As the
manhunt for killer herdsmen responsible for the recent carnage in Benue State
intensifies, what appears to be the lead on the possible direction security
operatives need to beam their searchlight on may have emerged.
Sources told
Sunday Sun that while those behind the killings and other high profile crimes,
including kidnapping for ransom and cattle rustling are indeed largely of
Fulani extraction, they maintained it is erroneous and misleading to dub every
Fulani cattle herder a killer.
Generally,
there are three different types of Fulani based on settlement patterns: the
nomadic or pastoral or Bororo , the semi nomadic and the settled or “town
Fulani” who are also known as Fulani Ngida. The pastoral Fulani move around
with their cattle throughout the year. Typically, Bororo do not stay around for
long stretches not more than two-four months at a time.
The
semi-nomadic Fulani who happen to settle down temporarily at particular times
of the year, or move around beyond their immediate surroundings, and even
though they possess livestock, they do not wander away from their fixed or
settled homestead. The settled or town Fulani are easily identified with their
communities and are easily traceable since they have permanent residence.
Sunday Sun
gathered that while there are indeed three categories of Fulani, two of these
categories, the settled or town Fulani otherwise known as Fulani Ngida and the
Bororo are more popular in Nigeria. The Bororo , besides having no traceable
addresses, are also known for their wild nature. In addition to these, they are
believed to migrate perpetually with their cattle, traveling from as far as
Mali and Niger Republic to Nigeria and other West African countries in search
of greener pasture for their herds.
Although the
same blood is said to flow in both the Fulani Ngida and the Bororo , the
latter, Sunday Sun learnt, have more wayward elements in the mould of the
street urchins in the Southern part of the country, most of whom resort to
criminalities to survive.
The Bororo
many of whom are said to be wild in nature owing to their upbringing, which
sources claim is often devoid of all forms of education and religious
orientation, largely reside in the bush from where the criminal elements among
them launch their operations.
“This set of
Fulani neither believe in the existence of God nor worship God. This perhaps
informs the reason for their unforgiving disposition whenever they are
offended. No matter how long the offence may last, they will always come back for
a revenge until there is nobody to attack again,” a source said.
The
criminals among the Fulani subset are alleged to be responsible for high
profile kidnappings along major highways in the country including the
Abuja-Kaduna highway and Abuja-Lokoja. They have also been linked to cattle
rustling and killings of fellow Fulani.
No fewer
than seven of such criminal herders were sentenced to life imprisonment in
April 2017 for their involvement in the abduction of a former Secretary to the
Government of the Federation SGF, Chief Olu Falae who was kidnapped from his
farm in Ilado Village, Akure North Local Government Area of Ondo state in
September, 2015.
In a related
development, 28 of such suspected Fulani criminals terrorizing the
Abuja-Jere-Kaduna highways were also arrested last December. The suspects were
apprehended by the IGP Special Tactical Squad upon the raids carried on some of
their identified den, camps, black spots and hideouts in the forests located in
the Federal Capital Territory, Niger and Kaduna states.
Lately,
however, these criminals are believed to have constituted themselves into
avengers for their tribesmen who lodge cases of injustice with them. A source
informed Sunday Sun that once vengeance-seeking members of a community lodge complaints
against anybody or any community, the group could go as far as other
neighbouring West African countries to hire fighters, launch attack against the
offending community, after which they disappear.
Senator
Kabiru Marafa from Zamfara State confirmed this much last week while raising
the alarm about his state being under the siege of militias. According to him,
“My state is now under the control of foreign militias. They move freely with
their arms. I said it on Tuesday.
I was home
during the fuel crisis. In my own town, they (militia groups) are the ones that
judge between the people. The people no longer go to the local authorities. If
there is a problem, they go to the bush and tell these people that I have a
problem with somebody. That is a national emergency. In all local governments,
this is the truth of the matter,” the lawmaker disclosed.
Sunday Sun
gathered that the scenario as painted by Senator Marafa is also obtainable in
some other states in the North and might have been largely responsible for the
recent upsurge in the activities of killer herdsmen in Benue with the recently
passed Anti-Open Grazing Law and the setting up of Livestock Guards by the
state government, fueling the latest attacks.
Before the
attacks, allegations of extortion and high-handedness were said to have trailed
the activities of the livestock guards since they were commissioned to enforce
the new law. Sunday Sun was informed that some of the livestock guards were
allegedly confiscating the cattle of herders who ran foul of the new law and,
in some cases, feathering their own nests with herders’ misfortune.
Piqued by
the incessant harassments from the livestock guards and the losses incurred
from their confiscated cattle, some the affected Fulani herders, Sunday Sun
gathered, resorted to seeking the help of criminal minded Fulani who responded
by launching the coordinated attacks on the affected communities in the state
and leaving no fewer than 73 people dead.
But reacting
to this, a former commissioner of police in Lagos, Abubakar Tsav disagreed with
the claim that the attacks on Benue communities were caused by the Anti-Open
Grassing Law in the state. He noted that similar killings had been witnessed in
the state in the past when the law was yet to be made. He called on the Federal
Government to set up a commission of enquiry to look into the problem with a
view to ascertaining the root cause.
His words:
“Nobody has been able to find the root cause of these killings. The best place
to start is to try to know the root cause. In the past, herdsmen lived amongst
the people and there was no such problem, why is it happening now? The
government should constitute a federal commission of enquiry, which will cover
all areas where herdsmen had killed. It is only when we know the root cause
that we can start tackling it.”
“In Benue
State, there was no anti-open grassing law when so many people were killed in
Agatu and when they made this law they still killed so many people in Logo and
Guma local government areas. Let the government constitute a commission of
inquiry to find out the real cause. We need to hear the side of the herdsmen.
