGP said the police and state governments are now working on how to build ranches for the herdsmen, adding that he had earlier discussed this with Governor Olusegun Mimiko.

    His words: “I have taken suggestions about how we can develop big ranches so that they can stop grazing on farmlands.

    “We should also know about the history of migration. Most of these herdsmen are not Nigerians. They are people from Mali, Chad, who came into our system. So that is why we have to be very careful. Our borders are very porous. Predominantly our own herdsmen are law abiding people.

    “But when people come from outside with their cattle, we should not deny them entry because of ECOWAS protocols, good neighborliness but at the same time we should not allow them to embark on criminal activities.”

    However, before the programme began, some farmers from Ayede-Ogbese in Akure North Local Government Area lamented the persistent attacks of herdsmen on their farmlands.

    A farmer, Sunday Owoseni, said they thought the condemnation of the former Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Chief Olu Falae’s abduction by various stakeholders would reduce the attacks on their farmland but reverse was the case.

    Also, a female farmer from Ebonyi State, Mrs Ngozi Ogbonna, lamented that she took a N1.5 million loan from a microfinance bank to cultivate cassava and rice but only for Fulani herdsmen to destroy it and all efforts to get them arrested had been frustrated by the police.

    Mrs. Ogbonna, a widow with eight children, said she would contemplate suicide, if President Muhammadu Buhari and Governor Mimiko fail to find lasting solution to incessant herdsmen attack on local farmers.

  • Ondo farmers count losses of Fulani herdsmen’s attack

    Ondo farmers count losses of Fulani herdsmen’s attack

    Farmers in Ondo State are counting their losses after  the invasion of their farms by Fulani herdsmen.

    The siege led to the destruction of crops worth millions of naira by their cattle. The cattle grazed through the farms, trampling on crops which included maize.

    Rising from its meeting last month, the Ondo State Agricultural Commodities Association demanded N2 billion compensation from the Federal Government for the colossal loss suffered by cocoa and oil palm plantations affected during the raid.

    The meeting was attended by 24 agricultural commodity associations.

    In a communiqué signed by its Chairman, Akinola Olotu and the Secretary, Obaweya Gbenga, the group called for “urgent government assistance” for the affected farmers. The group said the  menace of the nomads had transcended just grazing on crops, with “a new dimension of bush burning, rape and physical attack with machetes, robbery, kidnapping and destruction being recorded across the state.”

    The group called for measures to deal with nomadic Fulani herdsmen. According to the group, the activities of the normads make them more dangerous and destructive as they destroy properties during raid.

    The farmers said they were living in fear due to the activities of the Fulani cattle rearers.

    They said they can no longer entertain Fulani herdsmen and their cattle because they’re not law abiding. According to them, a petition has been sent to the National Assembly to register their concern over the increasing threat to life and properties constituted by Fulani nomads.

    In protest, the group urged Ondo people and the Southwest to boycott or abstain from buying, selling and eating of beef throughout the month of March in solidarity with the farmers.

    The group warned that it would resist any attempt to create any grazing zone in the state, because there is hardly a space of one kilometre between farms across the state.

    “We reject the idea of acquiring land in our state for the purpose of planting grass to feed nomadic cattle. The Federal Government should please restrict this idea to the Northern region and irrigate the grass, like it’s being done to other crops there,” the group said.

  • Minister laments herdsmen/farmers crisis

    Minister laments herdsmen/farmers crisis

    • As FG plans nutritional grasses for cows

    Agriculture and Rural Development Minister, Audu Ogbe, Thursday said that the increasing spate of crisis between herdsmen and rural farmers was taking a toll on agricultural sector of the country.

    Ogbe said that as part of Federal Government effort to tackle the problem, his ministry would develop paddocks to grow grasses, develop boreholes and dams for cattle rearing across the hinterlands.

    The minister stated this during the budget defence of his ministry in the Senate.

    Ogbe said that the project would enable herdsmen to have a more organised life, where their children would have access to education and other basic needs.

    He said, “We are facing a major national problem between herdsmen and rural farmers and we have to bring the crises to an end.

