Tag: herdsmen

  • Gunmen kidnap UBEC official in Ondo

    A 45-year-old official of the Universal Basic Education Board (UBEC), Abuja, Mr. Femi Adesote, has been kidnapped by gunmen suspected to be herdsmen near Auga in Akoko Northeast Local Government Area of Ondo State.

    The victim was returning from Abuja with his aged father and younger sister, who accompanied their father, when the incident happened.

    The victim’s father, Samuel Adesote, reportedly travelled to Abuja on the invitation of his son to receive medical treatment.

    A source said the four kidnappers waylaid them and abducted the victim.

    The Divisional Police Officer (DPO) in Ikare, Adeniyi Agboola, was said to have mobilised his men to comb Auga forest with other security agents to rescue the victim and arrest the suspects.

    The Area Commander in Akoko, Assistant Commissioner of Police (ACP) Razak Rauf, assured residents that the criminals would be flushed out of Auga forest.

    He said the victim’s vehicle, a BMW with number plate ABJ RSH 862 DV, has been moved to the police headquarters in Ikare-Akoko.

    Auga-Akoko’s monarch Oba Samuel Agunloye, whose driver and wife were kidnapped last year, said but for a brief delay, she and the driver would have again fallen victim yesterday.

    He urged the police to establish a station at Auga, while soldiers should be stationed at a checkpoint in the town, to tighten security.

  • Two feared killed as suspected herdsmen attack Delta community

    Two persons were yesterday feared killed and houses torched at Effurun-Otor in Ughelli South Local Government Area of Delta State, following an attack by suspected herdsmen.

    But the police in a phone chat last night debunked the report of casualties.

    They said the situation had been brought under control, adding that investigations were on.

    Community sources told The Nation that two people were confirmed dead. They said many houses were burnt down.

    The traditional ruler of the community, Orovworere of Effurun-Otor Kingdom, King Duku II, reportedly escaped death by a whisker when the suspected herdsmen stormed his palace.

    Although the cause of the attack could not be ascertained last night, it was learnt that the invaders stormed the community with weapons, shooting into the air sporadically.

    Contacted for comments, command spokesman Andrew Aniamaka said there was an incident in the community, but he could not confirm any death or the identity of the attackers.

    He, however, said the situation had been brought under control, adding that stakeholders had moved to prevent reprisal.

    “I’m not aware of any death. I know it’s a crisis having to do with vigilance group, not herders and farmers clash. The matter has been brought under control by the police.

    “The Ughelli Area Commander, DPO Otu-Jeremi and the king of the community have sat down on the matter. They have ensured that things are now under control,” Aniamaka said.

  • Two feared dead, houses razed as suspected herdsmen attack Delta community

    Not less than two persons were reportedly killed and tens of houses burnt in Effurun-Otor community, Ughelli South council area of Delta state on Sunday following a suspected armed cattle herders’ attack.
    But the Delta state police command, in a telephone chat on Sunday evening, debunked the report of casualties, adding that the situation in the community had been brought under control and that investigations were already ongoing.

    READ ALSO: Kogi: Uproar over killing of septuagenarian by suspected herdsmen

    Meanwhile, community sources told The Nation that two people had been confirmed dead, many houses burnt and that the traditional ruler of the community; the Orovworere of Effurun-Otor Kingdom, HRM King Duku II, escaped death by the whiskers when the invading herdsmen stormed his palace.
    Although the cause of the herdsmen attack could not be confirmed on Sunday evening, it was gathered that the invaders stormed the community with assorted dangerous shooting sporadically and unchallenged.
    Meanwhile, when reached for confirmation and comments, the spokesman of the Delta state police command, Mr Andrew Aniamaka (DSP), said there was an incident in the community, but could not confirm any death or the identity of the attackers.
     
    He, however, said the situation in the community had been kept under control, adding that all concerned stakeholders had been engaged in serious activities to ensure that there would not be a repeat of the unrest.
     
    “I’m not aware of any death and I know it’s a crisis having to do with vigilante, not herders and farmers clash. Surffice it to say that the matter has been brought under control by the police.
    “The Ughelli Area Commander, DPO Otu-Jeremi and the king of the community have sat down on the matter and have ensured that things are now under control,” Aniamaka said.
  • Fulani group seeks amnesty for victims of farmers/ herders clashes

    A Fulani Socio-Cultural Group under the auspices of Gan Allah Fulani Development Association of Nigeria (GAFDAN) is seeking President Muhammadu Buhari led APC Federal Government to urgently and responsively fast track the granting of a comprehensive amnesty programme to all the victims of farmers/herders crisis.

