Tag: hunters

  • Bush meat hunters risk 10-year jail term in Oyo

    Bush meat hunters risk 10-year jail term in Oyo

    The Nigerian Conservation Federation (NCF) has warned that anyone found guilty of exploitation and commercial hunting of wild animals risked 10-year imprisonment with an option of N1million fine or both.
    Its Director-General Mr Adeniyi Karunwi, gave the warning in Ibadan at a workshop organised by the Pangolins Conservation Working Group, Nigeria.
    The workshop organised in collaboration with the National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA) in the South West Zone and entitled “Speak Up for Pangolins” was in commemoration of the 2017 World Pangolins Day.
    “Our environment is in danger; a lot of wild animals like pangolins are at the risk of going into extinction and there is over-exploitation of these animals.
    “People need to know that exploitation and commercialisation of wildlife identified under Schedule 1 of the Endangered Species Amendment Act is a criminal offence that attracts a 10-year jail term,” Karunwi said.
    According to him, conservation of wildlife is important in order to promote ecological tourism.
    On her part, Dr Olajumoke Morenikeji, Coordinator, Pangolin Conservation Working Group, said that pangolins risked going into extinction because they were the most illegally hunted and traded mammals.
    Morenikeji, who is an Environmental Biologist, said that pangolins were illegally traded for their scales, meat and body parts which were in high demand in Asia, especially in China and Vietnam.
    “Pangolins’ meat is considered a delicacy, while their scales are used in traditional medicine and folk remedies to treat a range of ailments.
    “There is insatiable demand for pangolin scales, especially in China where they are used for traditional medicines.
    “There is a belief that the scales has curative properties like keratin and can be used to treat skin diseases.
    “There is also the claim that its liver, throat and toes can successfully treat asthma, goitre, elephantiasis and impotence,” she said.
    She, however, said that the claims of the traditional medicine practitioners were yet to be scientifically evaluated.
    “If pangolins go into extinction before research can be done, the human race would have lost a lot of benefits.
    “The issue of pangolin is a shame to the country for a recently seized shipment in China contained kilograms of pangolin scales which totalled 7,200 pangolins got from Nigeria.
    “We are appealing to hunters to stop the exploitation and trafficking of these animals.
    “Pangolins, like all animals going to extinction, serve as buffer for human beings. If we remove all the buffers in the ecosystem, one day, the human race will also go into extinction.
    “We need a grassroots approach to education and awareness on the importance of pangolin conservation to the ecosystem; humanity should be the guardian of pangolins, not the predator,” Morenikeji said.
    NESREA Southwest Zonal Director Mr Adeleke Ajani, said pangolins were important in the maintenance of ecological balance.
    “Pangolins need to be sustained because they are very important in the ecosystem; they also serve as biological pest control,” Ajani said.
    “They are very voracious ant eaters; one pangolin can eat 70 million insects, including pests in a year. This means if you remove all of them you are calling for trouble,” he said.

    Describing their sustainability as crucial, Ajani said that pangolins were peculiar animals which mates only once in a year and gives birth to just a single young one.

    “Pangolins are very vulnerable creatures which cannot breed in captivity; they only breed well in their natural environment.

    “We need to go into research as well
    as get the actual inventory of these animals in the wild and see possible means of domesticating them,” he said.

  • Spiritual, moral lives of hunters

    Spiritual, moral lives of hunters

    Hunting has always been regarded as pastime for lazy men who have no serious means of livelihood. It is also regarded as vocation for those who have no regard for the mores of the land and, therefore, can indulge in any unwholesome activity. But hunters have refuted these views, saying they are an organised and law-abiding group guided by some ethical rules. BISI OLADELE writes that the joy and satisfaction hunters derive from the game are not as a result of wealth but as a result of members of the hunting profession upholding pristine and old-time values of honesty, respect for Ogun the god of iron and self-worth.

    Hunting has always been  an important aspect of life in rural communities. In the past, hunting provided the main source of animal protein and professional hunters occupied a highly respected position in the society. Even in modern times, some hunters depend almost entirely on hunting and gathering to obtain essential protein and cash income, while many others supplement their livelihood considerably by hunting.

    Hunting with guns and bows is predominantly a male activity.

    This age-long practice is still a hobby or better still, a source of income for most people living at the grassroots in Yoruba land.

