Tag: herdsmen

  • A season of ‘banditry’

    For nearly a decade, the intensity of the Boko Haram insurgency has surged and waned in Northeast, between periods of keen military action and times of almost criminal negligence by the government. Also, in the last five years, the long suppressed threat of conflict between farming communities and cattle herdsmen took a deadly turn nationwide, and the terror of ‘killer herdsmen’ swept across Nigeria. Now, while the country is reeling from the damage to nationhood and livelihood that these two evils have brought, there is yet another scourge of terror tearing through Northwest. This time, the perpetrators have been labelled “bandits”.

    In the Northwest, particularly in Zamfara State, there have been gun-toting marauders wreaking havoc on communities for unclear reasons. There is no single or clear agenda to their madness. It is reported that over 100 lives were lost to the rampage of the so-called bandits in Zamfara in 2018. For instance, on December 19, 2018, suspected bandits attacked three separate communities in BirninMagaji Local Government Area of Zamfara State, killing at least 25 people.  The turn of the year saw the situation deteriorate further, with the attacks seemingly taking on fresh fervour, necessitating a revamped military and security campaign against the bandits.

    As the military offensive intensified, it is believed that some of the bandits fled to other north-western states like Sokoto and Katsina, where they have been engaged in mindless attacks and kidnapping. In February, it was reported that members of a vigilante group lost their lives in open confrontation with the bandits in Raba Local Government Area of Sokoto State, after a round of attacks by the bandits. According to media reports, the police spokesperson asked people in the affected areas to “keep their fingers crossed” as the police is doing all it can.

    Having endured many months of seeming ‘occupation’ by the so-called bandits and the inadequate security response by the government, the people of Zamfara were at their wits end on Tuesday, April 2, when members of what is called the Civilian Joint Task Force from a community in KauraNamoda Local Government Area of the state marched into the forest hideout of the bandits to engage the bandits. According to the Speaker of the Zamfara State House of Assembly, over 50 persons were killed in that clash. The desperate assault by the civilians caused the military to step up their efforts, through air raids and ground assaults that have caused the bandits to abandon their hideouts and mix with the civilian population.

    After the military raids, the people cried out through media reports that the bandits had abandoned their hideouts and were walking about with arms in broad day light amongst the ordinary people, with the alleged help of some civilian collaborators. It seems like a change in strategy, to prevent air raids by blending in with the local population. The confidence of the bandits is indicative of a region now saturated with arms of all kinds, for civilian vigilantes and the so-called bandits alike. Meanwhile, on April 9, some of the suspected  bandits that had fled to Katsina razed buildings and killed indiscriminately in Sabuwa and Batsari local Government Areas of the state, causing Mohammed Adamu, Acting-Inspector General of Police, IGP, to visit the areas.

    In this sordid tale of mayhem and carnage that stretches all the way to Kaduna, and also with the kidnappings on the Abuja-Kaduna expressway and elsewhere in the country, there seems to be a real security crisis on our hands, and one could have made this statement at any time in the past 10 years in Nigeria. The country appears to be in a bubble of insecurity that seems resistant to all remedies. Not even the tears of governors and senators from the northeast and northwest have inspired any enduring solution. Benue and Taraba are still hot from continued communal clashes after the violence was likely momentarily diverted into election conflict. Just last Sunday, there were beheadings on the streets of Ajah, in Lagos State. Nigerians no more feel safe.

    While the military is doing its bit with the resources it has in fighting the bandits, it faces strong criticism and near opposition by some traditional rulers in the Northwest. The native leaders claim that air-force jets are bombing innocent people, while the military has hinted on the involvement of some traditional rulers with the bandits. This difference of opinion could have been settled by evidence garnered from good intelligence gathering, but like in our other internal  ‘wars’ against terror, there is a serious lack in that department.

    The menace of the bandits has also brought to light, the threat posed by the seemingly underground mining and trade in precious stones that are going on in the Northwest. This dimension is already causing ripples nationally. It is thought by some that the banditry is not unrelated to the activities of illegal miners who had armed themselves in an increasingly dangerous trade in that region. Others think that the banditry has little or nothing to do with the mining activities. That there are many desperate men with guns is unfortunately, a real and present danger, in any case.

