• ‘They are
criminals, should be treated as such’
• Wants
sources of arms uncovered
• Tension in
Delta, Ondo communities
• Osinbajo
greets Muslims, urges unity
As Muslims
celebrated the end of Ramadan fast yesterday, the Sultan of Sokoto, Alhaji
Mohammad Sa’ad Abubakar urged the Federal Government to move against killer
herdsmen across the country.
herdsmen across the country.
The royal
father, in his Eid-el-Fitr message yesterday, noted that genuine herdsmen do
not carry guns, but only go about with their cows, holding sticks. He
acknowledged that there could be bad eggs among the Fulani, but insisted that
those carrying arms and perpetrating heinous crimes are not herdsmen.
“They are
criminals and they should be treated as such,” Sultan said. He therefore urged
the government to urgently uncover the sources of their weapons and bring the
full weight of the law to bear on all those implicated.
He praised
the Federal Government for the progress so far recorded in the war against
insurgency in the north-east but cautioned against complacency as the challenge
is far from being over.
Guardian reported that the sultan
appealed to all Nigerians to see the issue of security as a collective
responsibility and support the efforts of the security agencies to make the
country more secure.He charged Muslims to continue to reflect and uphold the
virtues learnt during the month-long Ramadan fast, including patience,
perseverance and brotherliness. He appealed for continued fervent prayers for
the ailing President Muhammadu Buhari, and the sustenance of peace, unity and
progress of the country.
The Islamic
leader spoke as residents of Ndokwa East Local Government Area of Delta State
now live in constant fear for their lives following intermittent attacks on
them by the Fulani herdsmen.
Since last
weekend, one person has been killed and no fewer than three others got gunshot
wounds inflicted on them by the herdsmen at Ulogwe farmland, Oloa-Ossissa. The
victims include Emmanuel Isiekwene and Mike Orji.These incidents came weeks
after the gruesome murder of about six persons by herdsmen on their farms at
Ossissa. They forced the farmers to abandon their farms.
In the
latest attacks, a father and his son were the first victims before others were
waylaid and shot at by the herdsmen. While the son died instantly, the father
was seriously injured and is currently receiving treatment in an un-disclosed
location.
The
development has made the farmers jittery and deserted their farmlands already
destroyed by the invaders.One of the villagers and indigenes of
Umudike-Ossissa, Stanley Isiekwene, said that after the recent killings that
attracted Governor Ifeanyi Okowa to the community, the people expected that the
area would be calm and wondered why the attacks by the herdsmen continued.
Also,
farmers in Ondo State trooped out to protest against the killing of a colleague
by Fulani herdsmen who often attack them and destroy their farmlands. The victim,
Mr. Linus Ogheh, a farmer and indigene of Ebonyi State was killed last week at
Ileyo Camp, an agrarian community near Igbatoro in Akure North Local Government
Area.
It was
learnt that suspected herdsmen, who were searching for their strayed cows following
an exchange of gunshots with policemen drafted to the farm of the former
Secretary to the Government of Federation (SGF), Chief Olu Falae, had killed
Ogbeh.
The murder
of the father of seven, Ogbeh, provoked a protest by the farmers, their wives, children
and other stakeholders in the area, who gathered at Ileyo Camp to condemn the
damage being caused by the grazing of animals in their area.
The
protesters, armed with green leaves and placards with inscriptions condemning
grazing on their farms and attendant damage to their crops, trooped out to the
lonely road chanting anti-herdsmen slogans.
The Bale of
Ileyo Igbatoro Camp, Chief Ogunleye Taiwo, told journalists in Akure yesterday
that the majority of people living in the area were non-indigenes comprising
Igbo, Agatu, Ebira and Langtang farmers.
“This man
that was killed had been living here for over 30 years. Chief Falae’s farm is
close to us here. Our people cannot go to farm again because of the fear that
the herdsmen would attack them.
“This is the
time we should be spraying our cocoa farm with chemicals, we cannot go to farm.
This area is the food basket of Akure, the state capital but cattle enter our
farms without restraint. We are tired of the menace of the herdsmen.
“The youths
in the area had wanted to go and confront the herdsmen, we are the ones that
have been restraining them because we know what that can cause,” he said.In his
Eid-el-Fitr message yesterday, Acting President Yemi Osinbajo pledged the
commitment of the Federal Government to doing everything to ensure the
entrenchment and sustenance of the existing unity among Nigerians. He said this
would boost development and enhance the welfare of the people.
Osinbajo
spoke at his official residence at the Presidential Villa, also known as Aguda
House, where he received the Muslim community who paid him homage on the
occasion of the 2017 Eid-el-Fitr.Receiving the delegation on behalf of
President Muhammadu Buhari, the Acting President said: “Your ethnicity doesn’t
matter, and that is why for us, unity is so important that we must work
together to make sure that our country is able to take care of the millions of
people we govern. God expects us to take care of the poor and those suffering,
to ensure that we use government resources only in such a way that will benefit
the good of the majority of our people.”
Osinbajo
re-echoed President Buhari’s sallah message to citizens, saying that the
country must remain united. He enumerated the gains of unity to include love
towards one another, integrity, enjoying the endowments of the nation, gaining
respect globally and diversity, among others.
“Our unity
is not negotiable. We should make sure that we remain united in order to enjoy
the resources God has blessed Nigeria with. So many nations envy what we have
as a nation,” he said.
The Acting
President used the opportunity to pray for President Buhari’s quick recovery
and return to Nigeria, adding that the president still has a lot to do for
Nigeria.
Earlier, the
leader of the delegation and Minister of the Federal Capital Territory,
Mohammed Bello said paying Sallah homage was customary as a mark of respect for
the president.He thanked the security agencies and religious and traditional
rulers in the FCT for playing a great role in sustaining the peace being
enjoyed in the nation’s capital city.
He said the
kind of harmonious relationship they have exhibited needs to be replicated in
the 36 states. The delegation commended the Acting President for guiding the
country well in the absence of his principal.Present at the event was the Chief
Justice of Nigeria, Justice Walter Onnoghen, some legislators and members of
the Federal executive Council.
Besides,
former Vice President, Atiku Abubakar, urged Nigerians to demonstrate a greater
spirit of tolerance and firmer commitment to peaceful coexistence, which he
described as the prerequisites for unity and love.
In his
message, Atiku said: “Abstention from eating and drinking should go a long way
to create empathy from the rich towards the poor, making the well to do
appreciate the conditions of millions who go hungry because of poverty. “I urge
well-to-do Muslims to identify with ordinary Nigerians who go without food
almost every day, and to be more concerned about what to do to improve their
plight.”
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