    It observed that the sad experience of the crises has negatively reduced the pastoralists to unwilling and circumstantial criminals as a result of losses of their entire source of livelihood and survival.

    The urgent and necessary call by the group is contained in a communique issued following its national delegates meeting held at the Sultan Bello Mosque conference Hall in Kaduna.

    The communique signed by three Principal Executives of the group which include Alhaji Sale Bayari, Alhaji Ibrahim Abdullahi and Alhaji Suleiman Yakubu as the national chairman, national secretary and zonal national vice chairman, South West also identified the gross negligence by the three tiers of Government of over 15 million members of the herders community in the country.

    The trio further pointed out that the negative development has since resulted in many loss of lives and billions of naira, as well as the abandonment of a great segment of the herdsmen and their means of livelihood.

    “It is unfortunate that the government has failed to address problems like cattle rustling and kidnapping, that have led to the near national collapse of the animal husbandry or national livestock industry in the country.

    ” This condition has given birth to restiveness, hopelessness, joblessness, confusion and a state of anomie where nobody knows what is right from wrong. Such situation has led to many unconstitutional enactments and passing into law of draconian, inhuman, restrictive, segregation and divisive anti-grazing laws that have banned otherwise legitimate and lawful means of livelihood of herdsmen.

    ” Total bewilderment of lack of any redemptive or palliative support for the herdsmen as fellow Nigerians by the federal government despite the huge losses with rough estimates of about 2500 human lives and about 3.7 million cattle without any compensation or subsidy.”

    The group also lamented on the failure of the Government to provide assistance to the herders as was being extended to others in the agricultural and allied sectors like crop farmers and many others, through Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, (FMARD), Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN and the presidency.

    ” It is evident that the sum of about 84b naira for subsidy on rice farmers and another 60b naira for rice flood disaster victims under the Chairmanship of Mr President were dole out to these groups respectively”, The communique pointed out.

    It, however,  condemned the exclusion of its members ( men and women) from almost all the government economic empowerment palliatives such as Tradermoni, subsidy, International aids, grants logistics given to other Nigerians in addition to FMARD and CBN which gulp all the 15 percent budget allocation in Agriculture ministry to only crop farmers.

    Similarly, the conference according to the communique, condemned the involvement of the herdsmen association in the dirty and partisan politics of candidates endorsement as well as outright reckless abuses or condemnation of other candidates.

    As such, it described the visit to the presidential Villa and press conferences in Abuja to either support or curse other candidates as embarrassing while reminding the members that the two leading candidates are of the same tribe and faith.

    In a related development, the Gan Allah Fulani Development Association, GADFAN has thrown it’s weight behind restructuring of the country saying, ” in view of the massive problems that have overwhelmed the herders society in the country, we called for and endorsed the agenda of restructuring of the country as well as those that take it as cardinals of principles of their administration agenda.

    “We also welcome statement of Kaduna State governor, Mallam Nasir El-Rufai at the colloquium organised for Bisi Akande in Ibadan where he calls for the restructuring of the country.

    “It is the strong view of this meeting that the need to restructure the country is one of the greatest needs and challenges facing Fulani herdsmen in Nigeria today.

    “Today the problems of the herdsmen bother on their survival or extinction now more than before”, it pointed out.

  • Herdsmen attacks: 483,699 IDPs in camps

    The State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) said there are 483,699 Internally Displaced Persons ( IDPs) in various camps across Benue State.

    According to SEMA, the presence of  IDPs in various camps is as a result of herdsmen attacks on Benue communities, who are predominantly farmers.

    The Executive Secretary Hon. Emmanuel Shior said the number of IDPs has overwhelmed Benue State Government resulting to a huge humanitarian crisis.

    Reading a communique to newsmen after a two day symposium organised by SEMA in collaboration with Yavnielle Konsult tilled:  ‘Displaced ,traumatized  and neglected: A humanitarian crisis in Benue State, the Communique described as false and malicious attempt in some quarters to link herdsmen attacks and invasion of armed groups on Benue communities to the fall of Ghaddafi in Libya and the enactment of the Open Grazing Prohibition and Ranches Establishment Law, 2017 in Benue State.

    Read also: Row over death of two residents during customs, smugglers clash

    The communique further called on Civil Society Organization and the media to take more interest in the plight of the Internally Displaced Persons ( IDPs) who are facing untold hardship with a view of attracting relief for them.

