Minister of
Agriculture, Audu Ogbeh, yesterday declared that ranches remained the only
panacea if the government was desirous to end the farmers-herders clashes
a
cross the country.
Ogbeh, who
briefed State House correspondents along with Governor Simon Lalong after a
meeting of the Committee on National Food Security at the Presidential Villa,
Abuja, yesterday said that cattle in the country contributed six percent of
the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) hence the need to create an “environment where
they have water, grass and security against rustlers.”
The minister
lamented that for nearly 40 years the country did not do much about the cattle
sub sector which, he said, made it inevitable for the herdsmen to roam around.
“The
cheapest way of rearing cattle is by roaming around with them as you see now.
If you go into a ranch, it is not cheap and government cannot subsidize cattle
rearing like they do in Europe where they subsidize every cow with €6 which is
about N2,400. We cannot afford that.
“So the
thing is, to create those ranches, the herdsmen must be prepared to pay tax to
support the programme. If we don’t do it, next year will be worse than this
year, I assure you.,” he said.
Fielding
questions, the minister said the committee at its meeting yesterday also
discussed the price of goods in the market, availability of food and the
challenges facing the country during emergencies, among others. He said the
panel looked at other security issues, including those that impede on
agriculture growth.
Lalong said
the committee would come up with recommendations for the setting up of what he
called agro-rangers as part of the solutions to the farmers-herdsmen crisis.
“Part of the
recommendation we have made and we are working on, is the issue of
agro-rangers. We noticed that if you are talking about farmers-herdsmen crisis,
you have to train a specialized group of security outfit to handle those
issues, it is not to concentrate on conventional security.
“What we are
still appealing to Mr. President to do is to hasten the process so that it can
help solve some of the problems that we have in various states on the conflicts
between farmers and herdsmen.”
Governor of
Ebonyi State, Dave Umahi, who also joined in the briefing, said the committee
was poised to resolve the conflict between farmers and herdsmen in parts of the
country.
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