    The saturation of arms in the country generally has been linked to many things, some tracing the origins as far back as the civil war. A more current source has been traced, by analysts, to the activities of politicians who procure arms to distribute to local thugs as part of preparation for elections. With the excess of guns and desperate men for hire in the fallout of conflict in Libya and other places, and with our porous borders, anyone with sinister plans has little difficulty in smuggling arms into the country. The problem may begin there, but continues when the “principals” of the now armed thugs have achieved their aim. The guns and the men remain, left to their own devices.

    The security issues bring to question, again, the best model for securing our communities, rural and urban. Community policing is a tried and tested model and the rise of vigilante groups and the many “Civilian Joint Task Forces” is already indicative of a natural gravitation towards that solution. When communities are forced to form unofficial vigilante groups in the face of governmental inefficiency, the results have not always been good. The excesses of the Oodua People’s Congress, Bakassi boys and many more examples show how they can go rogue or become ethnic militias.

    Several theories have been advanced for the poor state of security in the country today. The fact is that many of the “major” security problems we now face have only now burst into the open after bubbling beneath the surface, unchecked, for too long. Our authorities have displayed a serious lack of foresight in dealing with security challenges, and the lack of local, pro-active andmulti-institutional collaborativeeffort is at the root of the problem. The security council should not be convened in Abuja for internal and local threats, but should be done at state or community level.

    The rise of the militant warfare between Boko Haram and Nigerian troops could have been halted if long term consequences were discussed between security agents and moderate religious leaders at local level. The bloody and widespread communal clashes that gave rise to the “killer herdsmen” could have been avoided if the impacts of climate change, population surge and land rights could have been viewed through a local security lens. The banditry that has now gripped the Northwest is not a situation that suddenly happened overnight. Men with guns do not just appear in forests.

    We cannot continue to ascribe military solution to every threat within our borders, when communities, through the police, are in the best position to develop security plans for protecting themselves. State policing should advance from the stage of idea and discussion and become a reality in Nigeria. Only at the state level can smaller communities organize into security units and departments. We cannot continue in ignorance. We must halt the dangerous drift towards a failed state.

  • Two farmers killed, three injured in Ekiti

    SUSPECTED herdsmen early yesterday attacked Eda, one of the communities under Iyemero town in Ikole Local Government Area of Ekiti State.

    The gory incident claimed two lives and three persons were inflicted with injuries.

    Sources identified one of the dead as Mr. Danjuma Ali, a farmer. The identity of the second person, whose body has been deposited in the morgue of the General Hospital, Ikole-Ekiti, is yet to be known as at the time of going to the press.

    Those undergoing treatment at the emergency section of the Federal Teaching Hospital (FETHI), Ido-Ekiti include: Mrs. Jennifer Akoko, Mr. Joseph Achebe and one other victim.

    The source said: “It has happened again today; it has been a recurrent killing.  Some herders called Bororo stormed the farmstead and shot these innocent people.

    Read also: Herdsmen kill 16 at naming ceremony in Nasarawa community

    “They came around 1a.m. and were there till dawn. Our farmers are all afraid to go to their farms. They all rushed to the palace of Oba Ebenezer Agboola Ogungbemi, the Olu of Iyemero-Ekiti, to take refuge.

    “We are mourning today at Iyemero. We are not happy about this incident and the government must do something about it.”

    Oba Ogungbemi and Olu-In-Council restated their calls for establishment of a police station in the town to curb the activities of the herders.

    The monarch, who spoke through the palace spokesman, Chief Ariyo Abejide, said there was urgent need for the population of farmers in this farmstead to be protected and secured by the security agencies from another imminent attack by the marauders.

     

  • Herdsmen kill 16 at naming ceremony in Nasarawa community

    •Senator, monarch seek military base in Akwanga

    GUNMEN suspected to be militias on Sunday attacked Numa village in Andaha community, Akwanga Local Government Area, Nasarawa State, killing 16 Mada natives during a naming ceremony.

    The incident came barely three weeks after some suspected herdsmen raped a Mada girl to death, sparking off a confrontation between the herdsmen and the natives.

    Confirming the incident to reporters in Akwanga, the headquarters of Akwanga Local Government, the senator representing Nasarawa North, Philip Aruwa Gyunka, said the celebrators, made up of the father, mother and the baby boy, were killed during the attack.

    The Nasarawa senator described the killings as “unfortunate, barbaric and uncalled for”.

    Gyunka said: “The unfortunate thing is that both the celebrators – the father, the mother and the boy – were killed. A pregnant woman and an aged person, who was above 100 years was also involved.

