Tag: killings

  • Plateau and other killings

    AFTER a lull, violence made a bloody return to Plateau State last weekend. Scores of people were killed right in their homes by gunmen suspected to be herdsmen.

    Condolences. More condolences. Tears and more tears. Recriminations. President Muhammadu Buhari and Vice President Yemi Osinbajo have visited, promising justice. But the question remains: when will the killings stop?

    It was not immediately clear why the gunmen struck, but the popular thinking is that the bloodletting was a result of the loss of some cows by Fulani herdsmen. Indeed, the spokesman of the association of cattle breeders said that much – that the bloodbath was in retaliation for the loss of some 300 cows. He was later to retract the statement, blaming it all on reporters who, he said, misquoted him. It was obviously to fend off the huge pressure that he should be arrested for fuelling the senseless killings and provoking the question: what is a man’s life worth, as against a cow’s?

    Only justice can answer this knotty question. But when will justice catch up with these marauders?

    Governor Simon Lalong was shocked at the carnage. He wondered why and how the peace he had been so proud of suddenly collapsed like a house of cards. The Berom and the Fulani who had been living together in peace suddenly became enemies, drawing daggers and pulling triggers.

    “I am greatly shocked that it happened because we have set a roadmap for peace for ourselves…shocked because the Berom and the Fulani have agreed to live in peace with one another and in practical terms they have co-existed for the last three years based on that agreement – to put the past behind them and live as a family.”

    The governor said when he was alerted that the violence was coming, he rushed down to the security agencies who assured him that it would not happen. “I left and it happened,” Lalong said.

    Why did the security chiefs’ assurance become a deflated balloon? Is an officer’s word still a word of honour? Was Lalong deceived? Or was it just a matter of intelligence deficit? Or Conspiracy? Or complacency? Or sheer incompetence?

    One thing is clear: the justice the President spoke of should start from the security agents. Whoever is found to have been negligent in this matter should carry the can. Carrying on from here as if rhetoric, and not action, will be enough will be politically and morally imprudent. People must be brought to account on the bloodshed that happened under their watch. That way, they will be more alert in future.

    The killers should be fished out and punished. We must find out who they are and why they are so mad. I do not believe that it is all because of cattle rustling and associated problems – land, ethnicity, religion and all that. No. It is, as Lalong observed, deeper than all the sentiments that we confront.

    We have a large army of terrorists in our midst.  Bands of bandits moving from one part of the country to the other, posing as kidnappers and highway robbers. They are not; they are in reality terrorists who have found us so vulnerable.  Even the President attests to the weight of the assault weapons they carry.

    Buhari said: “Take, for instance, the situation in Benue. The Benue subsistence farmer knows that the Nigerian cattle herder that he knows doesn’t carry nothing more than a stick, occasionally, sometimes something to cut grass to feed his cattle.

    “But the present herder, I am told, carries AK47 and people are even blaming me for not talking to them because maybe (they say) I look like one of them. There is some injustice in these aspersions.”

    Buhari is right – in his analysis (I have always believed that the herdsman is a mask for those crazy elements who are bent on destroying our humanity and our values but there is no way he can be right in what seems a security failure here.

    It was the turn of Ekiti State to have a taste of the madness a few weeks ago when these un(known) gunmen and madmen posing as herdsmen seized the beautiful Iwaraja (Osun State) – Efon Alaye (Ekiti State) road, killing and kidnapping innocent motorists and passengers. Those who attempted to flee the hell were shot in the back, among them a woman who had her kids in the car. By the time the military were called in, the marauders had gone into the deep, dark bush on the outskirts of Efon Alaye where they were negotiating ransom for their captives. No arrests have been made.

    Travelling from Iwaraja to Efon Alaye, you are confronted on both sides of the road by a beautiful scenery of lush green forests, undulating hills with low  vegetation in some areas and a massive greenery of virgin forests that exhibit the majesty of nature. The seductive hills take your eyes round and round in an exciting spectacle. The air is clean and fresh. All is quiet, except for birds chirping and farmers chatting on their way from the farm.

    Now motorists pass through with trepidation, their hearts in their mouths. And everybody is asking: Where are Governor Ayo Fayose’s hunters who came out the other day in their numbers – charms, arms, amulets, guns, catapults,machetes and headlamps – vowing to stop killer-herdsmen? His Excellency himself addressed them, decked out in military fatigues, pumping the air with his fist in a gesture of defiance.

    One of those kidnapped on this road, Dr Tunde Hamzat, spoke of his six-day ordeal in the hands of the gunmen. In his view, the Southwest has been infiltrated by agents of the devil. He has big machete cuts on his head and other parts of his body. He was starved, beaten and dehumanised. Every night, he and his captors trekked a minimum of five kilometers into the forest. To his amazement, he found out that the gunmen had a supply line; they were getting Indomie and recharging their phones by calling somebody somewhere. They had power banks to charge their phones, he said, adding that the gunmen confirmed that they were Fulani and members of the Boko Haram, the deadly Shekau faction. He was tied down like a goat. Insects feasted on his body. Eventually, he was freed after his friends and associates paid a ransom, in millions, of course.