    The Executive Secretary on his part told The Nation in an interview that the Federal Government through it’s relief agencies like NEMA  has neglected Benue IDPs who are facing hardship in various camps.

    He said out of the hundreds of IDPs, 138,212 are between the ages of 1- 9, and they face a bleak future as most of their parents have been killed by armed herdsmen.

  • Spectacle of the herdsmen and the herd (1)

    If there is a cautionary tale in Nigerian politics, it is in the tension between the politician and voter. Both schemers, their hostility echoes the proverbial race between the fox and tortoise. The fox, for all its brawn and trickery meets his match in the tortoise, whose cunning eventually wins the race. Thus goes the ethically-correct narrative.

    The fable, however, dissembles in the Nigerian wild. Ultimately, it manifests in reverse: picture the politician as the fox, the electorate as the tortoise, and the political arena as the wild. The fox beats the tortoise silly thus winning the race time and again.

    At the forthcoming general elections, the foxes will carry the day. It’s a given. The race has always been rigged in the interest of the foxes.

    Thus this year as all others, Nigeria reels at the borderline between republic and empire.

    The voters’ bent, however, will determine if the country would re-emerge as a republic of free people, from the 2019 elections. At the moment, the indices are clear, and all the aspects manifest to reinforce the actuality of the country as an oligarchic empire.

    The oligarchy that corrupted Nigeria’s politics, has been on song and its manipulative best en route the 2019 elections. The most affluent of the coven assign public offices by whim and lottery thus affirming the grim unreality of the electoral process.

    These formidable oligarchs, in a bid to perpetuate themselves in power, assign national tracts and public offices to their children, quoting phantom egalitarianism.

    To their stooges, they equally assign power, contracts and public offices with cautious benevolence and a disdainful smile.

    They expect their child and protégé to enter the power elite, infinitely beholden to them, often through a rigged process. Of course, the recipients of such tarnished benevolence accept to play ball.

    On assumption of office, they attempt a perfect interpretation of the script handed out to them, in a political high drama, in which they play deity and minion for applause, as the circumstances dictate.

    They will scorn the poesies of democracy, likewise the humaneness and progress they hitherto promised the electorate en route the polls.

    They will embrace moral nihilism and so doing, perpetuate a radical evil, sustainable by what Hedges calls the collaboration of a timid, confused electorate, a system of propaganda and mass media that offers strictly spectacle and amusement in lieu of news, and an educational system incapable of transmitting transcendent values and nurturing the capacity for individual conscience.

    Having ignored the societal play of forces operating beneath current political platforms, Nigeria and her people will once again, bear the curse of pitiless forms of governance through all tiers of government.

    Dissent would be outlawed and deemed inconsequential; and the shrill, occasional cries of the few who dare to protest, will resonate, like the spatter of spilt milk on sand dunes.

    Silence would be appreciated while duplicity gets celebrated across social strata, fragmented families, public and private institutions.

    It doesn’t matter who wins the election, the political complex, established and presided over by the oligarchy, will subsist but the electorate would remain compliant and endure the bestial system foisted on them, often turning impatiently, to seek a cosy place within its crannies.

    The prospective ruling class, like its predecessors, will set out to diminish the individual, and crush his or her capacity for moral choice, thus ushering him into a seemingly harmonious collective.

    This warped realism, has previously manifested through spells of bad governance and tokenism inflicted on long-suffering communities and states across the country.

    Each human fragment of the electorate knows what issues and inadequacies require urgent resolution but most would rather keep mute no matter their afflictions.

    The persistent lack of electricity supply, bad roads, substandard health care, insecurity, unfavourable business clime and an economy rigged in the interest of thievish bank chiefs, giant corporate thieves and political class, remain the bane of Nigeria’s micro and macro development since independence.

    Nonetheless the victors at the 2019 polls will maintain the status quo. Like previous governments, they will muster life-boat solutions as responses to the country’s towering adversities.

    Of the 36 state governors that would emerge from the forthcoming elections, for instance, a paltry five would preside fairly and manage the resources of their states judiciously. The remaining 31, would loot their states’ coffers to purchase outrageously priced tracts in Banana Island, and exclusive neighbourhoods abroad. They will connive with bank chiefs to pilfer their states’ treasuries and divert money meant to build schools, hospitals, and rehabilitate crucial infrastructure into their concubines’ and private accounts at home and abroad.

