Tag: Herdsmen

  • Fleeing Igangan killer herdsmen relocate to Ogun, kill three in Imeko

    Fleeing Igangan killer herdsmen relocate to Ogun, kill three in Imeko

    Three persons have been reportedly killed in Ogun State by herdsmen said to be among those behind killings in Igangan, Oyo State, on Sunday.

    The victims were identified by an impeccable source as: Femi Bara, John Taiwo and Tunde Taiwo.

    They were said to have been murdered at Amule Kanji village, via Imeko, Imeko/Afon Local Government Area of Ogun State.

    We learnt that the three men were on a bike, coming from Ologede village when they ran into the killer herdsmen, “who killed them and took away their motorbike.”

    The Balogun of Imeko Isale, Chief Ganiu Akinleye, confirmed that the incident happened around 11 pm on Sunday.

    Chief Akinloye confirmed that the police had gone to the village to evacuate the corpses.

    “You know there was a crisis in Igangan yesterday, those herdsmen who escaped to Imeko through our forest reserves killed three men on Sunday night.

    “The victims were riding on a motorcycle, coming from Ologede around 11 o’clock last (Sunday) night. They ran into these fleeing herdsmen, who killed them. They even took the victim’s new motorcycle away, leaving their old one behind,” he said.

    “We saw empty AK-47 cartridges at the scene of the incident. A formal report has been made at the police station in Imeko and the police have gone there to take the bodies.

    “This is getting too much. We can no longer sleep in our houses. The herdsmen are everywhere. Government should come to our rescue. The Amotekun operatives in Imeko are too few. We need help.”

    The Balogun raised the alarm that the Igangan killers had relocated to a village called Sagada in Imeko/Afon.

    “Those herdsmen who escaped after killing people in Igangan are now in Ogun State. They camp in a village called Sagada, under Oke Agbede in Ward 2.

    “There is a river, (Oyan) in-between Sagada and Igangan. They are there as we speak. We have informed the appropriate authorities, but no positive steps have been taken so far,” the community leader said.

    Contacted, the Ogun State Police Public Relations Officer, Abimbola Oyeyemi, said, “I will find out.”

    We earlier reported that scores of Igangan residents were gruesomely murdered by suspected herdsmen on Sunday.

  • Suspected Herdsmen Attack Another Internally Displaced Persons, Kill Five, Abduct Two in Benue State

    Suspected Herdsmen Attack Another Internally Displaced Persons, Kill Five, Abduct Two in Benue State

    By Isaac Kertyo, Makurdi

    Barely two weeks after suspected Militia Herdsmen attacked and killed over ten Internally Displaced Persons, IDPs, at the Abagena camp in Guma Local Government, armed bandits have shot dead five IDPs and abducted two Persons in Gwer-west Local Government Area of Benue State.

    Findings by Day Break showed that the victims who are currently taking refuge in one of the camps in the local government went home to carry food items for their families who are also in the camp where suspected Militia herders attacked and killed five of them, abducting two others.

    The villages that came under attack include; Tse Shishim and Tse Iber in Ahumbe, Saav , Ukusu Council Ward and Mbaatan, Kunav, Sengev Council Ward of Gwer-west Local Government.

    Reacting to the incident, the Chairman, Gwer-west Local Government Council, Mrs Grace Igbabon lamented the sustained attacks on some communities by Suspected Herdsmen.

    She urged security agents to intensify surveillance to prevent the attackers from unleashing mayhem on innocent citizens and to allow farmers go about their farming activities.

    The Police Public Relations Officer PPRO, DSP Sewuese Anene was unavailable for comments on the killings as at the time of filing this report.

  • 10 Killed As Suspected Herdsmen Attack Taraba Communities

    10 Killed As Suspected Herdsmen Attack Taraba Communities

    No fewer than ten persons have been confirmed killed by suspected herdsmen in Bornon Kurkur community, Bali Local Government Area of Taraba State.

    Confirming the incident on Sunday, the Police Public Relations Officer, David Misal, said the attack occurred today, adding that the situation has been brought under control.

    According to him, the Commissioner of Police in the state, Ahmed Azare, has ordered for deployment of more hands to comb the area as well as protect the victims.