    In the circumstances, local hunters are enjoying their world across communities in the Southwest region. The joy and satisfaction they derive therefrom are not as a result of wealth but as a result of members of the hunting profession upholding pristine and old-time values of honesty, respect for Ogun, the god of iron and self-contentment with the little they have.

    Against expectations, hunting, an age-long profession, is attracting more youths as they seek more ways of earning additional income and involvement in game-like activities. But the career is guided by strict rules that forbid members from allowing modernity to destroy their cherished custom.

    Aside individual hunting, group hunting has become regular, and used to celebrate popular festivals such as Christmas, New Year, Sallah and other traditional festivities.

    Unknown to many, hunting in modern time is highly regulated, not only by the government or society but by the association of hunters. The rules guiding joining and remaining a member are generated from inherited values summarised in the concept of omoluabi.

     

    Hunting as a vocation

    The vocation is not just about hunting down animals in the bush. It is learnt for a period of time before one begins practising. The learning process also includes accepting the leading of Ogun, the god believed to be in charge of anything that has to do with iron, in Yoruba land, how to participate in group hunting and how to protect oneself with charms.

    According to Mr Rahman Adeyemo, for a hunter of over 15 years’ experience, hunting is a serious business that does not accommodate people with shady characters. Only honest, committed and highly spiritual people survive in the profession.

    Adeyemo, who is the Vice-Secretary, Hunters’ Association, Badeku, Ibadan branch, said he inherited hunting as a vocation from his father.

    He posited that the profession is profitable if carried out with sincerity.

     

    Hunting is spiritual

     

    Adeyemo underscored the spirituality of the profession by explaining that the entire hunting activity is based on the faith and reliance on Ogun. He added that the fear of God and Ogun paves way for success in the vocation.

    “Handling guns makes one to fear God and Ogun. Then one prays Ogun to make animals whose time to die has come to cross one’s path as one goes hunting. We pray in the name of Ogun. We pray against killing humankind while hunting. Without the prayers, one may find oneself wandering in the bush throughout the day or night without killing any animal. One may shoot an animal and it still escapes.

    “One may even get injured while roaming the bush. But once one prays, one does not trouble oneself if one is unable to get animals into one’s kitty. We believe that is the way Ogun wants it for that day.

    When we shoot animals and they refuse to die, we believe their appointment with death is not sealed. When we return to the village, we still thank Ogun for bringing us back safely,” Adeyemo said.

    He said any hunter who has an unresolved issue with a fellow hunter settles the issue before embarking on fresh hunting expedition. If two hunters have unresolved issues, other members intervene to resolve the issues before joining them for group hunting. If the differences are irreconcilable, both of them are prevented from participating in the group hunting exercise.

    If they are allowed, Adeyemo said, the group will end up without killing any animal throughout that day.

    When Ogun is unhappy with any hunter, Adeyemo said, such person would be unable to get animals during hunting and could sustain injuries regularly, among other discomfitures.

    However, their belief in God and Ogun does not prevent them from practising modern religions such as Christianity and Islam. He said many of their members belong to those religions.

     

    Training

     

    Explaining further, the State Secretary of the association, Mr Ismaila Saka, told Southwest Report that hunting is not all about competence in handling the gun.

    According to him, learning how to hunt animals takes minimum of six months. Apprentices begin with how to hunt, using dogs.

    He pointed out that some never mastered how to shoot, hence remain with dogs. Some still specialise on hunting with traps, including wire traps.

    After mastering the use of dogs and traps, apprentices are allowed to participate in group hunting. After group hunting, animals killed are cut into equal pieces for every participant.

    In group hunting, Saka further explained that only those competent in shooting are allowed to carry guns. Others go with dogs to chase out animals from the bush.

    This they do by combing the bushes. During this process, the hunters encircle a patch of vegetation known to harbour animals and work towards the centre beating and slashing the bushes.

    Signs used to determine whether or not a patch of vegetation is likely to contain animals include presence of droppings and food remains. The method is popular for hunting rodents, especially the grass cutter. Animals emerging from the bushes during the combing are either chased and caught by dogs or killed with clubs and cutlasses.

    For the spiritual aspect, apprentices also learn how to make charms to protect themselves against all forms of attack.