    “There is too much death, violence and too much destruction, gun fire is being used by the herdsmen against rural farmers.

    “ So we will go for massive nutritional grasses across the hinterland because what the cattle want is grass and water and we have the capacity to grow the grasses they want.

    “If it can be done in Kenya and Saudi Arabia, there is no reason why we cannot do it here. So there is a sizeable provision in the budget to grass up the hinterland,’’ he said.

    The minister noted that as part of his ministry’s determination to take agriculture to the next level, it would improve on bee production, hides and skin, bush mango seed (ogbolo), life stock, cotton and groundnut among others.

    He said the ministry would also consolidate on local staples, particularly rice and wheat, which consume 11 million dollars a day in import.

    He noted his ministry would further introduce two programmes to assist young Nigerians and women.

    Ogbe said that small factories will be built in large quantities for them, rather than allowing them to go through the rigour of acquiring land, loan and equipment.

    The minister warned that Nigeria was at the risk of starving to death by the year 2050, if nothing was done to ensure an all year round farming.

    For him, the present mode of farming would not sustain the increasing population in the country.

    Ogbe stressed the need for all major stakeholders to work towards improving mechanized farming and irrigation, to ensure an all year round farming to avert the problem.

    He said, “We have written to state governments to encourage them to develop dams and canals so that  agriculture becomes an all year round activity  and it is not confined to the rainy season alone.

    “Four or five months of farm activity cannot sustain the country for 12 months besides  by 2050 Nigeria’s population will be very close to 500 million going by the current rate of growth.

    “This is just 34 years from now. If we carry on at the current rate of one crop per year and very low mechanization,  Nigeria runs a risk of starving to death.’’

  • Six herdsmen remanded

    Six herdsmen remanded

    An Oyo State High Court, Ibadan, Oyo State, yesterday remanded six Fulani herdsmen in prison custody for alleged kidnapping and illegal possession of firearms.

    Abdullahi Mohammed (35); Abubakar Abubakar (28);  Damanya Gambo (30); Usman Saidu(30); Usman Idris (35) and Hassan Maikudi (30) were remanded by Justice M. L. Abimbola.

    It was gathered that the accused terrorised Okeho, a border town between Oyo and Benin Republic.

    They were said to have been arrested by the Inspector General of Police (IGP) Intelligence Response Team (IRT), which raided the community and apprehended them.

    The police alleged that Maikudi led his gang to abduct his father, Alhaji Idris Maikudi, after which a ransom of N1.5million was paid to secure his release.

    When the charges were read to them, the accused pleaded not guilty.

    Justice Abimbola remanded them in prison custody and adjourned the case till February 2.

     

  • Six herdsmen remanded for alleged kidnapping

    Six herdsmen remanded for alleged kidnapping

    An Oyo State High Court, Ibadan Monday remanded six Fulani herdsmen in prison custody for alleged kidnapping and illegal possession of firearms.

    The accused, Abdullahi Mohammed, 35, Abubakar Abubakar, 28, Damanya Gambo, 30, Usman Saidu, 30, Usman Idris, 35 and Hassan Maikudi, 30, were remanded by Justice M. L. Abimbola, after their arraignment.

    It was alleged that accused have terrorised Okeho, a border town between Oyo and Benin Republic kidnapping prominent residents.

    They were said to have been arrested by the Inspector General of Police (IGP) Intelligence Response Team (IRT), which raided the community and apprehended the suspects.

    The police alleged that one of the suspects, Maikudi led his gang to abduct his father, Alhaji Idris Maikudi, after which a ransom of N1.5million was paid to secure his release.

    According to the police, their alleged offence was punishable under Section 364(1)(2) of the Criminal Code, Laws of the Oyo State, 2000.

    When the charge was read to them, the accused persons pleaded not guilty.

    Subsequently, the presiding judge remanded them in prison custody and adjourned the case to February 2, for hearing.