    In a related development, six persons have been found dead between Jatau Kungana and Gazabu communities of the Bali local government area.

    This is according to the Chairman of the local government, Mahmud Musa, who spoke to Channels Television during an interview.

    Musa said the fracas started in Katsina-Ala Local Government Area of Benue State which shares a boundary with Taraba State.

    He said some Fulani herdsmen were chased from the axis and ran into Bali local government where they were partially resisted and the fight escalated which led to the death of six persons in the axis.

    Musa added that he has summoned the leadership of both Fulani herdsmen and the Tivs tribe to talk to their subjects and put the situation under control.

    He insisted that calm has been restored and security agencies are manning the nooks and crannies of the local government to avert any uprising and asked those using the opportunity to destroy or steal from houses to desist from such act.

    Taraba state in Northeast Nigeria has been in the news lately for one communal crisis or the other.

    On April 15, gunmen suspected to be bandits killed four people in separate attacks in the Wukari local government area of the state.

    The gunmen in their number first attacked Tor-larshager  a suburb community of Wukari local government area killing a 70-year-old man and setting ablaze his residential apartment at about 9:00 PM on Wednesday.

    At about 2:00 am on Thursday the gunmen struck again at Rafinkada village killing three persons.

    The attack is coming barely one week after bandits killed three farmers in Assa village of Wukari local government area on the 7th of April and two Mobile police officers also killed at a checkpoint in Takum LGA on the 6th of April in Taraba state.

    Observations indicates that the farmers vs herders and farmers vs farmers crisis always come to be at the beginning of each year’s rainy season.

    These crises have also in one way or the other devalued the peace agreement entered into by the two governors of Taraba and Benue States as well as the warring tribes to sheath their swords and allow peace reign.

  • IDPs Block Makurdi-Lafia Highway, Protest Killing Of Seven By Herdsmen

    IDPs Block Makurdi-Lafia Highway, Protest Killing Of Seven By Herdsmen

    Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) from the Abagana camp have blocked the Markurdi-Lafia Federal Highway protesting the recent killings by herdsmen and laying the corpses of the victims on the road.

    The suspected herdsmen on Tuesday morning invaded Abagana IDP camp killing seven persons and injuring about 15 of them.

    According to an eyewitness account present at the protest, the armed herdsmen stormed the IDP camp and started shooting at the people killing seven and leaving many others injured.

    The eyewitness warned that they will resort to arms to defend themselves if the Federal Government does not intervene.

    The Benue State Governor, Samuel Ortom during a visit to the scene of the protest challenged President Muhammadu Buhari to rise up to the defence of vulnerable rural farming communities and Internally Displace Persons.

    The governor also asked the President to allow them to acquire weapons to fight armed Fulani herdsmen following the attack on the camp.

    He further asked the President to convene a National Security Summit to get the true picture of the killings allegedly attributed to the bandit noting that 70 people have been killed in the last one month with no actionable intelligence to track the perpetrators.

  • In Nasarawa: Suspected Herdsmen attack Doma villages, kill nine farmers

    In Nasarawa: Suspected Herdsmen attack Doma villages, kill nine farmers

    By Abel Leonard/ Lafia

    Suspected Fulani herdsmen, Saturday morning killed nine farmers during an attack on three villages in Doma local government area of Nasarawa State.

    The attacked villages were Ajikamaka, Gidan Rail and Ankoma settlements near Rukubi where Olam farm is located, a border town between Nasarawa and Benue State belonging to the Tiv farmers.

    The settlements belong to late Hon Micheal Koko, a Tiv man, who represented Doma South in Nasarawa Assembly between 1999 and 2007.

    Majority of the victims were said to be deeply asleep when the marauding herdsmen surrounded the villages, set houses on fire and opened fire on fleeing villagers.

    The Nation gathered most of the victims were children, women and young boys scampering to safety.

    The deceased were identified as Tsekaa Chiatyo, Kwaghdoo Tsekaa, Sewuese Tsekaa, Bobo Chiatyo, Aondosee Fidelis, Aboy, Igba Aduku, Iwuesi and Aseer.