    Resistance to such maladies will be impossible because the electorate lacks the knowledge and introspection required to articulate and weaponise dissent at ballot time.

    Schools and religious houses won’t impart such enlightenment because the pedagogical and ascetic structures, that, should facilitate such awareness have collapsed around specialisations and prophesies designed to maintain the status quo.

    However, frantic idealists and erratic pundits will ornament politics and the media space, as they do en route the elections, with unrealistic fantasies of progress via monetised columns, television and internet soapboxes.

    Call them journalists, if you like. In truth, they are out to further confuse an already confounded electorate, and so doing, persuade all to reason and speak as a harmonious herd.

    The actual controllers of the herd, however, are the political, business class in the shades: those who own and control the press. The press is relegated to the lower rung, where it plays herdsman, driving the citizenry, like cattle, through thickets of sentiments and outrageous bigotries, on to their principals’ chosen paths.

    Thus Nigeria will emerge from the polls, to trudge and dissemble in familiar hardship and chaos, because the press has lost its ethical, rhetorical rhythm. This can be rectified, however.

     

    • To be continued…
  • Suspected herdsmen kill farmer in Benue community

    Gunmen suspected to be herdsmen have killed a farmer, Iornongu Mwuaga, at Tombo Ward of Tse-Orbaki village in Logo Local Government Area of Benue State.

    Three other persons were declared missing.

    The chairman of the local government, Richard Nyajo, accused herdsmen of launching the attack.

    He said the herdsmen were freely grazing on farmlands and destroying crops.

    A brother to the deceased, Mr Terkula Mbanyi, who is also a former deputy chairman of the local government, told reporters that herdsmen with rifles and cattle surrounded their farmlands while they were working.

    Mbanyi, a worker at Benue State Scholarship Board in Makurdi, said: “The armed herdsmen shot at those working on the farm. In the ensuing melee, one person was killed and two others got missing.”

    Read also: Sunshine Stars 80% ready, says Dogo

    The traditional ruler of Tombo Ward, Chief Enoch Ikyumen, told The Nation on phone that the body of farmer had been deposited at Ayilamo town hospital and the matter reported to the local government chairman.

    There has been an increase in herdsmen attacks on farmers in Tse-Dzungwe, Anawah and Tse Ibor villages, following the return of armed herders with cattle.

    The herdsmen were said to have grazed on unharvested farmlands and destroyed crops unchallenged.

    Police spokesman Moses Yamu, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), said he had not received the report last night.

    Governor Samuel Ortom kick-started his re-election campaign in Logo local Government area on the day herdsmen launched attacks on the community’s residents.

  • Awaiting death: Benue communities crippled by fears of fresh herdsmen attacks …as dry season sets in

    Sometime around this time last year, many communities in Agatu, Guma and Logo local government areas of Benue State suffered mindless attacks in the hands of murderous gunmen suspected to be herdsmen who  killed the residents in their numbers, destroyed their victims’ farms, residential buildings and innocent children’s  school buildings comprising furniture and books.  One year after the sad incident, INNOCENT DURU  visited the volatile communities to gauge the mood of the people, and reports that many of them are apprehensive that the ugly incident could  rear its head again, especially as the floods that obstructed the movement of the herdsmen into their communities have dried up.

     

    Madam Memunat Musa, a 65- year- old, had everything going very well for her until early last year, January to be specific, when suspected herdsmen invaded her community in Okokolo area of Agatu Local Government  and shattered her joy.

    During the attack, Memunat had her husband and one of her sons cruelly murdered, butchered and set ablaze by the assailants, who also set their house on fire.

    The murder of her hubby, son and other kinsmen last year and previous attacks on the communities, according to the slim built dark-complexioned woman, occurred during the dry season when the floods that blocked the path through which the herdsmen invaded the community had dried.

    Sitting dolefully under a tree beside her late husband’s burnt house and fragilely removing maize grains from the cobs, Memunat said  she dreads dry season because it reminds her of  the  sad incident last year and also causes her  concerns about her own safety and that of her people.

    “My son, the season of killings has come. The time of bloodshed  and endless mourning is here. I am talking  about the dry season that is here because it is the period the herdsmen always enter our communities to wreak havoc.  I was a victim of their unholy activities last year.