  • Perm Sec visits robbed herdsmen

    Perm Sec visits robbed herdsmen

    The Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Permanent Secretary, Mr. John Chukwu has paid a condolence visit to Fulani herdsmen who were attacked by armed robbers in the Ketti-Pyakassa suburb of Abuja.

    Chukwu condemned the attack and urged the victims to be calm as security agencies were working round the clock to fish out the perpetrators.

    Unknown hoodlums attacked the Fulani community, killing seven persons.

    Chukwu also visited the National Hospital Abuja where three injured persons including a baby were  receiving treatment.

    He also called at the scene of the unfortunate incident in the company of some senior officials of the FCT Administration to commiserate with the victims.

    The Permanent Secretary during the visit directed that two other injured persons receiving treatment in a village hospital be immediately transferred to the Asokoro District Hospital for adequate medical care.

    Chukwu assured that the FCT Administration would pay all the medical bills of the injured persons being treated.

    He prayed for the repose of the souls of the deceased persons who lost their lives in the unfortunate incident as well as for the quick recovery of the injured persons.

    While commending the police  for the prompt response, he called on them to hasten their investigations in order to bring to book all those culpable.

    Chukwu reiterated that the government would surely get to the root of the crime; stressing that the perpetrators would definitely be apprehended and prosecuted.

    He said, “The Health and Human Services Secretariat, the Area Council Services Secretariat and the FCT Emergency Management Department are hereby directed to immediately liaise with the National Hospital as well as the relations of the victims to pick all medical bills of the injured and sparing no cost in treating them.”

    He advised the victims to be calm, not to take the laws into their hands as the Security Agencies are already assiduously working to unravel all those behind it.

    Responding on behalf of the victims, the Ardon Fulanin Garki, Alhaji Kogi Salihu appreciated the sympathy visit by the high-powered delegation of the FCT Administration and promised to remain calm and law abiding.

    Salihu said, “We are really glad that the FCT Administration leadership has promptly responded to our plight because this is indeed a time of need,”

    He prayed for the guidance and the well being of President Muhammadu Buhari to continue to steer the affairs of the country as this ‘uncommon’ visit demonstrates the change mantra of the Federal Government.

    In order to further calm down nerves and maintain peace in the FCT Chukwu has had an emergency meeting with some leaders of the victims of the armed robbery attack in Pyakassa to avoid any reprisal.

    The Permanent Secretary, who had the emergency meeting in his office, emphasized the need to maintain law and order, assuring that the perpetrators would definitely be apprehended and therefore nobody should take the laws into their hands.

    Chukwu reiterated that the Police and other security agencies in the Federal Capital Territory are on top of the situation.

    Meanwhile, The Permanent Secretary has directed the Area Council Services Secretariat to organise stakeholders meeting with the herdsmen dwelling in and around the Federal Capital City, Abuja scheduled for next week.

    According to him, the main issue to be discussed at the meeting is on how to permanently put a stop to the knotty cases of grazing of cattle within the City Centre.

    He affirmed that after the stakeholders meeting, the FCT Administration would have reached an understanding on how to permanently solve the problem of grazing cattle in the city centre.

    He remarked that this would be an enlarged meeting between the FCT Administration and the Fulani herdsmen as well as their leaders in the Federal Capital Territory.

    The Permanent Secretary insisted that grazing of cattle in the city centre and along the Airport Expressway must be stopped because there are designated grazing areas in Paikon-Kore, in the Gwagwalada Area Council of the Territory, which according to him, is underutilized.

     

  • IYC, herdsmen and politics of entitlement and blackmail

    IYC, herdsmen and politics of entitlement and blackmail

    Whether he likes it or not, and notwithstanding the subtle or direct messages his body language projects, President Muhammadu Buhari will have to grapple with ethnic and regional misgivings over his policies and programmes. For instance, miffed by what seemed on the surface to be an anti-graft war directed at some top Ijaw leaders who served under ex-president Goodluck Jonathan’s government, the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) last week spoke unequivocally of bias against Ijaw people. Also, chafing at calls by Yoruba leaders for herdsmen to be banned from grazing in the Southwest on account of the economic and social damage occasioned by their nomadic lifestyle, leading Fulani politicians have risen stoutly in defence of their people, apparently oblivious of the national security crisis the clash between farmers and nomads might predispose the country to. It will, therefore, require first-rate wisdom, courage and diplomacy to tackle what is likely to be four years of turmoil for the Buhari government, a turmoil certain to be compounded by economic paralysis and political stalemate.