    The invasion of the community occurred around 2:00am with the gunmen said to be chanting war songs.

    Deputy Chairman of Doma local government, Hon Atukpa Osukunu, who confirmed the incident, said it was a reprisal saying herdsmen, who also settled within the area, found one of them dead in the bush and suspected the Tiv community for the death.

    Nasarawa Police Public Relations Officer, ASP Ramham Nansel, said the attack was yet to be reported to the Police Command.

    President, Tiv Development Association (TIDA) in Nasarawa state, Comrade Peter Ahemba, also confirmed the incident to reporters.

    He lamented recurring attacks on Tiv people, particularly those living at the border areas between Benue and Nasarawa states despite efforts by Nasarawa Governor Abdullahi Sule and his Benue counterpart, Dr. Samuel Ortom to ensure lasting peace.

    The Tiv leader lamented that the ugly development has led to the displacement of thousands of Tiv farmers in the area, regretting the incident occurred when the current farming season was about to commence.

  • Herdsmen Attacks: Reps Deputy Speaker’s rejection of diaspora petition, a clue to masterminds

    Herdsmen Attacks: Reps Deputy Speaker’s rejection of diaspora petition, a clue to masterminds

    By Usman, Masara Kim, Jos

    Last Thursday, Mr. Idris Wase, the Deputy Speaker of the Nigerian House of Representatives, publicly shouted down Rep Mark Terseer Gbillah, from presenting a petition on the forceful acquisition of land in his Benue Gwer east/Gwer west federal constituency by herdsmen.

    Wase, who presided over plenary, rejected the petition from “Mutual Union of the Tiv in America,” saying Nigerians in the diaspora do not “really know” the situation in Nigeria and thus are not eligible to file petitions. Without listening to or reading the petition, Mr. Wase concluded that the petition lacked merit just by hearing its introduction. All attempts to convince the Deputy Speaker to allow the reading of the petition were frustrated.

    In the most verbally aggressive words, Mr. Wase said, “If they are in America could they really be an interested party here? Do they really know what is exactly going on?

    “I don’t want to make a blanket statement regarding those who are in diaspora.

    “If this petition is coming from those who are within the country, I believe it has a loco standing. But those living in America, then coming to lodge complain.

    “If there are Nigerians, they are Nigerians, but I don’t know if they have dual citizenship.

    “Are they registered with Corporate Affairs? If they are Nigerians and living in Nigeria and bringing issues, I agree. But somebody in America who is far away from this country.

    “I am not convinced that somebody from America can come here and then delaying issues in Nigeria. I am not convinced.”

    To start with, section 40 of Nigeria’s 1999 constitution provides for freedom of association. Section 39 of the same Constitution guarantees freedom of expression. Section 4 of the Constitution gives the National Assembly powers to make laws for the peace, order and good governance of the country. This “country” (Nigeria) according to Section 2 of the Constitution is one indivisible, indissoluble and sovereign entity. No part of it, according to Section 1 shall be taken illegally.

    20 years of persistent herdsmen attacks in Central Nigeria have led to an estimated 60,000 deaths. More than 50 villages have been sacked in each of the affected States with many of them forcefully occupied by the attackers. The power of the Constitution to secure lives of citizens and prevent unauthorized persons from taking any part of the country illegally, was what the Tiv community in America sought to invoke. But Mr. Wase, without a thought quashed the petition.Mutual Union of the Tiv in America is an affiliate of Mzough U Tiv (MUT), a local association of the Tiv tribesmen in Nigeria, which is registered with the CAC. This was stated in the opening paragraph of the quashed petition, which the Deputy Speaker out of what seemed to be a display of bias did not allow to be heard.

    He also claimed Nigerians overseas have no right to complain on things happening in the country. But there are ongoing debates on the creation of polling units for citizens to vote from their overseas bases. Many of them fly home during elections to vote. During election campaigns, politicians hold consultations with them. This is because of their electoral value, and their stake in the nation.

    The Federal Government of Nigeria, in July 2017 signed the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NIDCOM) Establishment Bill into law and in 2019, declared July 25 of every year as National Diaspora Day. The Nigerian House of Reps itself has a Committee on Diaspora Affairs. But the Deputy Speaker feels that Nigerians outside have no rights to comment on issues in the country.