    Until recently, the Akungba-Owo road was a den of kidnappers, perhaps the same set of bandits or an arm of their evil organisation. Their domain used to be Borno and some other states in the Northeast. Not anymore. The terror corridor has been expanded. We all seem to be helpless.

    The new war is beyond tanks, arms and ammunition. It is, in fact, beyond battalions. It is a war of intelligence and technology,  a people’s war. It is everybody’s war because the situation keeps challenging our claim to humanity.

     

    A World Cup update

    BEFORE the Super Eagles’ loss to Argentina on Tuesday, I asked my colleague Ade Ojeikere, who was in St. Petersburg to cover the match a difficult question: “Can Nigeria beat Argentina?” He replied: “It’s possible, based on our boys’ form, and if the ref will not play politics. They may see Argentina as the better team to advance – for marketing sake.”

    Isn’t Ade damn right? The ref saw an Argentine defender handle the ball inside the box, yet he would not award a penalty, which, if scored, would have sunk the Argentines. After the match, on the social media appeared the image of the ref watching the VTR to establish what happened. On the screen is $10,000,000. “That is what the referee saw on the VAR,” a fellow wrote.

    As usual, all Nigerians have become experts in soccer. The coach, poor fellow, is being hammered for the loss. He is blamed for not knowing what to do in the last 10 minutes of a match in which he required a draw to qualify. He is blamed for fielding Ighalo who lost at least two clear and crucial chances.

    Besides, there are sardonic jokes about our exit. A friend sent this before the match ended: “Now that we need Nigerian witches and wizards, they won’t show up. If it is to stop somebody from getting a big contract, they will be flying up and down.”

    In my view, the Eagles did well. They are gallant losers. They were not disgraced. Above all, their exploits united us all. Can we continue in that spirit?

  • Killings: Buhari to put more pressure on security chiefs

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday promised to put more pressure on security chiefs to stop the spate of killings in the land.

    Speaking at an interactive session with stakeholders in Jos, the Plateau State capital, in the aftermath of the killings in some communities, the President urged traditional and community leaders to complement the government’s efforts by persuading their constituencies to tolerate one another for peace and unity.

    In a statement by his Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, the President said: ‘‘I will continue to pressurise members of the law enforcement agencies directly under me by the Constitution as the Commander-in-Chief. About eight days ago, we had five hours security meeting of the Service Chiefs and the Inspector-General of Police.

    ‘‘What happened here in Jos is very bad. The question of leadership, from your household to whatever you are, is justice. The bottom line is justice.

    ‘‘That is why wherever I go, I will always appeal to the leadership of the communities, the law enforcement agencies to always have control of their constituencies.’’

    Condemning the bloodletting, which left scores dead, Buhari, who was accompanied to the meeting by Governor Simon Lalong and his counterparts from Kebbi and Niger, condoled with the victims’ families, the government and people of the state, and wished those injured a speedy recovery.

    The President also used the interactive session attended by traditional rulers, community and religious leaders, representatives of youth, women and trade union groups, security chiefs and some top government officials to appeal to Nigerians to avoid inflammatory utterances that endanger peace or promote conflicts.

    He said: “Whatever is being given to the media, we have to be very responsible about it.

    ‘‘Take, for instance, the situation in Benue. The Benue subsistence farmer knows that the Nigerian cattle herder that he knows doesn’t carry nothing more than a stick, occasionally, sometimes something to cut grass to feed his cattle.

    ‘‘But the present herder, I am told, carries AK47 and people are even blaming me for not talking to them because maybe (they say) I look like one of them.

    ‘‘There is some injustice in these aspersions,’’ Buhari said.

    “It is noteworthy that many Nigerians still acknowledge that despite the security challenges, this administration has made notable successes in the security sector,” the President said.

    Lalong blamed parties in the conflict for reneging on their agreement to maintain the peace, leading to the recent upsurge in violence, after nearly three years of calm.

    ‘‘We are concerned as a state that the sophisticated weapons used in these attacks, from the evidence on the ground and the narrations of victims, are not those conventional to our environment for self defence but reflective of a terrorist invasion.

    ‘‘It, therefore, demands a justified response like that which was undertaken to address the Boko Haram insurgency,’’ he said.

    The governor also requested that given the number of villages ravaged in the violence, the Federal Government should establish an Emergency Special Intervention Fund to help reconstruct the destroyed communities.

    President Buhari also listened to the presentations and recommendations made by Alhaji Nura Abdullahi, State Chairman, Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN) and Mrs Florence Jambol, a representative of the Berom community, on engendering peace in the communities.