    “My husband was killed and burnt, while my son was butchered like an animal. While I have not yet overcome the grief that comes with the  horrendous murder of my husband and one of my sons, I am worried about my fate and that of my kinsmen. There is always a kind of explosion in my head each time I think about this,” the beleaguered woman, speaking through an interpreter, said in emotion-laden voice.

    Explaining the crucial role that rains play in saving the area from the assailants, Memunat said: “We have security operatives in some parts of the community, but the rainy season also helps in securing our lives. The floods caused by heavy rains help us a great deal to prevent the attackers from having access to the communities because they block the route from which they enter here. Now that the dry season is here, the roads would be very free now for the herdsmen to come in.

    “I am psychologically disturbed right now because from every indication, the crisis is not yet over. We have fears that the attackers could easily invade our communities and kill us now that the dry season is here. Any strange sound around me makes my heart to skip as I often think it is the herdsmen that are coming to attack us again.”

    The remark by Memunat that the route through which the herdsmen enter the community was just behind the house sparked anxiety in this reporter, who instantly became concerned about his own safety too. Every unusual movement from the said route heightened the fear. The noise of chirpping insects, whistling breeze and debilitating cries of birds with pointed mouth combined to give the kind of sound effect used in many Nollywood movies to signal that danger is lurking.

    It was like being between the devil and deep blue sea. The reporter’s mind ceaselessly quaked as he expressed concern  about what would happen to his wife and children should the enemies suddenly strike.  Going back would mean not getting the report done and going forward would mean getting deeper into danger. But the decision to brave the odds became stronger and there was no going back as far as getting  the assignment done was concerned.

    Not a single security man was seen in all the communities in  Agatu visited by this reporter. The only area where military presence wasfelt at RCM Primary School, Okokolo where sand bags were heaped in a corner of the school but no single officer was sighted in the area.  The community members, however, said soldiers were always around but that they were not on ground during the reporter’s visit.

    Recalling how the herdsmen struck last  year, Memunat said: “My late husband built this house, which comprised eight rooms and a parlour. But the herdsmen set it ablaze when they attacked us last year. We were inside the house when they came shooting. Immediately we heard the gunshots, we started running for our dear lives but my husband wasn’t lucky enough to escape. The killer herdsmen caught up with him, killed and burnt him. Like I said earlier, the same fate befell one of my sons who was also killed and butchered by the herdsmen.

    “When we fled into the bush, we had nothing to eat for several days except mangoes because it was the dry season. The attack was so sudden that we couldn’t pick anything out of the house. Everything we had was burnt when the house was set ablaze. After leaving the bush, we fled to Makurdi where my late husband built another house and stayed there for about three months before coming back here. Coming back here, we only managed to erect one room since we don’t have money to renovate the entire building. It is in that one room apartment that two other wives of my late husband and I are putting up.”

    Aside from the adults, the young ones, especially those whose fathers were cruelly killed, also expressed  uncertainty over their safety.

    Twelve-year-old  Rachael Onumiya, a pupil of Government Junior Secondary School, was one of such children. Last year, her father, a teacher, was murdered by the herdsmen about the same time Memunat’s husband and son were killed. “In spite of  having security men who come around, we are all still living in fears, especially now that dry season has come. This is the time they attack us more because the floods that used to obstruct their movement into our communities are fast drying up,” the young girl said.

    Narrating how Her father was killed, she said: “He was teaching in the school when the herdsmen attacked and  killed him.  He was not as lucky as some of his colleagues who escaped. He was also fleeing from the attackers who caught up with him and murdered him in cold blood.  I ran away when the killers came to the community.

    “ The moment we heard that they were approaching, we all ran away. They burnt our houses  and killed many people, especially the old and the younger  ones who could not run very fast.”

    Rachael’s colleagues,  Patient Tanko and Regina Francis, also lost their fathers last year during the attacks. Like every other member of the community, the dry season has become a nightmare for the children.

    “We don’t sleep at night because if the herdsmen should come around that time, one may not be able to get up on time to escape. It is possible for one to suddenly wake up and mistakenly run in the direction of the killers. We are also always at alert during the day because there is no specific time the herdsmen come. They strike anytime and we are constantly watching out for them because we are in a war situation. This affects us in every area of life because all we know and see is trouble, sorrow and anxiety,” Patient said.

    Also speaking, Regina said: “Everybody runs when trouble comes. Nobody hardly remembers anybody.  Nobody cares how the kids, disabled and  aged people would   escape. Often times, this set of people are the first to be hacked down or shot dead by the murderers.  We are in that season and anxiety is everywhere.”