    Himself, Mr. Wase attended an executive course in Strategic Governance at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, United states in 2016 while serving as Rep member. Like him, many Nigerians are overseas studying, with some running businesses on temporary Visa. If being overseas strips one of their right to comment or be concerned about issues in Nigeria, Maje ought to have resigned as Rep member before going for his course.

    This is the same group that last year sent about $25 billion into the country as donations and welfare to family members and communities, increasing cash flow and reducing government’s burdens. These remittances by Nigerians in the diaspora was more than 80 per cent of the country’s annual budget and formed about six per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), Officials said. 

    But Mr. Wase rejected the argument of his colleague that the petitioners have families in Nigeria who are currently forced to stay in IDP camps. Does this not technically endorse land grab, making him a party to the crime? This is not the first time the lawmaker is showing these types of sentiments at a time crucial action is needed to save suffering Nigerians from death in line with their rights to life as enshrined in the Constitution.

    In June 2018, while the whole world was mourning the murder of over 200 farmers in Plateau State, Mr. Wase without condemning the killers stood on the floor of the House to accuse the immediate past Governor of the State, Jonah Jang of training terrorists in Israel. This was clearly to crucify Jang for introducing a State owned neighborhood watch (Operation Rainbow), which’s first set of employees trained in Israel. Operation Rainbow, approved by the Federal Government in 2012 still exists as a State owned security outfit, supplying intelligence to federal Securities toward ending violent attacks. It was birthed after series of public complaints on the slow response of federal security agencies.Wase claimed to have documents to prove his claims but never availed them despite being promised security cover. 

    One expects that the lawmaker would rise above his sentiments having been elected Deputy Speaker, a position of responsibility and national concern. His election to that office was celebrated in Plateau beyond sentiments. But he does not seem to overcome the emotion.

    Wase spent years in Activism before he was appointed as Executive Secretary, Plateau State Muslim Pilgrim Welfare Board from 2005-2006, a position that ought to have shaped his love for peace and general human welfare. Shortly after that, he was elected as Member, Federal House of Representatives, Wase Constituency, a position he has held to date, which ought to have shaped his understanding of governance and the need to eschew anything that resembles bias.

    Today, there is increasing demand for military and humanitarian aid in the Northeast and Northwest regions following attacks by Herdsmen. As one-time Chairman House Committee on Federal Character, who fought to ensure Justice, Equity and Fairness as claimed by his website, Wase should have considered the plights of the people mentioned in the petition.

    Having served as Governing Board member of the National Institute of Legislative and Democratic Studies (NILDS), Regional Representative for West Africa to serve on the Executive Committee of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA) International and currently Deputy Speaker, Mr. Wase has a duty to save himself from the negative image he is currently attracting for himself.

    He could begin by reintroducing the quashed petition and if possible, apologizing publicly for his biased reaction to it the last time. This is not for anyone to gain but to redefine him as a credible, patriotic, fair and caring leader. His ambition cannot end in the House of Reps. Everyone dreams to grow. Amending his ways and publicly showing his change of attitude toward suffering people from religions and tribes other than his might be his ticket to securing bigger responsibilities later.

  • ACF Back Order To Shoot Herdsmen Carrying AK-47s

    ACF Back Order To Shoot Herdsmen Carrying AK-47s

    Benue State Governor Samuel Ortom and the Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF) have given full backing to the directive by President Muhammadu Buhari that bandits bearing AK-47 should be shot on sight.

    The governor said the measure will reduce banditry, clashes between herders and farmers and other forms of criminality.

    The Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG) urged caution.

    Senior lawyers contacted by our correspondents kicked against the order for being contrary to the law and might lead to unintended consequences.

    All of them agree that it is illegal for anybody to carry an AK-47 rifle unless he is a security operative.

    Special Assistant on Media and Publicity to the President Garba Shehu told the BBC Hausa Service in an interview aired on Wednesday that the order showed the seriousness with which the government was taking banditry, kidnapping and other acts of terror.

    “What can be stronger than the fact that the President has directed the operatives to shoot anyone seen with dangerous weapons like AK-47, on sight, in as much as the person is not a security operative?