  • How to end killings, by NHRC boss

    Executive Secretary of the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), Tony Ojukwu, ex-Ekiti State’s Attorney General Olawale Fapohunda and others have given insight into how the Federal Government could address the incessant killings across the country.

    Ojukwu, Fapohunda, Law Professor, Agbo Madaki and rights activist, Chino Obiagwu suggested a general overhaul of the nation’s security architecture to enable the country address the heightening insecurity in the land.

    They spoke in Abuja yesterday at an event tagged: “Civil Societies/NHRC dialogue on the state of human rights in Nigeria,” jointly held by NHRC and Human Rights Agenda Network (HRAN).

    Ojukwu argued that the reluctance of security agencies to properly situate the identity of perpetrators these killings was either a lapse or a deliberate ploy to shield them.

    He added: “See what is happening in Benue and Plateau states. I keep telling people that this may be another Boko Haram in another guisebecause the way these killings were being done, I am surprised that herdsmen can kill people like this.

    “I am really surprised that people will just wake up and take joy in just killing human beings. For what? Just for you to have have your herds graze in the bush?

    “I think there is more than meets the eye. But, because they just want to maintain the narrative that Boko Haram has been degraded and defeated, they don’t  want to look at that direction that this could be another Boko Haram.

    “This is because when they scattered them in the North-East they (the Boko Haram members) dispersed into small groups and entered communities and that is what we are seeing.

    “The clinical way these people are handling AK47 and killing, it is difficult for me to accept and believe that these are herdsmen,” Ojukwu said.

    The NHRC boss said: “I have been one of those, who have always said that unless we have state police in this country, it is going to be a problem to protect us. I can give you an instance.

    “We have a federal police, yes. You take a man from Katsina and send him ke him my village and transfer him to my village, he does not understand Igbo language. There is not enough he can.

    “But, look at how the vigilantes work in some villages or even in towns. Every neighbourhood has its own vigilante. They put a bar and it is working for them.

    “Look at what happened in the North-East. Part of the problem we had while fighting Boko Haram was that they were brothers living among brothers. The soldiers did not know who was who.

    “But when the indigenes themselves formed the civilian JTF, they were able to know those, who among them, were Boko Haram and they started fishing them (Boko Haram) out, Ojukwu said.

  • Apc petitions police over killings

    The Ekiti State chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) has petitioned the Commissioner of Police over killings of members as the July 14,  governorship election draws nearer.

    APC Ekiti State Secretary Paul Omotoso said it was writing to lodge a complaint about the gruesome serial murder of members, Mr. Williams Aiyegoro popularly known as Willy and Ayo Ayodeji by suspected assassins.

    He explained that the late Aiyegoro was killed June 13, at Igbehin area of Ado Ekiti by a gunman who suddenly emerged and shot him in the head.

    He explained that Ayegoro used to promote APC’s candidate in the July 14 election, Dr Kayode Fayemi, around the Igbehin area of the state capital, where his sister has a shop, stressing, “we strongly believe that the murder of Ayegoro was politically-motivated”.

    He added: “The killing came hours after an early morning attack on the hotel owned by former APC governorship aspirant Dr. Wole Oluyede, by suspected PDP thugs. He was   heard by a night guard raining curses on Oluyede and threatening to destroy his hotel for not supporting  Prof. Olusola Eleka.

    “The assailants didn’t leave the hotel premises until they destroyed the billboard that Oluyede donated to APC governorship candidate, Dr Kayode Fayemi, to be followed in the night by gun attack on Ayegoro who was confirmed dead at the Ekiti State University Teaching Hospital, Ado-Ekiti.

    “Just this morning around 6am, Wednesday June 20, one week after the gruesome murder of Olawuyi Ayegoro, another staunch supporter of APC, who always used his megaphone to campaign for Fayemi, Ayo Ayodeji (aka Omo Ijoba), was shot dead around Oke Ori Omi area of Ado-Ekiti.”

    He said PDP was taking the governorship poll as a do or die, noting the incidents was reported.

    “Sir, recall that a petition signed by 15 political parties under the umbrella of the Conference of Nigeria Political Parties (CNPP) entitled, “Reminder: State of Insecurity in Ekiti State and Impending Clear Danger with Particular Reference to Fayose’s Security Aide, SUPOL Gbenga Timothy Joseph.”

    “In that petition, we raised alarm that Fayose through his security aide, Gbenga  who leads a hit squad, has concluded plans to eliminate certain opposition figures whose names we mentioned as well as some of the deadly thugs who he keeps with other Fayose’s aides.

    “This same SUPOL Gbenga was indicted by Olusegun Obasanjo presidential panel on political killings in Ekiti State in 2006 after the murder of the late Dr. Ayodeji Daramola.