    If the Buhari presidency appreciates the huge security risk constituted by the activities of herdsmen in some parts of Nigeria, especially the Southwest, none of his officials has spoken on the subject. The government has neither condemned the herdsmen nor denounced the new separatist predilection of some Yoruba leaders. But what is even more worrisome is the almost unanimous opinion of top politicians of Fulani extraction. A few days ago, human rights activist and senator, Shehu Sani, spoke glowingly of Fulani herdsmen’s rights almost to the total exclusion of the rights of farmers who are bearing the brunt of the excesses of the herdsmen. “No ethnic group in Nigeria can rear cattle but the Fulani and there is no ethnic group in Nigeria that doesn’t eat meat,” he argued glibly and fallaciously. “Yoruba, Igbo, Hausa, Ijaw, Tiv, Urhobo, Itshekiri all eat meat but none of them can rear cattle except the Fulani. This country should appreciate the Fulani because they have to move around with cattle through very dangerous locations and people are not talking about the hazard these people face to rear cattle.” Is cattle rearing now superior to farming, and meat to food crops?

    Pushing what is apparently the Fulani sense of entitlement to the most intolerable limit, he further snorted: “All that we (i.e. meat consumers) do is simply to buy cows and slaughter them for our naming ceremonies, wedding ceremonies, birthdays and so on, prepare barbecue and buffet, but nobody thinks of how Fulani herdsmen rear these cattle before people see them to buy.” In the interview in which he made these astonishing statements, and in which he declaimed vigorously on the rights of the Fulani herdsmen, he avoided giving an opinion on what he thought farmers whose livelihoods were threatened by grazing should do, or how they should protect their crops and rights from the unbearable expansion of the rights of the herdsmen. Though he agreed a clash between herdsmen and farmers was inevitable, considering the refusal or inability of the federal government to establish and protect grazing reserves, he seemed to think that until the needful was done, every victim would probably remain helpless. It did not occur to him that if the herdsmen embraced self-help, farmers could do likewise, even at the risk of stereotyping every herdsman as a potential kidnapper, farm destroyer and security risk.

    What is most puzzling, therefore, is the silence of the Buhari administration. A spokesman of the Department of State Service (DSS) had recently warned Southwest leaders to see the September 21 abduction of Afenifere leader and former Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Olu Falae, by Fulani herdsmen as nothing but a petty crime. It was, however, clear that he spoke to deaf ears, not to say he seemed insensitive. While it seems sweeping to stereotype every Fulani as a kidnapper and farm destroyer, it does not obviate the fact that most of those who perpetrate the crime of crop destruction in the Southwest are herdsmen, nor does it assuage the hurt the farmers and the victimised political and cultural leaders feel. This is clearly a contentious issue. What would help are deliberate measures by the federal government to ameliorate the problem before everyone embarks on self-help. So far, the presidency has said nothing, and the problem will not go away simply by wishing it.

    In fact, rather than the problem abating, other leading politicians of Fulani extraction have prejudicially waded in. Former Kano State governor and senator, Rabiu Kwankwaso, denounces the stereotyping of the Fulani and defends the right of herdsmen to graze across state and national boundaries. He also bemoans the inability of the federal government to educate nomads and establish grazing routes and reserves. But for a politician of his repute, especially one with presidential ambition, he implausibly said nothing about the inalienable rights of farmers to nurture and protect their farmlands and crops. No one could ban or banish the herdsmen, said Senator Kwankwaso in a note of finality, as faulty and curious as Senator Sani mocking the meat-eating propensity of those who grumble against the harmful corollary of unrestricted grazing.