    “Government is doing this with all seriousness. The President equally directed that the security (operatives) should go after them and kill them except they lay down their arms,” Shehu added.

    Ortom, speaking yesterday at the Government House Makurdi when he hosted the Chairman Governing Board, Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC), Prof Adamu Kyuka, said: “I wish to commend Mr President for his recent order against those bearing AK-47 rifles. This I am sure will reduce the high rate of criminality, banditry and militia herdsmen attacks on our farming communities.

    “I don’t only criticise, I also commend where necessary. And I want to say it is a shame on those psychopaths who were bashing me for writing to Mr President because he has finally heeded my advice.”

    The ACF said the security situation required extreme measure to curb, pointing out that AK-47, being a dangerous assault rifle, should not be handled by unauthorised persons.

    Its National Publicity Secretary Emmanuel Yawe said: “Though only lawyers can interpret the legality of the President’s order, that the President ordered people to be shot without trial is a legal issue.

    “But we agree that there is a need for the extreme measure to curb the spread of arms like AK-47.

    “Some governors are even arguing that people should be allowed to carry AK-47 and that is not right. They want the country to dissolve into anarchy. It is not right for private individuals to carry AK-47, which is known all over the world as a very dangerous assault rifle.

    “Nigeria is not at war, so why should people carry AK47 freely? Even Dane guns, you need a licence to own it. In Nigeria, people just carry AK-47 freely and they kill people and nothing happens to them.

    “The ACF welcomes the President’s order.”

    Lawyers who faulted the President’s directive include Chief Ifedayo Adedipe, Seyi Sowemimo, Jibrin Okutepa, Ahmed Raji and Mr Chino Obiagwu (SAN), all Senior Advocates of Nigeria (SANs), as well as Jiti Ogunye.

    Adedipe described the order as contrary to law.

    He said: “Much as we are all concerned about insecurity in the country, I am afraid the President’s directive is wrong and frightening.

    “This is because the directive to shoot presupposes that those allegedly bearing AK-47 have been found guilty of an offence whose penalty is death. I am afraid, that does not align with our legal system.

    “You have to arrest and prosecute those bearing arms in a duly constituted court of law. To do otherwise is to follow the approach of President Rodrigo Dutrete of the Philippine in his fight against drug lords.

    “Even without the presidential directive, our security agents are masters at shooting unarmed civilians. To be given Presidential order now will enable some of them to kill innocent people, and plant guns on them. That is scary.

    “We need to do better than the bandits we are fighting. I sympathise with the President because his job is not easy in the present climate of insecurity.

    “But those in charge of our security should develop a better solution, other than the one that can lead to the killing of innocent citizens.”

    Okutepa advised those opposing the order to go to court.

    Sowemimo said: “I think the President should not be speaking literarily. I don’t expect the President to say they should just be shot on sight.

    “What he is suggesting is that the practice of carrying weapons without a license is unacceptable and that sanctions will be strictly meted out against those found with arms.”

    He said he believed that the president was trying to tell bandits, kidnappers and other criminal elements that if they use weapons without a licence, they would be arrested and prosecuted.

    Raji believes security operatives might find it difficult to identify the targets of the President’s order.

    He said: “The question will be how to define a bandit. What are the characteristics of a bandit? How do you recognise one when you see him? What if he is carrying another variant of weapon as deadly as AK 47? Is it about the nature of particular arms or the person? These are some of the issues agitating the minds before there can be any meaningful contributions to the debate.

    “If you shoot ‘bandits’ bearing AK-47, what do you do with those giving them the rifles? Should the effect be treated without attention to the cause?”

    Okutepa, who declined to analyse the President’s order, referred anyone confused by or opposed to it to seek judicial relief.

    “Only the court can say whether he is right or wrong,” Okutepa said.

    Obiagwu, National Coordinator of Legal Defense Assistance Project (LEDAP), said: “For such an order to emanate from The Presidency, there should be an Executive Order that will dispel the Police Regulation. Remember the Police Regulation has a procedure for disarming an armed person.

    “If the President wants to waive that provision of the Police Regulation which was made under Police Act, but which he can suspend, he has to issue an Executive Order saying for the issue of security, this is the position.”