    “Supol Gbenga  was incarcerated for three years, dismissed and recommended for prosecution but he miraculously found his way back to the police.”

    they allegedly enjoyed protection from the

    state government.  “Now that Olawuyi Aiyegoro and Ayo Ayodeji  have been

    assassinated, we implore you to use your good offices to act and save

    members of the opposition who have been marked for assassination,” Omotoso

    pleaded.

     

    He demanded immediate transfer, arrest, interrogation and prosecution of

    SUPOL Gbenga Timothy Joseph for all his alleged criminal activities since

    2003 as recommended by the Obasanjo Presidential Security Report and urged

    security agencies to conduct searches on the many chalets in the Government

    House “where deadly cultists and suspected assassins are quartered”,

    arguing that the governor’s immunity does not cover the assassins lodged in

    the Government House.

     

    He also urged the security agents to increase patrols on the streets of Ado

    Ekiti and do more to protect innocent citizens from the assassins’ bullets.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Minister: support Buhari to end killings

    Minister of State for Environment, Alhaji Ibrahim Jibrin yesterday solicited the support of well meaning Nigerians to enable the Federal Government restore peace across the country.

    The minister, who made the appeal while speaking with newsmen in Nasarawa, stressed that President Muhammadu Buhari is working hard to end the killings not only in Nasarawa State but also across the country.

    Jibrin particularly urged Agatu farmers and herdsmen in the state to co-exist peacefully and sheath their swords in the interest of development.

    He cautioned Nigerians against unguarded utterances that would further escalate the crisis.

    “So, we call on the people in Nasarawa state and the entire country to be mindful of the language we use so that we don’t inflame what is already a bad situation.

    “The issue of insecurity is not a one man show, it is something that is collective whether your are a political, religious or community leader, we have to come together to address this issue.

    “Lets continue to provide intelligence to the security agencies as no security agent can succeed without intelligence.

    “I assure you that the federal government is determined, the President is determined to make sure that farmers/herdsmen clashes is stopped,” he said.

    The minister, therefore, urged Nigerians to be law abiding, respect constituted authorities, live in peace and be their brother’s keepers in the interest of development

  • Killings: Yari hands off as Chief Security Officer

    Governor Abdul’aziz Yari of Zamfara State said yesterday he had relinquished his responsibility as  chief security officer of the state as he had no control over the security machinery in the state.

    Yari told reporters in Talata Mafara that his decision stemmed from the seeming helplessness of the state government and the people over recurring killings in the state caused by cattle rustlers and marauders.

    Dozens of residents have been killed by such gunmen over the last few months during their raids of villages.

    The governor deplored the prevailing situation where as the chief security officer of the state, he could not take decisions on strategies for protecting the state and its people.

    ”We have been facing serious security challenges over the years, but in spite of being governor and Chief Security Officer of the state, I cannot direct security officers on what to do nor sanction them when they err,” he said.

    He added:”as chief security officer, the nomenclature in just a name.”

    The governor lamented that it was disheartening that killings in the state had continued in spite of the President Muhammadu Buhari’s order to security agencies to end the incessant blood-letting across the country.

    He said that even after  the president’s order  the killings have not stopped.

    He said that the state government was spending huge amount of its resources on security but to no avail.

    Yari, therefore, urged people of the state to be more faithful to God and embark on special prayers over the challenges facing the state.

    He also appealed to them to be patient and continue to cooperate with the government and security agencies as steps were being taken to address the challenges.

    “We cannot keep quiet while our people are being killed daily. We are going to cooperate with all stakeholders to bring the situation to an end,” he stressed.

  • Group warns against arms’  build up across Benue communities for renewed killings

    The Middle Belt Conscience Guard’s  (MBCG) says it has uncovered sinister plots by some communities in Benue State to upscale arms build up in order to torment the peace of others and heightened the state of insecurity in the State.

    It described as frightening the deliberate attempt by stakeholders in the state to ignore peaceful approaches in resolving communal clashes but resorted to using sophisticated guns to kill innocent citizens whilst the State and LGAs all watch with amazement.

    Paul Itodo, General Secretary of the group addressing newsmen on Monday, faulted the so-called leaders for worsening the situation instead of finding a lasting panacea to it.

    Itodo lamented that it was unfortunate because the latest killings in the state were as result of communal and no longer herdsmen.

    His statement reads full.

    We have elected upon ourselves to alert relevant stakeholders to troublesome issues, potent enough to cause anarchy, large scale outbreak of violence or skirmishes and its concomitant deaths and displacements of people within communities in the Benue valley.

    Emphatically therefore, the MBCG is again perturbed and distressed at the glaring replacement of the waning herders/farmers clashes, in the Benue valley with communal clashes.

    The Nigerian Army has worked relentlessly, day and night to subdue the herders/farmers imbroglio and it is unacceptable and insane for anybody or group to scheme its replacement with inexplicable communal fracas and politically induced violence or killings in hitherto peaceful and law abiding communities. More irritating is its active backing by unscrupulous traditional rulers, detractors and politicians who profit from such crisis.