    “They did not spare women or children. These were the people that didn’t have arms.”

    The senator recently moved a motion on the floor of the Senate, calling on the Federal Government to establish a military base in Akwanga. According to him, people from Calabar and Maiduguri meet in Akwanga on their way to Abuja.

    “You can see incidents of kidnapping and robbery on the Akwanga-Abuja road. This is as a result of people moving with weapons unchecked,” Gyunka explained.

    A resident of Numan-Chuko, Maiwuya Bahago, also narrated how she lost a pregnant daughter and three other children to the herdsmen attack.

    According to her, at about 9p.m., some persons suspected to be herdsmen invaded the vicinity, shooting sporadically.

    She said: “Four of my children were killed by the herdsmen. One was pregnant, another one was a mother of three and two others were unmarried.

    “They came for the naming ceremony and that was how they met their demise.”

    Bahago called for assistance from the government and well-meaning Nigerians to cater for the children left behind by the deceased.

    “How do I take care of these children they left behind? I do not have anyone to help me bring them. I need prayers and help from well-meaning Nigerians,” she said.

    Also, the paramount ruler of Mada, HRH Samuel Gamu-Yare, while speaking to reporters in his palace on the attack, said: “This thing happened like a thunder strike in the night and the terrain was too accessible and when we informed the police, the perpetrators had vanished.”

    Gamu-Yare, who is the Chun Mada, confirmed that 16 people died in the attack.

    “Sixteen people died and several others were critically wounded. The militias interacted with the celebrators during the naming ceremony before they suddenly started shooting sporadically.

    “Some of the assassins were identified and some names were mentioned and handed over to the security agents,” the monarch said.

     

     

  • Herdsmen kill 16 at naming ceremony in Nasarawa community

    GUNMEN suspected to be militias on Sunday attacked Numa village in Andaha community, Akwanga Local Government Area, Nasarawa State, killing 16 Mada natives during a naming ceremony.

    The incident came barely three weeks after some suspected herdsmen raped a Mada girl to death, sparking off a confrontation between the herdsmen and the natives.

    Confirming the incident to reporters in Akwanga, the headquarters of Akwanga Local Government, the senator representing Nasarawa North, Philip Aruwa Gyunka, said the celebrators, made up of the father, mother and the baby boy, were killed during the attack.

    The Nasarawa senator described the killings as “unfortunate, barbaric and uncalled for”.

    Gyunka said: “The unfortunate thing is that both the celebrators – the father, the mother and the boy – were killed. A pregnant woman and an aged person, who was above 100 years was also involved.

    “They did not spare women or children. These were the people that didn’t have arms.”

    The senator recently moved a motion on the floor of the Senate, calling on the Federal Government to establish a military base in Akwanga. According to him, people from Calabar and Maiduguri meet in Akwanga on their way to Abuja.

    “You can see incidents of kidnapping and robbery on the Akwanga-Abuja road. This is as a result of people moving with weapons unchecked,” Gyunka explained.

    Read also: Herdsmen attack: Abia to offset medical bill of victim

    A resident of Numan-Chuko, Maiwuya Bahago, also narrated how she lost a pregnant daughter and three other children to the herdsmen attack.

    According to her, at about 9p.m., some persons suspected to be herdsmen invaded the vicinity, shooting sporadically.

    She said: “Four of my children were killed by the herdsmen. One was pregnant, another one was a mother of three and two others were unmarried.

    “They came for the naming ceremony and that was how they met their demise.”

    Bahago called for assistance from the government and well-meaning Nigerians to cater for the children left behind by the deceased.

    “How do I take care of these children they left behind? I do not have anyone to help me bring them. I need prayers and help from well-meaning Nigerians,” she said.

    Also, the paramount ruler of Mada, HRH Samuel Gamu-Yare, while speaking to reporters in his palace on the attack, said: “This thing happened like a thunder strike in the night and the terrain was too accessible and when we informed the police, the perpetrators had vanished.”

    Gamu-Yare, who is the Chun Mada, confirmed that 16 people died in the attack.

    “Sixteen people died and several others were critically wounded. The militias interacted with the celebrators during the naming ceremony before they suddenly started shooting sporadically.

    “Some of the assassins were identified and some names were mentioned and handed over to the security agents,” the monarch said.

  • Suspected herdsmen kill farmer, mother, daughter

    Suspected herdsmen have shot dead three persons at Abraka in Ethiope East Local Government Area of Delta State.