    If President Buhari feels unnerved by the pressing danger his government faces in the looming herdsmen/Southwest farmers conflict, he has not betrayed it, perhaps because that kind of conflict had suffused the northern landscape for decades without triggering any apocalypse. But another perhaps more potentially dangerous conflict is brewing in the South-South.  Sooner or later the president will have to grapple with it and free himself from the illusion of regarding the presidency as an end in itself. Going by the opinion of the Ijaw Youth Council, a feeling and frustration given fillip by the death of former Bayelsa State governor, Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, President Buhari’s anti-graft war is nothing but sectional.

    Speaking to reporters in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, the IYC president, Udengs Eradiri offers an incandescent and alarming opinion of the anti-graft war. “Much as we support the war against oil theft,” said Mr Eradiri, “it must come with an economic plan as an alternative so that as you are going in to stop them from their way of life, provide an alternative.” He added: “Engage, employ the youths who engage in illegal refining of crude in the creeks. But when you do otherwise, there will be effects. That’s why you are seeing the increase in crime rate, robbery is going up, kidnapping is on the increase, they are kidnapping even ice fish sellers now. It is because when you destroy their means of livelihood and you don’t create any alternative, it is a deliberate ploy to destabilize the Niger Delta so that businesses would not come here…They say oil theft is economic sabotage, what of the illegal mining that is going on in the North? Is that not worst economic sabotage?”

    In the same way herdsmen and their apologists view the destruction of crops and farmlands as collateral damage to their grazing rights and sense of entitlement, the Ijaws deliberately fail to subscribe to a moralistic view of illegal bunkering, illegal refineries and other activities that sabotage what they describe as the nation’s unfairly and unjustly structured economy. To the IYC, every crime in the creeks is justified on the grounds of economic and, increasingly, political alienation. Nor do they feel apologetic. Instead, they have even gone ahead to warn the Buhari government against mistreating their daughter and former oil minister, Diezani Allison-Madueke.  Said the IYC: “The UK government should stay away from Diezani. This was how they muscled (Diepreiye) Alamieyeseigha, and now he is dead. Now they have started with Diezani. They should leave Ijaw people alone. Are there no other governors that have stolen? Go to UK, almost all the streets are owned by northerners who stole Nigeria money. So why are they just on Goodluck Jonathan’s men, just to demonise Goodluck? As far as we are concerned, the anti-corruption fight is a fight against the Ijaw people. Goodluck should have won Nobel Prize for peace. Goodluck deserves a Nobel peace prize, Goodluck deserves respect from Nigerians.”

    The IYC’s views may be shocking and not even unanimous in the Ijaw country, but it is a dangerous manifestation of the complex nature of Nigerian politics, the differing and conflicting assumptions and definitions of moral values and principles in Nigeria, and the ethnic prejudices and isolation that war against a sense of nationhood. If the feelings of alienation and persecution are not arrested, they will grow until they compound the herculean efforts to tackle the country’s monumental problems. No part of Nigeria must be allowed to create a political exclusion zone within the purview of the current constitution. Yet the budding national crisis of confidence represented by the herdsmen/Southwest farmers conflict and the insular view of morality by the Ijaw epitomise the worrying lack of coherence in President Buhari’s anti-graft war. If he is to stave off a far more dangerous blowout in the near future, it is urgent for the president and his team to conceive and enunciate a unifying national ideology for the country within which social, economic and political justice can flourish, and Nigeria’s sometimes fractious and competing ethnic nationalities can find anchor and expression.

  • ‘Prosecute herdsmen now’

    ‘Prosecute herdsmen now’

    Director, International Relations, Youth and Conflict Resolution Initiatives, Efemena Agadama, says herdsmen excesses must be checked.

    We call on the government to begin an urgent prosecution of all erring Fulani herdsmen who go about with Ak47 to trespass farmlands and public paths.  Their prosecution should be immediate as Nigeria cannot afford another bloodletting that may emanate from reactions due to the activities of the Fulani herdsmen.