    Everyone is aware of the imposition of horrifying magnitudes of political violence, orchestrated by unconscionable politicians in conspiracy with vulnerable community leaders at the eve of every general election year, more pronounced during electioneering campaigns. This dreadful era is with us again.

    The hot and competitive scramble for elective mandates by politicians often exhume ancient land disputes and allied disagreements, such as family feuds which have been forgotten for ages. These controversies are now elevated to the level of conflicts between opposing communities, leading to unprecedented violence and deaths in the quest to promote partisan and clannish interests for the benefit of election mandate seekers of rival communities.

    It is sad that the same scenario is replicating in 2018 and it appears to be Benue’s heaviest cross now.  We have accessed intelligence reports which suggest that rival politicians have plotted various evil schemes to set their communities on conflagrations, which would later be blamed on the herders/farmers skirmishes.

    We stand to make the distinction and bear witness that some communities have already been visited with violence, deaths and displacements of people in communal clashes in the last few weeks in Benue state. The immediate and remote causes of the violent squabbles are within the confines of the aforementioned.

    In Ukum, the Mbagwa and Mbagen clans in Torov district recently exercised this satanic might in bloodbath, in communal clashes that had political undertones. Likewise, in  Konshisha, the Ugambe and Mbamaa clans in Shangev-Tiev district have locked horns in communal dispute.

    And in other LGAs of the state, the songs and drums of communal clashes are excitedly chorused and skillfully planned. Enough havoc has been wreaked already with terrifying magnitudes of violence and deaths on the local populations.

    And the obnoxious and predetermined evil actions have not only been sustained, but are spreading to other parts of the state, with the speed of a tornado. It is reportedly evidenced in amazing arms build-up to empower feuding parties in the crude and barbaric display of strength in extermination of selves.

    Kwande, Katsina-Ala  and Apa LGAs of Benue state have  also  come under the  latest  furnace  of  communal clashes and some  communities have continued to arm locals against their neighbours or themselves.   Unfortunately, politicians are allegedly responsible for the arming and persuasion of natives into violent confrontations for selfish political reasons, instead of amicable resolution of disputes, if any.

    We have gathered that land dispute has just rocked Mbachom clan in Kwande LGA, which is the cradle and symbol of Tiv traditional and cultural essence. Again, scores have lost their lives or wounded and others displaced by the fracas. This is completely unnecessary and retrogressive.Conversely, in Katsina-Ala LGA yesterday, June 3, 2018, unidentified armed gunmen attacked a family in Tse-Adoor village. The assailants killed seven people and injured another six persons during the attacks.  Insider sources have confirmed that the attack was politically motivated and targeted at a specific family over a subsisting land dispute and other economic factors   involving two families in Tse-Adoor village.

    Though, the situation has been brought under control by the Nigerian Army and, assisted by sister security agencies. But it is extremely unreasonable and questions our sense of humanity and justice to seek to aggravate the already tense security situation in the area with violent reprisals over a family feud.

    The MBCG is equally concerned by the boldness of the Ugbobi community, which is audaciously plotting a reprisal attack on Edukwu community in the narrow-mindedness of self- defence.  In June, 2018,  Ugbobi sons and daughters domiciled in Makurdi converged in North Bank, with the sole agenda of  raising  funds to purchase ammunitions to battle their neigbouring clan of Edukwe.

    Similar meetings of the community members outside of Benue state were reportedly replicated Lagos, Abuja, and other towns. And the monies realized for this destructive agenda were immediately transmitted to arrowheads in the village for ammunitions.  That’s the level of bestiality we have become and proudly brandish.

    We are thoroughly bemused and stunned by this show of shame. It is senseless, destructive and condemnable in all gradations by men of good conscience. Those who think, warring is the best option out of disputes are making  grave mistakes; that’s why they are easily lured into combatants either against themselves or neighbours by satanic minds.

    Benue vallay has had enough share of violence and it is disservice to these communities for the political elite and  these agents of darkness  to continue to arm them for avoidable  wars, instead of  preaching peace and  harmonious co-existence to attract the much needed  development to these communities.

    This easy resort to violence has serious consequences and astonishing implications on the communities figured in the communal disputes.  Apart from worsening the already prevailing crises   between herdsmen/farmers; it would exacerbate the burden of securing these communities, by forceful enthronement of peace on our conspicuously and needlessly sapped or already stretched military and other security agencies.

    And in the midst of these rising tensions and escalating violence within our borders, Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom  and his indoctrinated Local Government chairmen prefer to  hold tightly to  sumptuous  monthly   security votes instead of deploying it to its useful  statutory function of nipping crisis in the bud, and  securing lives  and property of the citizenry.