    According to him, the order “did not come directly from the President.”

    He argued that if the person refuses to surrender the arms, the law does not automatically authorise security agents to kill that person.

    Ogunye also disagreed with the shoot-on-sight order.

    He said in a post on his Facebook wall, said: “Shoot AK-47 gun carriers on sight? No. Illegal possession of firearms does not attract a death penalty under our criminal law.

    “Arrest AK-47 gun carriers and seize their weapons, and apply force, including lethal force, if they resist arrest or pose threat to lives of law enforcement agents? Big yes.”

    National Chairman of Afenifere Renewal Group (ARG), Mr Wale Oshun, described the order as “delicate.”

    “Let it not be a blanket order” else the police will seize the opportunity to deal with anyone found with a gun. If you have a Presidential order to shoot-on-sight, they will kill anybody with a gun. I hope it won’t be another cover for police excesses?”

    Oshun added: “Nobody has a right to carry AK-47; it is meant for security people; but ordering police to shoot anyone with it is not the solution. They will just be killing people. Let the police disarm anyone with AK-47 and charge him to court. You can’t give the police the powers of a prosecutor, a judge and an executioner.”

    Ndudi Elumelu, minority leader of the House of Representatives, said: “The statement credited to the media aide to Mr President is a welcome development. I would have preferred Mr President by himself to have made that order”.

    “I will like him to condemn outright the activities of the herdsmen. They are everywhere, messing up all the communities, attacking people, because some people are very fanatical and they will want to hear him speak.“

  • I will never Apologise For Opposing Fulani Profiling – Bala Mohammed

    I will never Apologise For Opposing Fulani Profiling – Bala Mohammed

    Bauchi commissioner alleges Ortom using herders to cover up failure
    Bauchi State Governor, Bala Mohammed, has said that he will never apologise for opposing profiling of patriotic Fulani herders as killers and kidnappers.

    Mohammed had last week said that “herders who carry AK-47 around do so to defend themselves against cattle rustlers that are rendering them bankrupt.” The position generated mixed reactions across the country.

    Speaking yesterday during the official launch of the 2020/2021 annual livestock vaccination campaign at Galambi Cattle Ranch in Bauchi, Mohammed said no tribe or group was free from criminality, so labelling a particular tribe was unfair and would breed disunity in the country.

    Reacting to his Benue counterpart, Samuel Ortom, who asked him to apologise for defending carrying of weapons by herders, he said the Fulani, over the years, had been making so much sacrifice in their pastoral life, adding that the supply of beef would not have been possible without herders’ contribution.

    His words: “We kicked against the profiling of the Fulani as killers and kidnappers. We have no apology for what we have done because what we have done is to say the truth, that there is no tribe or group that is free from criminality. We are not saying that to spite anybody or spark unnecessary controversy, we have made our point.

    “Nigerians have discussed it and I am happy to say that, from all indications, majority of sensible Nigerians have appreciated what we have said and that is the point. I need not mention anything of this matter for fear that controversy will be escalated, I will listen to voices of reason and keep quiet about it.”

    He called on the Fulani to make their communities free of criminality.

    “They must make sure that they fish out the bad eggs from among themselves because criminality is criminality. In as much as we will protect them from being profiled badly, they should make efforts to show that majority of them are good citizens, contributing positively to the growth and development of Nigeria,” he said.

    ALSO, Bauchi Commissioner for Environment and Housing, Hamisu Shira, has said that Governor Ortom was covering up his non-performance with excuse herdsmen’s activities. He urged Ortom to prioritise good governance in Benue like his Bauchi counterpart.

    “This is a governor that could not afford to pay salaries while the workers resorted to demonstrations,” Shira said.At a press conference yesterday, the commissioner lamented that Ortom was distracting Mohammed with his comment.

  • Shortage Of Beef, Tomatoes, Onions Loom In Southern Nigeria

    Shortage Of Beef, Tomatoes, Onions Loom In Southern Nigeria

    Acute shortage of beef, vegetables, tomatoes and onions, among other essential edibles from the North may soon hit Southern Nigeria, as foodstuff and cattle breeders have threatened to withdraw their services.