    It is the same mistake that the administration of Olusegun Obasanjo made between 1999 and 2007 when youths were on rampage with AK47 that allowed militancy to grow in the Niger Delta and terrorism to escalate in the North East.  The Obasanjo’s administration was so silent and deaf that it never resolved any conflict; rather conflicts were transferred to successors.

    Nigeria cannot repeat such grave mistakes again in 2015. There should be urgent prosecutions whenever there is destruction of property and loss of lives.  At present, thousands have been killed by the rampaging Fulani herdsmen in all regions of the country and it has to stop.  It must stop now.

    The ongoing trespassing by some Fulani herdsmen at Olu Falae’s farm must be addressed now as it seems the commissioner of police is afraid of the Fulani herdsmen.  Something is amiss there.  The police knew about Falae’s predicament long before he was abducted yet couldn’t arrest and prosecute the herdsmen before that eventual abduction.

    We hope the current arrest of the culprits won’t end as publicity stunt same way the initial arrest of Boko Haram members were handled at the earlier stage of the insurgency where traditional rulers would intervene and release the insurgents.

    The never-ending negligence by the police on the Fulani’s herdsmen atrocities is highly condemnable, unjust, unpatriotic, provocative and prosecutable as it betrays the tenets of equality and shatters the doctrine of a nation bound in freedom and unity.

    The solution is that local governments should provide licenses to cattle herdsmen to apply legal control over their activities.  There should also be a stipulated level of education and knowledge of their codes of practice before any of them should venture into cattle rearing.

    Cattles should be kept and reared in enclosure or designated fields by the local authorities and there should be prosecution for those who violate these provisions and animals confiscated.

    In England, the Welfare of Farmed Animals (England) Regulations 2007, codes of practice, specifies that a person responsible for a farmed animal or anyone employed must not attend to the animal except they are acquainted with any relevant code of practice and must have access to that code while attending to the animal.

    Nigeria should not look like a jungle.  There is no place in the modern world where cattle herdsmen are allowed to brandish AK47 riffles and other weapons of war.

    There is no place in the modern world where cattle herdsmen move their herd of cattle across farmlands and communities and when anyone tries to correct them, that person gets either abducted or killed, or their community completely destroyed.

    While we understand that some communities do kill their cows, it is necessary to state that there is no constitutional provision for the Fulani herdsmen or any other groups to burn entire communities down and murder every living soul – human and animals.

    The call for their prosecution needs urgent attention as it has now spread from the Middle-Belt to other zones of Nigeria.

     

  • How to prevent herdsmen, farmers clashes, by Falana

    How to prevent herdsmen, farmers clashes, by Falana

    Activist-lawyer Femi Falana (SAN) has suggested ways to prevent clashes between farmers and herdsmen.

    He said states which have large livestock populations should take advantage of the Land Use Act to acquire land for the establishment of grazing reserves.

    According to him, in view of the increasing incident of cattle rustling, security measure should be put in place to police the grazing reserves.

    Falana said the grazing reserves will be phased out gradually and replaced with ranches and abattoirs.

    “Since the Federal Government is obligated to protect the life and property of every citizen, urgent steps should be taken to avert further killings and destruction of farmlands by herdsmen,” Falana said in a statement.

    He said he would take legal action against the Federal Government should it fail to take steps to prevent civil disturbances.

    “If the Buhari Administration does not discharge its constitutional duty by stopping the unwarranted civil disturbances, we shall not hesitate to pray the Federal High Court to compel it to act responsibly in the circumstance by ensuring the protection of the fundamental rights of every farmer to life and property.

    “At the same time, we shall equally ask the court to compel the Federal Government and state government with large livestock populations to establish grazing reserves and ranches,” the lawyer said.

    Falana said farmlands have continued to be destroyed due to the state’s failure to address the problem.

    “Once again, I call on President Buhari to address the bloody clashes which occur regularly between farmers and Fulani herdsmen in the various parts of the country.

    “Through the negligence of the state, the country has continued to witness the reckless killing of innocent farmers and the destruction of farmlands.