    “Professional hunters depend on their skills, experience; knowledge of the behaviour of wild animals as well as a thorough knowledge of the forest within which they operate. However, hunters may also adopt a number of strategies involving the use of “magic”, which are believed to either increase hunting success or offer protection for the hunter,” Saka added.

    Four such strategies that are well known and have widespread use, even though their effectiveness has not been studied are identified. They are:

    Use of charms: A hunter may wear a ring on his finger or toe, a bracelet, a necklace or a talisman round his neck or a waistband around his waist, which is believed to improve hunting success by acting as a charm which draws animals towards the hunter.

    Magic of transformation: This is another form of magical power which is supposed to confer the ability for a hunter to transform into an animal e.g., a hunter may transform into, say a bushbuck. This then increases the chances of individuals of the same species coming closer to the hunter, which greatly improves the hunting success.

    Power of invisibility: This is a “magical” power which makes a hunter invisible to a wild animal and the hunter is therefore able to approach the animal without being detected and is able to shoot at close range; this may involve a magical preparation which the hunter carries around and places on his head at the appropriate time.

    Disappearance powers: This form of magic is aimed at protecting the hunter. It normally involves a long process of rituals comprising periods of confinement, bathing in a series of herbal preparations and living on a prescribed diet.

    After the initiation, the hunter may or may not be given a magical band which he wears. It is more common among old big game hunters. The process is believed to confer on the hunter the ability to disappear in the face of danger. For instance, if a hunter is faced with a charging lion or bush dog, he might draw on such powers and disappear from the scene. The magic is invoked as soon as the hunter panics or when the hunter utters a word or a phrase.

     

    The don’ts

     

    A hunter is not allowed to look into the face of another hunter’s wife. If he does, Saka said he is adjudged to have committed adultery.

    “If you want to assist a fellow hunter’s wife to lift a load onto her head, you must not face her directly. Otherwise, you are adjudged to commit adultery with her. If a fellow hunter’s wife stands up from a seat, you are not allowed to sit on that chair. Otherwise, you have committed adultery. If you meet an animal struggling to survive on a trap set by another hunter, you will kill the animal and leave a sign there to show that a hunter helped kill the animal. You must not take the animal home; whoever does that, will be punished severely by Ogun. A hunter must not snatch another hunter’s wife,” he said.

     

    Profitability

     

    In spite of the excitement derived from hunting, the profession, they said, is not self-sustaining economically.

    Adeyemo said: “As interesting as hunting is, our members have to combine farming with it. Many others are into other vocations while some take up security jobs in the city.”

    He recalled that the situation was the same during his father’s time.

     

    Prospect

     

    Against expectation, many young men are going into hunting. Adeyemo said the 50-member association in Badeku village is made up of virtually youths. He said only two members are elderly people.

    But for the strict requirements aspiring members must meet before they are admitted as members, Saka said the association would have had more members.

    “We watch and scrutinise them thoroughly before finally admitting them because Ogun does not want dishonesty and indiscipline.

     

    Ogun Festivals

     

    Annual Ogun Festivals are still celebrated with items used from time immemorial. They include palm wine, roasted yam, plantain, salt, honey, red oil, sugarcane, beans, fried maize and killing of dogs.

    During the annual Ogun Festivals, members embark on group hunting and cook the meat for everyone to enjoy together. They can also share fresh meat for individuals to cook and enjoy at their various homes.

    Hunters believe animals will always exist in the bush. They don’t believe in possible extinction of any animal.

     

    Hunting materials

     

    Adeyemo and Saka revealed that hunters’ implements would include a gun, a small bag (often made out of animal skin) containing a supply of gun powder and cartridges, a cutlass or heavy knife and in the case of night hunting, also a powerful lamp which is carried on the forehead.

    The hunting lamp is a special device made from brass with a polished reflector and contains carbide. The reflection of the lamp in the eyes of the wild animal enables the hunter to spot the animals. The strong light has the effect of dazzling the animals and the hunter is therefore able to approach them and shoot at close range.

    They, however, regretted that imported hunting materials are now very expensive, a situation that has forced local producers to come up with cheaper alternatives.

    For instance, they now use torch instead of imported hunting lamps.