Are they the ones killing or some people are coming to support them and in the
process killing people,” he queried.
Tsav added
that there was also a need to probe into the activities of livestock guards,
insisting only a commission of enquiry would reveal the truth behind the
problem.
“These
livestock guards are armed but they have not been trained in the use of
firearms. We also understand that a lot of them have cattle of their own and
that they make a lot of money and whenever there is problem between them and
the Fulani, the government gives them money. So, they take delight in causing
problem. It is possible. But the truth can only be known when there is a
commission of inquiry in place,” he declared.
In his own
contribution, Col. Gabriel Ajayi (retd) said it was wrong to view the problem
of Fulani herdsmen as a security challenge. He posited that apprehending and
prosecuting the perpetrators of the killings as directed by the Senate would
not produce the desired results.
According to
him, “the problem of Fulani is not a security problem; it’s a Nigerian problem
and the current security approach we are giving it can’t be used to solve the
problem. Everybody wants the culprits to be arrested and prosecuted, will that
bring back those people that had been killed and will that solve the problem?
“We need to
immediately restructure this country and let the people take care of
themselves. Let us go back to what we were as at October 1, 1960,” he said.
While
recalling that nomadic herdsmen had always been part of Nigeria without the
tale of bloodletting, he questioned the genesis of their resolve to carry
firearms in the cause of their pastoral task. “The Bororo had always been part
of the nomadic herdsmen in Nigeria since I was a child and then, they were
carrying only sticks as at that time and not weapons.
“Who are the
owners of the cows that are being herded around Nigeria? Are the Bororo the
owners of these cows? Are the nomadic herdsmen who are not Bororo the owners of
these cows? Is it possible for the herders to carry their cattle all the way
from Mali to Nigeria? And how will they give back the money to the owner when
they finish selling it here? Let’s take a closer look at what is actually
happening in Nigeria and let’s take it as a national problem, and face it
squarely.
“Those
people are the very owners of the cattle and they’re Nigerians. So, don’t let
us be under any illusion that the cattle belong to some people outside
Nigeria,” he said.
Proffering
further solution to the problem, Ajayi said Nigeria should consider phasing out
the species of cows currently being reared in Nigeria, which, according to him,
cannot be ranched. He maintained that as long as this species of cows continue
to roam the country, farmers/herdsmen face-off will continue to be a problem.
“There are
two types of cows: those that feed on dry leaves and those that feed on wet
leaves.
What the
government needs to do is to buy all the cows around from all these herdsmen
and share it out and reintroduce the cows that eat dry leaves that can be
ranched. The cows we have today cannot be ranched, because they eat wet leaves
and not dry leaves, so they need to graze around. And as long as they graze
around, there will always be problems between herdsmen and communities where
the cows are grazed,” he said.
Ajayi also
called on state governors to seek to assert themselves as chief security
officers in their respective states to be able to put full state security
machinery in place and safeguard the lives and property of the people in their
respective states.
“There
should be an opportunity for all the state governors to visit the Supreme Court
now to seek the constitutional interpretation of what it means to be the chief
security officer of their states.
What does
the constitution anticipate them to use to be the chief security officer of
their states? How does the constitution expect them to act as chief security
officer of their states?
“Everybody
is blaming the governors for this and that, what will the governors use to
protect anybody?
The
governors have no police; they are not the owners of the security apparatus in
their states. The security architectures in their states are Federal security
architectures. So how do the governors operate? The governors should go to
court and seek out these problems once and for all,” he submitted.
Despite the
order given to the police for the arrest of suspected herdsmen responsible for
the horrendous killing of more than 70 people in Benue State three weeks ago,
the killing continued unabated in the state and some other parts of the
country.
The Senate
had last week given the Inspector-General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, a 14-day
ultimatum to investigate and arrest the perpetrators of the killings. The
lawmakers’ position was sequel to the consideration of a report of the Senate
Ad Hoc Committee on the Review of the Current Security Infrastructure in
Nigeria. The committee had earlier visited Benue to ascertain the level of
killings in the state.
The state,
which prides itself as the food basket of the nation was on New Year’s day,
thrown into mourning, following the massacre by suspected herdsmen who staged
two days of coordinated attacks on six communities in the state.
The affected
communities are Tomatar, Umenge, Akor villages in Guma, Governor Samuel Ortom’s
home town, and Ayilamo, Turan, Ngambe-Tiev in Logo Local Government Area of the
state, leaving at least 73 persons dead, including nine members of the state
livestock guards, who also had their operational vehicle burnt by the invaders.
The attack also left several persons with varying degrees of injuries while
scores of houses and property were razed and destroyed.
But in spite
of the hue and cry the killings have generated in the country, the
perpetrators, who are believed to be Fulani herders appear unyielding in their
resolve to inflict more sorrow on people of the state. According to the state
governor, no fewer than six people were reported killed in fresh attacks in
Logo and Guma local government areas of the state last week by criminals suspected
to be herdsmen.
Similarly, a
pregnant woman was reported to have lost her life to killer herders in Ekiti
last Thursday. The incident, Sunday Sun gathered, happened barely 24 hours
after Governor Ayo Fayose had a peace meeting with Miyetti Allah Cattle
Breeders Association, farmers and local hunters in the state.
Security
experts, however, expressed the fear that the attacks and killings by criminal
elements suspected to be herders may continue, unless the government decides to
approach the problem more decisively, saying the current arrangement where the
problem is left in the hands of security agents, might not yield the best
result.
According to
them, killer herders will continue to remain elusive to security operatives not
only until the root cause of the problem is identified, but also until the
government is able to sieve the grains from the chaffs, as according to them,
not all Fulani herdsmen are killers as currently being peddled.
Source: sunnews
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