    “Farmers, like other citizens, are entitled to the protection of the right to life and property. To halt such wanton killings, the primitive movement of thousands of heads of cattle from the north to the south should be stopped without any further delay,” Falana said.

    The Senior Advocate of Nigeria also wants the government to call security agencies to order, saying conflicting investigation reports can hamper prosecution.

    He said: “On May 4, 2012, a gang of gunmen invaded the residence of Mr. Olaitan Oyerinde, the then Personal Assistant to the Edo State governor, Comrade Adams Oshiomole. In the presence of his wife and young children, Mr. Oyerinde was gruesomely killed. A few days after the tragic incident, the Nigeria Police Force addressed a press conference in Benin where a set of suspects were paraded before the media and admitted their ignoble  role in the criminal enterprise. Based on the investigation which had been conducted into the matter, the Police Authorities concluded that it was a case of paid assassination.

    “Nigerians were assured by the Police that the suspects would be promptly charged to court.

    ‘’Shortly thereafter, the State Security Service addressed another press conference in Abuja and paraded another set of criminal suspects. The suspects also ‘confessed’ that they were solely responsible for the barbaric murder of Mr. Olaitan Oyerinde.

    “The DSS which claimed to have investigated the incident stated that it was a case of armed robbery. Regrettably, the office of the Attorney-General of the Federation was unable to reconcile the two conflicting versions of the same incident.

    “As I did point out at the material time, the irresponsible conduct of both law enforcement agencies was capable of exculpating the actual culprits. Thus, by creating sufficient doubt in the mind of the trial judge both security agencies had clearly compromised the prosecution of either of two sets of alleged killers of Mr. Oyerinde.

    “A similar ugly scenario has just been re-enacted in the case of the criminal gang that abducted Chief Falae last month.  In separate press conferences both the Police and the SSS claimed to have arrested the two sets of suspects who abducted Chief Falae.

    “Both security agencies gave divergent versions of the abduction saga. Notwithstanding that the suspects arrested by the Police have since been charged to the High Court in Akure, Ondo State, the SSS should hand over the suspects in its custody to the Police without delay.

    “The Attorney-General of Ondo State should ensure that the prosecution of the suspects who kidnapped Chief Falae is not bungled by the security agencies.

    “It is high time the Federal Government called all law enforcement agencies in the country to order with a view to preventing them from toying with the security of the Nigerian people by engaging in meaningless competition and overzealousness.”

     

  • Enugu women protest herdsmen’s ‘menace’

    Over 20 women from four local governments in Enugu State have urged the state government to prevail on Fulani herdsmen to keep their cattle away from their farms.

    The women who represented the Anglican Diocese of Enugu North comprising Enugu North, Enugu East, Udi and Ezeagu,  alleged that the herdsmen also rape women and kill while their herds destroy crops.

    The women made the call during a peaceful demonstration at the state House of Assembly.

    Leader of the group, Mrs Achogaonye Eze said the herdsmen should be stopped for the sake of security.

    Eze who is the wife of Bishop Sustenance Eze of Enugu North Anglican Diocese, pointed out that apart from raping women and killing people in the communities, the herdsmen also rob and kidnap people.

    She lamented that they are helpless because they had complained to the law enforcement agencies to no avail.

    She disclosed that people are now afraid to go to the farm unless they are in groups for fear of rape or outright killing and recounted their ordeal thus:

    “They have butchered two men who tried to confront them; they rape women and destroy their crops.

    “They pretend to be selling bush meat and when you stop over to buy, their gang will come out of the bush and rob you of your belonging.

    “They are now wielding AK 47 guns at villagers who confront them and since the vigilantes do not have such sophisticated weapons they withdraw,” she enumerates and posted that they should be asked to vacate Enugu State for good.

    “Our people are molested, they feel that they own the land. If we don’t stop them, they may rape your own wives,” she avers.

    The demonstrating women carried placards that read in parts, “Fulani herdsmen kill our men with AK 47”, “All we are saying is, Fulani, leave our farmlands”, “They butchered two men at Eke, stop robbing us at the high ways, etc.”