    National President of the Amalgamated Union of Foodstuff and Cattle Dealers of Nigeria (AUFCDN), Muhammad Tahir, who disclosed this in Abuja, yesterday, explained that the association had lost property and several members and were, therefore, demanding N475b as compensation from the Federal Government.

    He hinted that unless the Federal Government addressed its grievances on or before Wednesday, February 24, 2021, it would have no other choice than to withdraw its services.

    The association, an affiliate of Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), said several letters written to President Muhammadu Buhari, Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Boss Mustapha and governors of the 36 states had not been acknowledged.

    He, however, pointed out that the National Assembly had addressed their grievances by referring the issue to its Ethics and Privileges Committee, adding that the two weeks given to the committee to consider the matter was too long for the breeders.

    The association also expressed concern over “incessant attacks” on its members and their property across the country including the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), Abuja.

    It revealed that despite its several complaints and engagements with the presidency, security agencies, and other relevant ministries that regulate its operations as contained in its three weeks ultimatum issued on November 7, 2020, its members have continued to suffer intimidation, frustration, humiliation, destruction of their property and carnage.

    “During the #EndSars protests, our members were killed and their property destroyed. We demanded compensations for lives and property our members lost.

    “We have also written to various security agencies on multiple taxation hampering activities of our members through illegal roadblocks at unavoidable and strategic locations on federal highways and demand tax worth N450,000 before reaching our destinations.

    “It is sad that some of the federal highways are not accessible to our members, as a result of multiple taxation, armed robbery attacks and kidnapping of our members until ransom are paid,” he lamented.

    Tahir noted that the recent violence in Shasha, Ibadan, Oyo State, claimed the lives and property of its members.

    It urged the Federal Government to revisit its demands at various times to address the issues, which include, but not limited to compensation for lives and property.

    Its other demands are: “To protect the rights of our members on transit and at their business places and dismantling of roadblocks on highways by hoodlums in disregard for laws of the country, especially from Adamawa, Taraba, Benue to Port Harcourt.

    “We seek an agreement between state governments and the union to the effect that henceforth, if any violence erupt in any state and our members are attacked, we will immediately withdraw our services.”

  • Herdsmen: Don’t set Nigeria on fire with your comments, Akeredolu warns Bala Mohammed

    Herdsmen: Don’t set Nigeria on fire with your comments, Akeredolu warns Bala Mohammed

    Ondo State governor, Rotimi Akeredolu, has described the comments made by governor of Bauchi state, Bala Mohammed, as “provoking and insensitive”.

    Recall that governor Akeredolu had in January ordered unregistered herdsmen to vacate the state’s forest reserves following the rising insecurity Ondo, saying “bad elements” had turned the forest reserves into hideouts for keeping victims of kidnapping, negotiating for ransom and carrying out other criminal activities.

    READ ALSO: Herdsmen don’t need Akeredolu’s permission to live in Ondo forests – Gov Bala Mohammed

    Expectedly, the quit order had generated different reactions with Governor Mohammed saying Akeredolu lacked the right to issue a quit notice to the herders in the state.

    “Land is in the hands of the state and federal governments in trust but Nigerians don’t need the permission of governors or the federal government to settle everywhere,” Mohammed had said on Friday.

    “You don’t need the permission of the governor of Bauchi or the governor of Ondo to be in the forests of Ondo if you choose to live in the forests because under Section 41 of the constitution, you are free to settle anywhere.”

    But reacting in a statement by Olabode Olatunde, his special assistant on new media, Mr Akeredolu advised Mr Mohammed not to set the country on fire with his “highly destructive” thoughts.

    He also urged Nigerians to ignore Mohammed’s comments and focus on how to unify the country.

    “The position of Governor Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, SAN, is not to engage or confront anyone who has the mindset of a crisis entrepreneur or war monger,” the statement read in part.

    “Very provoking and insensitive as the statement appears, we can only err on the side of caution by advising Governor Bala Mohammed not set Nigeria on fire by his thoughts that are highly destructive and undermining national cohesion.

    “Nigerians should ignore him and rather focus on those issues that can bring about peace and engender unity,” the statement read.