    In Odugbehon, Ugboju, and other Agatu communities  ravaged by the herdsmen’s attacks, disturbing sights of burnt and vandalised buildings litered the areas.

    “This is the condition we have found ourselves and yet danger is not completely averted. We have enjoyed relative peace all this while, but we are all aware that the time to be at alert during the day and  keep vigil all night is here. This dry season is the time the herdsmen come to shed the blood of our people.  When they came last year and early this year (20I8), they turned our land to a blood field.

    “Where they were initially resisted, they returned and cut children into two using their deadly sword. They are always carrying large charms.  They often start their satanic act by setting the buildings on fire. Those who are sleeping and can’t escape  would get burnt. As the fire is blazingly burning, they would be shooting indiscriminately”, Gabriel,  a resident of Ugboju, said.

    While appreciating the efforts of security men in curbing the rampaging herdsmen, Abu, a  member of Odugbehon community, said: “The security operatives are trying but they are also not spared by the herdsmen. Here in Agatu, they killed a top military officer and took his private part away. That is another  evil that they do after killing people. We can’t abandon our land for them no matter what happens. We  are convinced that we would have the last laugh.”

     

    War-like situation in Logo  LGA

    The mood in Logo Local Government, the home of Benue former governor, Gabriel Suswan, was like a war zone during the visit. The journey to the area, which requires crossing the massive  Buruku River by both vehicles and passengers coming from Gboko and other parts of the state on canoe, was a pointer to what awaited our correspondent in the tension-filled  area. Seeing the river and learning  that it had claimed many lives in the past,  terror seized the reporter,who helplessly wondered  what prompted him to embark on the perilous assignment.  Shortly after he left the area, 40 people crossing the expansive river reportedly perished  in it.

    Getting to different parts of the local government, no fewer than 200 security officers  stood at  strategic points to repel  the rampaging herdsmen.  One of the  traditional rulers  in the area, HRH, Dr Enoch Ikyumen, who is in charge of Ipusu Chiefdom, who also sees to the security of the area, gave the statistics  of the various officers thus:   “We have 25 army officers of the 73 Battalion mounting  guard  at Anyibe area. Thirty-three mobile policemen are at Ayilamo; 100 officers  are positioned at Tisenghen; 20 military officers and 65 Special Force  officials are at Ayiin. A set of 33 mobile men are at Chembe and another 65 Special Force are at  Gov.”

    Because of the tense atmosphere, our correspondent’s guides in the area refused to take him round fearing that the trip could  be calamitous. One of them eventually agreed on the condition  that he would not go beyond  the less  volatile  zones.

    An ugly development occurred when our correspondent left Anyiin community for Ayilamo.  Few minutes after leaving Anyiin, the head of security matters in the area, Jerry, who was with our correspondent, got a call that the herdsmen were already in Anyiin, the community that this reporter left shortly. Jerry, who also coordinates the various security teams, immediately made calls to the various security commanders.

    “I have made calls to the commanders, who would immediately mobilise to dislodge the herdsmen. You would soon be hearing the sound of gunshots now. If you had come sometime last month, we wouldn’t have been able to pass through some of the places we passed through because the herdsmen wreaked havoc there. You don’t have to worry about going back through the troubled area,” Jerry said to allay our man’s fears.

     

     Residents’ fears justified by recent killings

    The fears expressed by the residents appeared  justified considering the pockets of fresh  attacks and murder of farmers in different parts of the local government last week and the preceding week.

    Shortly before the Christmas celebration, one of such attacks was recorded at Tse Ibor, Tombo Ward,  where the herders allegedly killed some  farmers on their farms and also set valuables, including motorcycles, ablaze.

    One of the victims, Miahaga Ulyo, was said to have  gone to package  the rice he harvested  and planned to convey it to Ayilamo when he was attacked and murdered in the farm.

    “We can’t still sleep with our two eyes closed despite the presence of security men everywhere. What the herdsmen do now is to go to farms to attack people.  The dry season is here and they have started their heinous act again. We can’t go to farms to harvest our produce because there is no certainty that they would not come and kill somebody there. Able-bodied men and women are idle and hungry because of the fear of herdsmen, ”Benjamin, a resident said.

    When this reporter visited the IDP camp at Ayilamo, some of the displaced persons said there is still no respite for them even though there are armed security men around.