    So, killings in Benue and its environs have become normal and oddly celebrated with mass burials and philanthropic donations of cash and relief materials by sympathetic Nigerians. The joy they derive from it remains to be seen; but it is quite odd, to say the least.

    It mocks sound reasoning that we gleefully set the stage of violence, atrocious and other heinous crimes against ourselves and thereafter search for scapegoats to pass the bulk of blame.  The Fulani herdsmen have become weeping children to blame for every action of violence and deaths; we pleasantly initiate and execute to protect a name we do not deserve.

     

    We cannot continue to destroy ourselves in this brazen manner, while other regions of the nation have embraced peace and experiencing the dividends of democracy under President Muhammadu Buhari.

     

    We shall continue to suffer neglect and abandonment, unless these aberrations’ cease forthwith. Let’s allow reign peace among ourselves and with our neighbours. The traditional rulers and council chairmen must wake up from their slumber and burden themselves to end this nonsense.

     

    From our findings, we have been able to establish that the   Nigerian Army and other security agencies have put in their very best these past years and in the last months, particularly, to   quench the wildfires of bloodletting in some of the areas, the agents of darkness have caused considerable confusion and destructions.

     

    It behooves on us to conduct ourselves in a manner we shall  not be wrongly seen and adjudged  as expanding the frontiers’ of battle and combat,  rather than  peace and harmony for the unity and development of all components of Nigeria, including the Middle Belt.

     

    It is frustrating to national government and a shame to us that we have confirmed in public domain the speculations that this time, it is not herdsmen invading, burning, killing and displacing us. But sadly, by the latest developments, Benue people have loudly proclaimed to Nigeria that they have   armed themselves against themselves and their lands.

     

     

     

    Group warns against arms’  build up across Benue communities for renewed killings

    The Middle Belt Conscience Guard

    (MBCG) says it has uncovered sinister plots by some communities in Benue State to upscale arms build up in order to torment the peace of others and heightened the state of insecurity in the State.

    It described as frightening the deliberate attempt by stakeholders in the state to ignore peaceful approaches in resolving communal clashes but resorted to using sophisticated guns to kill innocent citizens whilst the State and LGAs all watch with amazement.

    Paul Itodo, General Secretary of the group addressing newsmen on Monday, faulted the so-called leaders for worsening the situation instead of finding a lasting panacea to it.

    Itodo lamented that it was unfortunate because the latest killings in the state were as result of communal and no longer herdsmen.

    His statement reads full.

    We have elected upon ourselves to alert relevant stakeholders to troublesome issues, potent enough to cause anarchy, large scale outbreak of violence or skirmishes and its concomitant deaths and displacements of people within communities in the Benue valley.

    Emphatically therefore, the MBCG is again perturbed and distressed at the glaring replacement of the waning herders/farmers clashes, in the Benue valley with communal clashes.

    The Nigerian Army has worked relentlessly, day and night to subdue the herders/farmers imbroglio and it is unacceptable and insane for anybody or group to scheme its replacement with inexplicable communal fracas and politically induced violence or killings in hitherto peaceful and law abiding communities. More irritating is its active backing by unscrupulous traditional rulers, detractors and politicians who profit from such crisis.

    Everyone is aware of the imposition of horrifying magnitudes of political violence, orchestrated by unconscionable politicians in conspiracy with vulnerable community leaders at the eve of every general election year, more pronounced during electioneering campaigns. This dreadful era is with us again.

    The hot and competitive scramble for elective mandates by politicians often exhume ancient land disputes and allied disagreements, such as family feuds which have been forgotten for ages. These controversies are now elevated to the level of conflicts between opposing communities, leading to unprecedented violence and deaths in the quest to promote partisan and clannish interests for the benefit of election mandate seekers of rival communities.

    It is sad that the same scenario is replicating in 2018 and it appears to be Benue’s heaviest cross now.  We have accessed intelligence reports which suggest that rival politicians have plotted various evil schemes to set their communities on conflagrations, which would later be blamed on the herders/farmers skirmishes.

    We stand to make the distinction and bear witness that some communities have already been visited with violence, deaths and displacements of people in communal clashes in the last few weeks in Benue state. The immediate and remote causes of the violent squabbles are within the confines of the aforementioned.

    In Ukum, the Mbagwa and Mbagen clans in Torov district recently exercised this satanic might in bloodbath, in communal clashes that had political undertones. Likewise, in  Konshisha, the Ugambe and Mbamaa clans in Shangev-Tiev district have locked horns in communal dispute.

    And in other LGAs of the state, the songs and drums of communal clashes are excitedly chorused and skillfully planned. Enough havoc has been wreaked already with terrifying magnitudes of violence and deaths on the local populations.

    And the obnoxious and predetermined evil actions have not only been sustained, but are spreading to other parts of the state, with the speed of a tornado. It is reportedly evidenced in amazing arms build-up to empower feuding parties in the crude and barbaric display of strength in extermination of selves.