     

     

  • Police/hunters clash: Farmers’ society disown attackers

    Nigeria’s farmers’ group, Agbekoya Farmers Society, has disowned the hoodlums who attacked policemen at Ogbere Onilanta in Ona-Ara Local Government of Oyo State.

    Rising from its National Executive Council, the group’s National Publicity Secretary, Olatunji Bandele, said it was sad miscreants could hide under the society to commit such a criminal act.

    He said the meeting, which was attended by the President-General, Kamorudeen Okikiola, Dr. Ogunlana Adegbenro, General Secretary Salawu Ajibola, treasurer and others frowned at the development.

    Bandele said these miscreants and hoodlums were not registered members of the society, “among them were some bad eggs dismissed from Agbekoya Farmers’ Society”.

    The statement reads: “These people are miscreants and hoodlums, who are not registered members of Agbekoya Farmers’ Society and who have teamed up with some bad eggs who were dismissed from our society.

    “These people were reported to the inspector general of Police through a petition dated September 30, 2015, and copied to the Director-General, Department of State Security, assistant inspector general of Police, Zone II, Osogbo, and commissioner of Police of Oyo State.

    “In view of this, any group of people or criminals impersonating and hiding under the name of Agbekoya to perpetuate crimes should be dealt with accordingly”.

  • ‘We mistook the kidnappers for hunters’

    ‘We mistook the kidnappers for hunters’

    EMOTIONS were rife yesterday at Lagos State Model Junior/ Secondary School, Igbonla, a suburb of Epe area of the state where gunmen kidnapped four pupils, a teacher and the junior secondary school principal in the early hours of Thursday.

    The embattled community continued to play host to hordes of visitors, especially parents who stormed the school to ascertain that their children were not among those kidnapped.

    Some of the parents started betraying emotions before they even got to the gate of the school. Tension started building when the beleaguered parents were prevented from going in to see their children by the armed vigilante men who said they were acting on orders from above.

    They asked the parents to come back today (Saturday), which is the visiting day.

    Enraged by the development, the parents engaged the security men in a shouting match, asking why they would be prevented from seeing their wards after the incident that sent shivers down their spine.

    “I have two children here and you are telling me that I can’t go in to see them. Do you have children at all? Are you a parent? If you are a parent, you will not say what you are saying,” one of the parents angrily said.

    When cornered by our correspondent, he said: “I came all the way from Lagos to see my children after hearing about that shocking incident and they are telling me to come back tomorrow.  How possible is that when I have not seen or heard from my children? This is disheartening because I don’t know the condition of my children.”

    Also speaking, a parent who simply identified himself as Ben, expressed disappointment about the decision to prevent them from seeing their children.

    “How on earth would anybody prevent me from seeing my son after that kind of incident? I was urinating on my body when I heard about the incident and couldn’t even sleep all the night. I hit the road very early to come and see my children and somebody is saying no. I will bite somebody here because my mind can’t be at rest until I have seen my child.”

    One of the administrative staff of the school who did not want her name in print described the experience as unforgettable.

    She said: “I was in the hostel preparing what the students would eat when we started hearing strange gun shots.  When I hear d the gunshots, I knew those shots were not the regular hunter’s gunshots.  Immediately, my colleagues and I stepped out to see what was happening. Before we took three steps, we saw a heavily armed man that was hooded. Instantly, we developed goose pimples all over our bodies and started running inside the bush.

    “Before we knew it, students joined us in the race.  We used our bodies to crush the thick bush. If you see the place, you will think it was cutlass that they used to cut it. It wasn’t cutlass, we used our heads, legs and hands to bring down the bush. We jumped, dived and did everything possible to run out of danger.

    “The children, who are mostly in junior schools started crying. I quickly prevailed on them to keep quiet to avoid giving us out. Instead, I said they should be praying in their different languages and religions.  After some time, we saw some teachers coming towards us. They said the gunmen had left and asked us to come out. We quickly went and made food for the students and later knew that some people were kidnapped by the gunmen.  This is the first time this kind of incident would happen since the school was established in 1988.”

    A resident of a building beside the school, who identified herself as Bunmi Pekun, was yet to come to terms with the strange development in the community. She said she was taking her children to school when the incident occurred.