    “The herdsmen have never stopped coming to attack us  and that has always resulted in heavy shoot out between them and  security men. We always hear sounds of gunshot down the camp and the moment it becomes too intense, all of us would begin to run away to no definite destination. It does not matter whether it is in the dead of the night or during the day, we would just be running.

    “In the course of scampering to safety, parents would forget their children and aged people would be left behind. Nobody even remembers pregnant women in that situation. It is always a race for survival where the strong survive and the weak abandoned to their own fate,” one of the inmates said.

    Recalling how the herdsmen sacked  his community during one of the previous attacks, HRH Dr. Enoch Ikyumen, said: “ It took the herdsmen a very shot time to burn down the whole  village. They burnt my new buildings, one Hilux van and one salon Peugeot car.They killed many people during those attacks. It was too bloody.”

     

    Anxiety in Guma, incumbent Governor Ortom’s local government 

    Guma, the local government area where  the incumbent governor, Samuel Ortom, comes from, is another part of the state that has been crippled by the herdsmen’s attacks. Many public schools in the area have been converted to IDP camps after the inmates were forced to quit their  homes because of the attacks.

    About 72 persons were murdered in the area around this time last year. Since then, life has never been the same for the residents.

    A resident of Uikpan, a community in the local government, who gave his name simply as Isaac,  said. “There is still tension everywhere as you can see. If  you move down this area to places like Tse Orkpen, Atongo,  Ortserga, Haaga, Chia, Akema, Baar, Tor Uke, Gawan, Tse Umande, you will  see that people are no more living there because of the herdsmen.

    “Some of the herdsmen are still there brandishing guns. How can you go and farm or live in that kind of place? We that are even here are still not safe not to talk of people in that environment? Herdsmen killed many people here too. This is the period (the season) they always strike. Unfortunately for us, we don’t have the means to fight back. We are always at their mercy anytime they come to attack.”

    Another resident, who identified herself simply as  Blessing, said: “We have not known peace since the herdsmen started attacking our communities. When it is night,  you can’t be certain that everybody will be alive the following morning. An attack can happen in the night and many will be murdered. We talk of wasting of human lives here like the killing of cockroaches. Now that the floods caused by rain have stopped, our fears are that floods of blood shed by herdsmen may be the next thing that we might be seeing.”

     

     Public education suffers setback

    Aside from crippling commercial and social activities, the herdsmen’s attacks have also caused serious setback to academic activities in the troubled areas as most of the public schools were vandalised during the attacks.

    During the trip to Guma, a good number of the children were found to have taken to farming  after being out of school for close to three years in the last four years.

    One of the parents, Raymond Kinda, said: “The future of our kids is very bleak. Our prayer is that our children should be better than us but how would this be possible when they don’t have the opportunity of completing ordinary primary school? There is no parent that would be happy that the children have at this tender age dropped out of school for no fault of theirs and engaging  in farming and playing around every day.

    “The government at all levels should do something urgent to restore peace to our communities, rebuild the schools and provide the enabling environment for education and other activities to thrive again.”

    At Agatu, pupils in most of the public schools were found learning under trees.

    The head of Odugbehon community in Agatu, Bawa Haruna,  said:  “As parents we are not happy because our children  are being denied  their rights to quality education. The state in which the pupils are learning is not conducive. We are only encouraging  them to go to school because any day wasted cannot be regained.”

    The situation appeared to be worse at Logo where the inhuman activities of the herders have led to the closure of many schools.  “We are in a war situation. We are not different from the people living in Liberia or Congo when those countries were gripped by civil wars.  We are always on the alert because the herdsmen can invade the community anytime without minding the presence of security operatives in the community. The moment we observe that danger is lurking, we would dismiss the pupils and also run away,” a teacher of Tombo  Community Secondary School, who craved anonymity on the ground of being a civil servant, said.

    The coordinator of the Benue chapter of Civil Society Action  Coalition on Education  for All, Rosemary Hua , said   “Some of them (pupils) have lost interest in schooling. How to bring them back now is another issue.  Some of the female children have got married and some others have taken to prostitution.  Some do menial jobs to get money  and some others have been trafficked.  Some of the adolescents girls  are being used as sex machines. Those who are around 17 years old are worst affected.”

    The chairman of the Benue State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB), Paul Tachin, however, said the state is doing its best in constructing new buildings and renovating old ones.

    “We have been working but the effort is still lesser than what it is supposed to be,” Mr. Tachin said. “Some of the buildings we recently built or renovated  were destroyed again.  We need external intervention to help us overcome our challenge. We have 2, 723  schools across the state. Some are in difficult terrains but contractors are working on them.”