    Among the victims were a 55-year-old mother and her 18-year- old daughter.

    Abraka has been attacked by suspected herdsmen several times since last year. Over 18 people have been killed.

    The Nation gathered that the victims were ambushed while returning from farm.

    An eyewitness, who preferred anonymity, said the incident occurred yesterday at about 5:30pm on Reserve Road, Abraka.

    It was learnt that one of the victims, identified as Kennedy Ukuwanorvwe, 27, was killed by the suspected herdsmen at about 7pm.

    Read also: Herdsmen attacks: security personnel deployed in Anambra community

    The Nation gathered that the herdsmen also killed an 18-year- old girl and her mother at Abacha camp. The victims were returning late from farm.

    Abacha camp is a farming area occupied by indigenes of Abraka and Obiaruku.

    It was learnt that one of the victims was identified to be an indigene of Obiaruku in Ukwuani Local Government.

    The Nation gathered that the bodies have been deposited at a morgue.

    Police Commissioner Mr. Adeyinka Adeleke said the bodies had been recovered, adding that it was premature to conclude that the killers were herdsmen.

    He said investigations are on.

  • Suspected herdsmen kill four in Delta

    Not less than four persons have been reported killed between Tuesday night and Wednesday morning by suspected herdsmen, who invaded some parts of Abraka community, Ethiope East council area of Delta state.

    The Nation gathered that the killer- herdsmen also barred farmers and labourers from gaining access into farmlands.

    They further took over parts of the community with their herds of cow, leaving many injured.

    According to community sources, among the four persons who had lost their lives to the invading herdsmen, was one Kennedy Ukuanovwe.

    Ukuanovwe, a father of seven and native of Urhuovie Quarters of Abraka, was reportedly attacked by the invaders along the Abraka-Benin Road while riding his motorcycle around the area.

    He was reportedly shot and cut into pieces.

    Read Also: Herdsmen attacks: security personnel deployed in Anambra community

    The other three casualties, who could not be identified yet as at the time of filing this report, included a woman, a soldier and one other male.

    All of them were reportedly killed by the rampaging herdsmen at different locations in the community on Wednesday morning.

    A community source, who spoke to The Nation on the development, said: “It was only Kennedy (Ukuanovwe), who was killed on Tuesday night that has been identified.

    “The other three dead people have not been identified in person yet. The other three were killed by herdsmen this morning (Wednesday)”.

    Policemen and other security operatives were seen patrolling the town, which is host to the main campus of the Delta State University (DELSU) and hometown of the governorship candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in last month’s elections, Chief Great Ogboru.

    Contacted, the Delta state Commissioner of Police, Mr. Adeyinka Adeleke, said: “The problem is it is not only one person that died. We saw corpses.

    “Other persons also died but we don’t know who actually killed them. Our men are still in the bush. When they come out, they will be able to give details.”

  • Suspected herdsmen kill four farmers in Benue community

    Suspected herdsmen on Friday killed four farmers in Ayilamo, Tombo ward, Logo local government area in Benue state.

    Ayilamo town is the headquarters of Tombo ward, and is located alongside River Benue and separates Logo and Guma local Government areas.

    It would be recalled that Guma and Logo LGAs have been under massive herdsmen attacked for more than 10 years.

    According to a community leader in Ayilamo Peter Iorbee, who spoke to The Nation via phone said the gunmen who were many in number stormed the town at about 8pm on Thursday night shooting anyone in sight.

    Iorbee said the gunmen operated unchallenged for hours and killed four people including a woman and leaving many others wounded.

    Those who were killed in attack include; Ortyom Ingyutu, Aondo Gbaagaver, Laaga and Wuese Wuakor.

    He said another victim; a lady was shot on the breast and had been transferred to Benue State University Teaching Hospital Makurdi for proper treatment attention.

    A farmer in Dzungwe village, Akosu Uja in an interview with The Nation pleaded with security agencies to protect the people as herdsmen have taken over their lands.

    Efforts to speak with Benue state police spokesman and operation whirl stroke commandant proved abortive at the time of filing this report, as they failed to response to text messages sent to their phones.

  • Suspected herdsmen sack 2 communities, raze 27 houses in Nasarawa

    Suspected herdsmen have sacked Merte and Nendem villages in Akwanga local government area of Nasarawa state following a dispute with some youths in the area.

    ASP Samaila Usman, spokesman of the Nasarawa State Police Command confirmed the incident to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Monday in Lafia.