    The terror-stricken woman narrated her experience thus: “I was taking my children to school that Thursday morning when we started hearing gunshots with some people shouting war, war.  I quickly ran back home with the children thinking that it was Boko Haram members that invaded the community. Before I knew what was happening, students from the school started running into our house crying and totally devastated.  It was the students that told us what exactly happened.

    “The gunmen, from what we heard, were already lurking around the community before they carried out the attack. It was immediately the junior and senior school principals stepped their feet inside the school that they began their operations.  They were asking the students to show them the child of a commissioner in the school.  They attacked and cut the head of a female staff member with cutlass and asked her to lead them to the principal. When they got to the junior school, he pleaded that they should release the children and take him away. But the plea fell on their deaf ears as they took him away with the students.

    “They also beat up the senior school principal. They asked him to prostrate and beat him very well. I didn’t allow my children to go to school because what they experienced yesterday was scary. No sane parent would allow the children to go to school after the ugly experience.”

    Another parent, who lives in the neighbourhood,  Segun Sulaimon,  said he has been living in fear since the incident happened.  He also did not allow his children to go to school as a result of fears.

    “There is nobody that will remain the same after that incident. If an adult like me is yet to overcome the shock, imagine what the impact would be on our children and the students of the school. How could I allow my children to go to school with that horrible experience? I prefer to have them stay here with me than to hear any negative story. I would have even left the environment if not for the presence of armed security men in the whole place and the assurance by the deputy governor that all is well.”

    Some of the children who spoke with The Nation were visibly troubled as they narrated their ordeal.

    One of them, who gave his name as Hamzat Abaniwonda, said: “We were at the bus stop waiting to board a motorcycle to school when we started hearing gunshots. We started telling ourselves that it was the hunters that were shooting at birds and jokingly said that they should remember to keep our share.

    “We were still laughing over the matter when a teacher from Lagos Model told us to run inside the bush because there was trouble in the school. Our hearts immediately skipped because what we thought wasn’t what was actually happening. Without waiting for more information, we ran into the bush in different directions and didn’t bother if anything was there that was capable of hurting us.”

    Another child, who gave his name simply as Gani said: “I am still afraid.  Each time I hear any strange sound, my mind goes back to the Thursday incident. The gunshots were deafening and they made the whole building to vibrate.    My mother quickly pushed us inside the house when they were shooting. She pushed us under the bed and locked the door.”

    When our correspondent visited the river through which the gunmen invaded the community, armed marine policemen were spotted in two boats on the river.

    One of them who craved anonymity said: “We have been here since yesterday. We went to a neighbouring community where the residents told us that the gunmen came and harassed them before coming to attack the school. They said that they came in a boat but when they took us to the spot where the boat was parked, we discovered that it was no longer there.  We later took local vigilante men to comb the entire area but we didn’t see the hoodlums.”

     

  • Boko Haram terrorists now  disguise as vigilantes, hunters

    Boko Haram terrorists now disguise as vigilantes, hunters

    The Defence Headquarters has said members of the Boko Haram group now disguise as hunters and vigilantes to  evade arrest.

    Defence spokesman Brig-Gen Rabe Abubakar, in a statement yesterday,  said: “The fleeing terrorists now disguise as vigilantes or hunters to evade easy detection. The terrorists, after being smoked out of Sambisa forest, in their desperation to wreak havoc on innocent Nigerians and to remain relevant, devised a new tactics of dressing like vigilantes or hunters to deceive unsuspecting members of the public of their true identity”.

    “The case of Kuda-Kaya village in Madadali community of Adamawa State, where a group of Boko Haram terrorists dressed like vigilantes, opened fire on elated people during a ceremony readily comes to mind. The general public is hereby advised to be wary of unsubscribed services or presence of vigilantes or hunters in their neighbourhood in order not to ignorantly harbour killer gang in their midst”.

    He advised members of the public to be security conscious and report any suspicious persons or group of persons in their community to security agencies.

  • Hunters mobilise against Boko Haram

    Hunters mobilise against Boko Haram

    The President of the Association of Animal Hunters of Nigeria (AAHON), Comrade Ray Macaulay, said yesterday that he had begun mobilising hunters to support their colleagues in the Northeast.

    This followed a clamour by hunters in Borno State to be involved in the fight against Boko Haram insurgency.