    Kwande, Katsina-Ala  and Apa LGAs of Benue state have  also  come under the  latest  furnace  of  communal clashes and some  communities have continued to arm locals against their neighbours or themselves.   Unfortunately, politicians are allegedly responsible for the arming and persuasion of natives into violent confrontations for selfish political reasons, instead of amicable resolution of disputes, if any.

    We have gathered that land dispute has just rocked Mbachom clan in Kwande LGA, which is the cradle and symbol of Tiv traditional and cultural essence. Again, scores have lost their lives or wounded and others displaced by the fracas. This is completely unnecessary and retrogressive.Conversely, in Katsina-Ala LGA yesterday, June 3, 2018, unidentified armed gunmen attacked a family in Tse-Adoor village. The assailants killed seven people and injured another six persons during the attacks.  Insider sources have confirmed that the attack was politically motivated and targeted at a specific family over a subsisting land dispute and other economic factors   involving two families in Tse-Adoor village.

    Though, the situation has been brought under control by the Nigerian Army and, assisted by sister security agencies. But it is extremely unreasonable and questions our sense of humanity and justice to seek to aggravate the already tense security situation in the area with violent reprisals over a family feud.

    The MBCG is equally concerned by the boldness of the Ugbobi community, which is audaciously plotting a reprisal attack on Edukwu community in the narrow-mindedness of self- defence.  In June, 2018,  Ugbobi sons and daughters domiciled in Makurdi converged in North Bank, with the sole agenda of  raising  funds to purchase ammunitions to battle their neigbouring clan of Edukwe.

    Similar meetings of the community members outside of Benue state were reportedly replicated Lagos, Abuja, and other towns. And the monies realized for this destructive agenda were immediately transmitted to arrowheads in the village for ammunitions.  That’s the level of bestiality we have become and proudly brandish.

    We are thoroughly bemused and stunned by this show of shame. It is senseless, destructive and condemnable in all gradations by men of good conscience. Those who think, warring is the best option out of disputes are making  grave mistakes; that’s why they are easily lured into combatants either against themselves or neighbours by satanic minds.

    Benue vallay has had enough share of violence and it is disservice to these communities for the political elite and  these agents of darkness  to continue to arm them for avoidable  wars, instead of  preaching peace and  harmonious co-existence to attract the much needed  development to these communities.

    This easy resort to violence has serious consequences and astonishing implications on the communities figured in the communal disputes.  Apart from worsening the already prevailing crises   between herdsmen/farmers; it would exacerbate the burden of securing these communities, by forceful enthronement of peace on our conspicuously and needlessly sapped or already stretched military and other security agencies.

    And in the midst of these rising tensions and escalating violence within our borders, Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom  and his indoctrinated first day Local Government chairmen prefer to  hold tightly to  sumptuous  monthly   security votes instead of deploying it to its useful  statutory function of nipping crisis in the bud, and  securing lives  and property of the citizenry.

    So, killings in Benue and its environs have become normal and oddly celebrated with mass burials and philanthropic donations of cash and relief materials by sympathetic Nigerians. The joy they derive from it remains to be seen; but it is quite odd, to say the least.

    It mocks sound reasoning that we gleefully set the stage of violence, atrocious and other heinous crimes against ourselves and thereafter search for scapegoats to pass the bulk of blame.  The Fulani herdsmen have become weeping children to blame for every action of violence and deaths; we pleasantly initiate and execute to protect a name we do not deserve.

     

    We cannot continue to destroy ourselves in this brazen manner, while other regions of the nation have embraced peace and experiencing the dividends of democracy under President Muhammadu Buhari.

     

    We shall continue to suffer neglect and abandonment, unless these aberrations’ cease forthwith. Let’s allow reign peace among ourselves and with our neighbours. The traditional rulers and council chairmen must wake up from their slumber and burden themselves to end this nonsense.

     

    From our findings, we have been able to establish that the   Nigerian Army and other security agencies have put in their very best these past years and in the last months, particularly, to   quench the wildfires of bloodletting in some of the areas, the agents of darkness have caused considerable confusion and destructions.

     

    It behooves on us to conduct ourselves in a manner we shall  not be wrongly seen and adjudged  as expanding the frontiers’ of battle and combat,  rather than  peace and harmony for the unity and development of all components of Nigeria, including the Middle Belt.

     

    It is frustrating to national government and a shame to us that we have confirmed in public domain the speculations that this time, it is not herdsmen invading, burning, killing and displacing us. But sadly, by the latest developments, Benue people have loudly proclaimed to Nigeria that they have   armed themselves against themselves and their lands.

  • Cleric: killings should draw Christians closer to God

    Spiritual leader and International Director of the Holiness Revival Movement, Pastor Paul Rika, has encouraged Christians not to be ashamed of the suffering and persecution they are passing through provided they are committed to God.