    According to Usman, trouble began on March 23, when a suspected herdsman allegedly assaulted and raped a lady in the area, who later died at the General Hospital Akwanga.

    “Suspected Mada youths mobilised and attacked a Fulani settlement in the area, killed one person and some animals in the process.

    READ ALSO: Suspected herdsmen ‘kill’ council secretary

    “Later, some suspected Fulanis, in a reprisal attack, touched Merte and Nendem villages burning 27 houses,” Usman said.

    He said that apart from the lady and the Fulani that was killed, no further lives were lost to the skirmishes.

    He said the Commissioner of Police, Bola Longe, had deployed a detachment of officers to the area to forestall escalation of the situation.

    Usman also said the police was working hard to ensure amicable resolution of the problem by summoning a stakeholders’ meeting for dialogue.

    He appealed to the people to desist from taking laws into their hands and to give peace a chance. (NAN)

  • 16 killed as herdsmen attack Benue community

    …we recovered only seven bodies – Army 

    Gunmen suspected to be herdsmen have attacked and killed 16 persons in Tse- Kuma, Mbachohon council ward, in Gwer west local Government area in Benue State.

    But the commander of Operation Whirl Stroke ( OPWS) Major- General Adeyemi Yekini said only seven bodies have been recovered in the attacked.

    Chairman of Gwer West Local Government council Francis Ayaga said the suspected herdsmen stormed Tse- Kuma village in the early hours of Sunday and sacked the entire mbachohon council ward.

    Read also: Let’s unchain Benue from underdevelopment, APC tells voters

    An indigene of Gwer west Francis Ugbede said the herdsmen completely took over Mbachohon council ward in Gwer west Local Government council.

    “they came with many cattle and are grazing on farm lands and destroying crops after they shot and killed harmless farmers” he said.

    “there is a great humanitarian crisis in the local government are as those who fled the troubled area have no where to put their heads”.

    Ugbede furtehr told The Nation that women with children on their backs have been trekking long distances without food nor water and called on humanitarian agencies and government to intervened as a matter of urgency .

    The Nation gathered that since since 2012 armed herdsmen have launched sustained attacked on the people of Gwer west, especially peasants farmers.

  • Herdsmen kill 16, injure two in Benue

    Suspected herdsmen on Wednesday killed 16 persons and injured two others during an invasion of Ebete community in Usha council ward of Agatu Local Government Area of Benue State.

    Our correspondent gathered the herdsmen stormed the area at about 1am when the residents were fast asleep.

    They reportedly opened fire on houses as the attacked community residents attempted to escape in the ensuing melee.

    After the attackers escaped, 16 people were confirmed dead while two others sustained injuries.

    They are said to be receiving treatment at General Hospital in Obagaji, headquarters of Agatu LGA.

    An eyewitness, Daddy Seni, who spoke to our correspondent in Makurdi, said his father and siblings were among the deceased.

    Read Also: Two feared killed as suspected herdsmen attack Delta community

    The Acting Chairman of Agatu local government council, Alhaji Oyigocho, also confirmed the incident.

    He said he had visited Ebete community with some council members in company of security agencies.

    The Force Commander Operation Whirl Stroke, Maj Gen Adeyemi Yekini, said the armed bandits actually invaded there areas but that they were yet to ascertain the number of casualties.

    “I received a report this afternoon that some people were killed in Agatu by suspected armed bandits.

    “I’m not sure of the number of casualty yet but I don’t think it’s up to 16.

    “We have sent a patrol team to the general area where the incident happened.

    “The location where it happened, although is in Benue can better be accessed through Loko in Nasarawa State”.

    Yekini, in a statement explained, he had already deployed a patrol team to the area verify what really happened.

    Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom described the incident as quite unfortunate and condemnable.

    He urged security agencies to move to forestall further attacks on innocent people of Benue State.

    Ortom, who spoke through his Chief Press Secretary, lterver Akase, said Benue can’t afford another rounds of killings close to general elections.

    “Yes I can confirm that the governor of Benue State met earlier today with the commissioner of Police Mr. Bishi and he confirmed that there was attack in Ebete in Agatu earlier today in which seventeen persons were killed by suspected armed herdsmen.

    “We feel that this is unfortunate because the governor has raised an alarm that some persons for political reasons are planning to unleashed armed herdsmen on innocent Benue people, to create fear in the people for political gains,” he said.