    A statement by Macaulay in Benin City, the Edo State capital, said: “I want to state categorically that I am in support of the request by hunters in Borno State.

    “This has added voice to the earlier request by hunters in the South to join their counterparts in the North to crush the terrorists.

    “With this new call, I think the government should attend to it and allow the hunters, not only those in Borno State, but others who have been yearning to join the military to end insurgency.”

    He said hunters understood the terrain in the Northeast and should be allowed to participate in the fight against terrorism, “especially since they are the ones volunteering to serve.”

     

     

  • Hunters seek to join Boko Haram war

    Hunters in Borno State yesterday implored the military to allow them join in the war against insurgents in Sambisa forest, the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports.

    The Borno Emir of the Hunters, Malam Mai-Gana Mai-Durma, who addressed reporters in Maiduguri, said the call became imperative because the hunters were familiar with the terrain at the forest, the hideout and base of the terrorists.

    He said: “We appeal to the military to allow us join the fight against Boko Haram at the Sambisa forest.

    “We are ready to combat the terrorists because we know the terrain well.”

    Mai-Durma said the military should align them with members of the vigilance group, popularly called the Civilian JTF, for result.

    “We will overrun Sambisa in partnership with members of the Civilian JTF, if given the opportunity.

    “This will help to complement the effort of the military in the anti-terrorism operation.”

    He lamented that hunters from the 27 local governments were rendered idle by the Boko Haram insurgency.

    “Hunters from the 27 councils are in Maiduguri with our leaders doing nothing because of Boko Haram.

    “Instead of idling away, we want to assist the military in crushing Boko Haram terrorists,” Mai-Durma said.

    He appealed to the Shehu of Borno, Alhaji Abubakar Ibn Garbai, to assist in sending their request to the military authorities.

  • Hunters sweet and sour

    Hunters sweet and sour

    Local hunters’ liberation of Mubi, where the Nigerian military failed, is both cheery and scary 

    It is cheery that citizens’ outrage, not the might of the state, just saved Nigeria its honour in Mubi and Maiha, Adamawa State, with local hunters reportedly kicking out Boko Haram.

    No matter the reservations, it is tribute to courage, patriotism and citizens’ outrage to save motherland. It was about time too — with Boko Haram running rings around our military: demoralised, near-demystified, and wracked with alleged high-scale sabotage.

    If the military, with their superior armoury and even supposed better discipline capitulates, and an elementarily armed local hunters triumph against Boko Haram, that suggests an apparent military house divided against itself. That is not strange, though it is sad: for Nigeria too appears a country divided against itself.

    Still, there are some positives the military authorities must take from the Mubi hunters’ triumph — if their clearly hurt pride would let them, from a scary report that the chief hunter of an Adamawa community was arrested for leading his guild against Boko Haram.

    The first is the indispensability of sound intelligence in a military campaign — and the bastion of intelligence is the local people. If hunters armed with Dane guns — and charms, as many claim — triumphed over Boko Haram, it is logically because the locals are masters of their environment.

    If Nigeria must reverse the disgraceful Boko Haram victories, the military must incorporate the locals into the army: not as a militia, as they are now, but as fully trained members of the armed forces. Their knowledge of the environment, coupled with discipline and better arms from the Army, is more likely to help halt the Boko Haram advance; and stop its cruelty, its dehumanisation of citizens and clear humiliation of our country.

    Now, to the dire tales. Local hunters coming to the rescue show the terrible state the country has sunk — and the terrible condition of the Nigerian military. Trite: a state unable to secure its own territory is no state. Nigeria, sadly, is nearing that meltdown, with the parlous state of things in the North East, and the creeping anomie, plaguing the whole of the North, what with suicide bombing all over the place.

    Many have said the demoralised military literarily melt in front of Boko Haram because many of them don’t feel any cause to fight for. Local hunters, on the other hand, prevailed because they had a deep and strong urge to protect their culture, their environment, their heritage, and even their basic human dignity, daily rubbished by a band of crazed Islamists.

    But that local outrage, no matter how deep it runs, does not necessarily translate into a cause to fight for Nigeria, beyond the liberation of local territories from the Boko Haram nuisance. If that comes to play, a worst-case scenario could well emerge: the local warlords, after unhorsing Boko Haram, could challenge the very state itself — and why not?