    “Those suffering according to God’s will should commit themselves to their faithful Creator and continue to do good,” Rika said.

    The spiritual leader was in Taraba State during the weekend, training pastors and preaching the gospel to multitudes.

    He was invited to the crisis-torn State by the United Methodist Church, for its “revival programme.”

    Rika told our correspondent: “My counsel is: make sure you suffer for doing the right thing; suffer in righteousness; suffer because of the holiness of God.

    “Don’t suffer because of crime, sin or evil because you yourself have done wickedness to others.”

    “We are emphasising transformation of life, true repentance and righteousness before God.

    “As for healings and miracles, surely, they follow us as a shadow follows a person.”

    Rika was accompanied to Taraba State by some coordinators of the Holiness Rival Movement, including Pastor Philip Dzer, who is the Coordinator of Benue state.

    On violence, Dzer said: “These are signs that the end time is here: wars, killings and the children of God being persecuted. Though, as the bible says, no one knows the exact time,” he said.

  • Group protests against killings

    A group of men and women yesterday in Lagos protest against what it called the “needless killings” in some parts of the country.

    The protest tagged: “National day of mourning, one death too many” was organised by the Women Advocates Research and Documentation Centre (WARDC) and other civil society organisations (CSOs), with the support of MacArthur Foundation.

    Clad in black Tee shirt, the group walked from the Airport Hotel to the Allen Roundabout on Obafemi Awolowo Road, Ikeja, singing dirge.

    Detailing killings in Borno, Zamfara, Benue, Adamawa, Plateau, Nasarawa, Taraba, Kaduna, Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Kogi, Kwara, Lagos and Edo states, among others, WARDC Executive Director Dr Abiola Akiyode-Afolabi urged the government to bring the killers to book.

    She said: “We say no to these killings. Our people are being killed like animals, they are being slaughtered in their homes on a daily basis; enough of these killing.

    According to her, Nigerians can no longer tolerate these deaths.

    Akiyode-Afolabi: “And that is why we say no to the death of our wives, husbands and children that are being killed by herdsmen. We are saying that we need prompt action from government; this must stop. Our security arm must be investigated, from Boko Haram to herdsmen, who knows what is next.”

    A representative of the Federation of Muslin Women’s Association of Nigeria (FOMWAN), Lagos State, Alhaja Zainab Dawodu lamented that women were mostly the victims of killings by Boko Haram, herdsmen and bandits.

    A representative of the Women’s Wing of the Christian Association of Nigeria (WOWICAN), Lagos State, Mrs Elizabeth Bassey, said farmers could no longer go their to farms because of the fear of being killed.

    “We cannot continue like this, we cannot keep quiet because we are in Lagos; it is our business. Many people have lost their lives. It is uncalled for and we say enough is enough. Some of these deaths are preventable; government must find lasting solution,” she said.

    At 11:59 am, a minute’s silence was observed for the dead.

  • Killings: CAN asks Buhari to forget second term

    •Christians commiserates with Catholics

    THE Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN) has asked President Muhammadu Buhari to forget his second term bid and tackle the killings in the country.

    CAN urged Buhari not to forget his 2015 campaign promises, which included fighting insecurity and keeping Nigeria united.

    According to the Christians body, Nigerians overwhelmingly voted for Buhari on the campaign promises.

    In a statement issued by the Special Assistant (Media & Communications), to the CAN President, Pastor Adebayo Oladeji, the association said Buhari’s administration should not fold its arms and watch misguided people, mostly Boko Haram and herdsmen, promote killings in the name of politics and ethnicity with solution appearing elusive.

    The statement commiserated with the Catholic Secretariat of Nigeria (CSN) over the mass burial for the two priests and parishioners killed by the herdsmen in Benue State.

    CAN described the present moment as a trying time for the church.

    “We also urge all Christians to identify with the Catholic Church in its nationwide peaceful protest against senseless killings in Nigeria,” the statement said.

    It asked the security agencies to rise up to the security challenges.

    The association said security operatives have no excuse to stop the unending killings.

    The statement reads: “It is disheartening to note that criminal Fulani herdsmen, bandits, kidnappers and other hoodlums have reduced Nigeria to a banana republic.

    “This development is unacceptable and we call on all well-meaning people anywhere in the world to join hands in praying for the deliverance, freedom and liberty from this self-inflicted bondage.

    “While CAN is not opposed to the President’s exercise of his civic right by seeking re-election to the office for the second time, we urge him to halt it meanwhile and attend to the security problems occasioned by the criminal activities of the terrorists, herdsmen and bandits.”

    It described Buhari’s ongoing campaign for re-election without plans to stop the state of anomie in the country as scary.

    The association prayed for comfort to the bereaved, accelerated recovery to those who are recuperating from the wounds and multiple injuries sustained from terror attacks.

    It said: “It is our hope that this season of incessant killings will soon become history in Jesus’ name.