    No cause for alarm – Joint Task Force spokesman

    The spokesman of Operation Whirl Stroke, a joint task force maintaining security in the troubled areas and other parts of the state, Major General Adeyemi Yekini, has allayed the fears of the people. He said: “I understand the fears of the people. Anybody who saw what happened in Benue State in the past would be afraid.  I can assure you that Operation Whirl Stroke is on top of the situation.  The people don’t have to be afraid of anything.

    “We are patrolling the nooks and crannies of Benue State for 24 hours every day.  Those who are having fears should stop exercising fears.  If they have any problems, they have our number and can call us.  The situation has improved and can only get better.  This 2019, there would be zero tolerance for insecurity.”

     

  • Herdsmen set Ortom’s rice farm ablaze

    Over 20,000 hectares of rice farm belonging to Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom have been set ablaze by suspected herdsmen in Tse-Adorogo, Mbabeagh, Nzorov, Guma Local Government Area.

    In a telephone interview with The Nation, the governor said he had not harvested his rice farm, which is incorporated under Oracle Business Limited, before the suspected herdsmen set it ablaze.

    Orace Farms, which started when the governor was the Chairman of Guma Local Government Area, is into massive rice and soybeans cultivation.

    It was learnt that this was the fourth time Ortom’s farms had been attacked.

    When he was Minster of State in former President Goodluck Jonathan’s administration, suspected herdsmen attacked his Oracle Farm on Naka Road at gunpoint and stole 30 cows.

    The herdsmen struck again in 2014 at his Tse- Adorogo, Mbabeagh country home and set his rice farm and house ablaze.

    When he became governor in 2015, herdsmen again set ablaze his rice farm in 2016 and 2017.

    The governor expressed concern that herdsmen again destroyed crops in the state.

    He reiterated his called for ranching of animals, saying there is no more land for anyone to feed their cattle in the name of grazing.

    “I said ranching is the international best practice for animal husbandry. But if anyone has an alternative method, let him bring it to the table,” he said.

    Ortom urged youths not to take the law into their hands but report to security agencies if any cattle encroached on farm lands in any part of the state.

    The governor told The Nation that he would officially visit the rice farm tomorrow to assess the damage done to it.

  • ‘How herdsmen killed my husband on Christmas eve’

    FOR Mrs. Mngohol Iorwuese, 32-year-old mother of six, it was a sad Yuletide as her husband and family’s breadwinner, Mr. Myaga Iorwuese, was ambushed and brutally killed by suspected herdsmen on his way to the farm.

    Narrating the unfortunate incident in an exclusive interview with The Nation at his Anawah village in Gaambetiev Logo Local Government Area, Mrs. Mngohol, said her late husband went to the farm on that fateful day with a promise to return home and provide money to buy things to celebrate Christmas the following day.

    She told The Nation that there was nothing to suggest that her husband was embarking on a journey of no return or that it would be the last time they would be seeing.

    The distraught widow, who wept as she fielded questions from the reporter, recalled that the entire village had come under heavy attacks from January 1 until August when the attacks abated and everyone returned to their farms.

    “Since August, the killings slowed down and we went into serious farming. So on the Christmas eve, my husband went to the farm with confidence that he would harvest and return on time to prepare for Christmas,” Mrs. Iorwuese said.

    She said she discovered that while she was preparing food for Christmas some of her family members, surrounded her, looking sorrowful. She became worried and asked them what had happened, and one of the family members told her that her husband had been shot dead in an ambush by suspected herdsmen.

    Mrs. Iorwuese said her husband was shot in the back and the bullets pierced through his stomach, killing him on the spot.

    She lamented that her husband was brutally killed, leaving six children for her to cater for.

    “All I want is justice. Let those who killed my husband be brought to justice so that his soul can rest in peace,” she said.

    Meanwhile most inhabitants of Chembe, Tombo ward and adjoining towns and villages have fled their homes following the return of herdsmen with their cattle.

    A community leader in Chembe town, Chief Anawah Joseph, said that herdsmen armed with sophisticated weapons have taken over almost all the settlements and destroying yet to be harvested crops.

    Chief Anawah, ex-media aide to Governor Gabriel Suswam, said if nothing is done by security the entire community faces imminent famine as all their crops were being destroyed by cattle.

    The spokesman of Benue State Police Command said the matter was yet to be reported to the police.