    With the security meltdown, to many of the locals, Nigeria is after all, no more than an abstract — and a hated one at that! Putting it differently: the hunters’ success of today could well be the foundation of tomorrow’s insurrection, especially if the military is further demystified.

    To fend off this looming tragedy, the Nigerian authorities must first regain the military initiative and secure these far-flung territories and their tormented denizen-citizens. Then, after decades of ruinous over-centralisation, it is high time Nigeria returned to productive federalism.

    With that, government would be nearer to the people; would be better placed to maximise their talents because it is close enough to appreciate and utilise them; and the country, by the activities of its component parts, would reinvent itself as a caring and efficient state — far from the bumbling nuisance that balks from its basic duty as security, yet demands fanciful loyalty, because it feels it has the means to bully people into submission.

  • When hunters endorsed Amosun

    It was a rare welcome and a surprising one at that. Governor Ibikunle Amosun got a heroic welcome from hunters at Owode in Obafemi – Owode Local Government Area with dozens of gunshot salute.

    The hunters (Olode), some of whom adorned themselves with hides and skin extracted from their game – deer, antelope and leopard, shot intermittently into the air as Amosun sets foot on the town and same feat was repeated when he mounted the podium to address the people.

    They also pledged to work assiduously for the actualisation of the Governor’s second term ambition.

    The Governor was in Owode, the headquarters of Obafemi – Owode Local government area in continuation of the tour of the state, ostensibly to ascertain how his programmes and policies have impacted on them in the last three and half years.

    Head of the state’s hunters association, Obafemi – Owode Local government branch, Mr Najeem Adetokunbo, said Amosun has earned their support for his 2015 ambition, citing the prevalent peace in the state, the clean and safe environment as well as infrastructural and urban renewal efforts as reasons for the decision.

    Adetokunbo said hunting is their occupation and appealed to the Governor to help them facilitate the process of obtaining licenced gun and also support hunters’ competition.

    Addressing the people, Amosun pledged to build more roads in the area, establish standard hospital and also create at least three Local Government Development Areas (LCDA) out of the present Obafemi – Owode Local Government Area.

  • Industrialist urges  protection  for hunters,  farmers over Ebola

    Industrialist urges protection for hunters, farmers over Ebola

    An industrialist and the Group Chief Executive of Origin Group Limited, Prince S.J Samuel, has urged the Federal Government to intervene in the plight of hunters who may have been adversely affected in the wake of the Ebola virus outbreak that has put the consumption of bush meat on hold.

    Prince Samuel said if no step was taken to address the plight of the hunters, whose main source of livelihood is hunting, it would lead to their inability to fend for their families and send their children to school.

    He said many states would suffer the consequence, arguing that the hunters cut across many states.

    He said: “These hunters do basically this business, what do we do about them, I am concerned and worried because that is the only source of their livelihood, that is the only way they send their children to school, that is how they feed their family. “There’s need therefore for government to quickly come up with a policy statement on the issue to address the plight of the hunters.”

    He argued that it is a known fact how Ebola came into Nigeria. “It came through somebody in the city,” he said, stating that the primary source of bush meat is the villages.  According to him, agreed that the viruses that transmit these disease are in the air and can easily be transmitted through animals,  but how many of the people infected are in the bushes and the villages? He said many of those infected are in the cities.

    He admitted that government has done well in the manner the Ebola infection  has been handled so far, but stressed that there was an economic dimension to the situation to which government must address itself.

    He said: “The government has done well in the containment of the situation, but the other economic effect on the  agric sector is where I stand that we should do something, and nobody is looking at it. It’s unfortunate and painful. The challenge we would have is the stigma that will go to the people who rear these things and to the product they sell, may not be quantifiable and measured for many years to come, even after the epidemic is gone.

    “That is why I think government should devote more effort and resources educating people about the bush meat thing and categorise it. For me the challenge is that most of the meat  we eat today is bush meat, including some of our cows.”

    Samuel said there is need for government to be distinctive on its classification on bush meat, so that people’s businesses are not unwittingly destroyed.

    “For me, I believe that there should be a sort of categorisation, more education and treading on the path of caution, so that we don’t destroy the businesses we are trying to build,” he said, adding that people have obtained loans to start some of  these businesses.