Daily Trust Saturday

Existentia­l threats of nomadic pastoralis­m to Nigeria

- Farooqkper­ogi@yahoo.com Twitter:@farooqkper­ogi with Farooq Kperogi

The bitter, blood staine drage that has defined relations between farmers and cattle herders in central Nigeria in the past few months has once again brought to the fore the dire existentia­l threat nomadic pastoralis­m poses to Nigeria. If it’s not artfully contained, it could be the death of the country.

There is no question that nomadic pastoralis­m is an anachronis­m. It doesn’t belong in the 21st century, and is a burden both on its practition­ers and on everyday peasant farmers who are its victims.

When you read about the menace of cattle herders in Nigeria, you would think Nigeria has the most cattle in the world. But figures from the United States Department of Agricultur­e shows that we’re not even in the top 18, as of late 2017. South Korea, with more than 3.3 million cattle (representi­ng 0.31 percent of the world’s cattle), is number 18 on the table.

A different figure from 2015 provided by the Food and Agricultur­al Organizati­on of the United Nations said we were number 14 with 23,141,388 cattle, representi­ng just 1.58% of the world’s cattle. What is significan­t, though, is that there are no records of herder/farmer sanguinary conflicts in countries with larger population­s of cattle than we do. And that’s because open grazing doesn’t exist in those countries.

To give just one example of how this anachronis­tic practice is ruining and displacing lives, in my local government, most peasant farmers have abandoned farming (and I know this is true of most traditiona­lly agricultur­al communitie­s) because of the menace of cattle herders. Farmers toil day and night to tend to their crops only for herders to destroy them in a day.

Last year, one of my younger brothers expended time, money, and energy to cultivate huge yam, peanut, and corn farms. He returned from school (he is an undergradu­ate) one day to find that almost all of his crops had been eaten by herds of cattle. Now he says he will never farm again. And he is not alone.

But he was even lucky. Many people who caught herds of cattle feasting on their crops and had the boldness to protest got killed by herders. A distant relative of mine was beheaded more than a year ago when he protested the invasion of his farm by herds of cattle. When a farmer was murdered by cattle herders in similar circumstan­ces in March 2017 inYakiru, a nearby community, farmers retaliated by killing four herders, and Miyetti Allah, as usual, threatened retaliatio­n.

The press statement by the group’s state chairman by the name of Usman Adamu is worth quoting. “Fulanis from across the country and neighbouri­ng countries gathered here last week and they requested for my permission to go and retaliate but I insisted that they should sheath their swords,” he said. “From there, they started pointing accusing fingers at me that government was paying money to me, that is why I don’t want them to retaliate despite incessant attacks on Fulanis. So, we want the Kwara State Government to bring the killers of Fulanis to book; if not, our people are ready to fight for their right. Then, we want this one to be the last because Fulanis of these days have changed. See what is happening in Nasarawa, Zamfara, Jos and other states. If you see what our Fulanis did in Imo, and if you are Muslims, honestly, you will cry. And if somebody said it was Fulanis that did that, you will not believe it.”

This is a self-confession of mass murder, and no one done anything about it. As a consequenc­e of the refusal of many people to go to farm, there is unaccustom­ed hunger even in rural areas that used to boast self-sufficienc­y in food production.

This topic is particular­ly difficult one for people like me because we don’t fit easily into the prevailing simplistic frames that the media and the commentari­at deploy to engage in this discussion. I come from Baruten, a rural, predominan­tly Muslim area of Kwara State that is culturally indistingu­ishable from Northwest Nigeria even though the people there don’t speak Hausa. Islam has been the predominan­t religion of the place since at least the 14th century.

That’s why I get bent out of shape when I read intolerabl­y ignorant comments suggesting that the transhuman­t herders’ murderous spree in Nigeria, particular­ly in the Christian North, is animated by Islamic jihadist impulses. I don’t read past the sentence where I encounter such undiluted ignorance. It’s not only factually inaccurate, it also renders invisible the pains of Muslims who are at the receiving end of the everincrea­sing murderous aggression of the rootless, perpetuall­y migratory Bororo pastoralis­ts and their enablers.

It’s true, though, as I’ve argued in previous columns, that it isn’t just southerner­s and northern Christians who deploy simplemind­ed ethnic and religious categories to make sense of the growing mass murders of the transhuman­t cattle herders; some settled, urbanized Fulani Muslims do the same. The worst culprit, perhaps, is Miyetti Allah, as we’ve seen from the associatio­n’s press statements.

Their pronouncem­ents give fuel to the suspicions, which have historical justificat­ions, that the murders by cattle herders who happen to be Fulani are motivated by religio-political considerat­ions. The truth, of course, is that most of the herders who clash with farming communitie­s aren’t, in fact, Muslims. They aren’t Christians either. Their whole religion is their cattle. And they clash with settled Fulani people, too.

Farmer/herder clashes are almost as old as humanity itself. have more. A discontent­ed person is regularly engrossed in thoughts of how to be betteroff in whatever he decides to go after. This obviously creates psychologi­cal instabilit­y in a greedy and ungrateful person because of his persistent and desperate attempts to realize his tall ambitions. One negative consequenc­e of this lifestyle is an unrealisti­c and disorganiz­ed way of life. Discontent­ed and unthankful persons are also likely to be under psychologi­cal tensions.

It is likely that an ungrateful person might not be committed to his religious duties, obligatory as well as superogato­ry. And even when he does, the religious act may not be accompanie­d with the desired piety and devotion. Discontent­ment creates materialis­tic tendencies. Discontent­ment similarly tempts the mind to indulge in sinful acts including illegal transactio­ns such as ribbah (usury), hoarding, and fraud; all in an attempt to making ends meet (if they would ever meet).

A contented mind is a peaceful mind. Contentmen­t is virtue and one of many forms of showing gratitude to Allah, the most Beneficent. Besides making the rich poor even though without Even before the incursion of bloodthirs­ty Bororo pastoralis­ts into Nigeria, farmers occasional­ly had clashes with settled herders over grazing, but the clashes weren’t usually as bloody and as frequent as they are now. So something new is certainly happening, and the sooner we find out what it is and nip it in the bud, the better for everyone.

Limiting cattle to grazing reserves so that they don’t wander off into people’s farms and spark needless bloodletti­ng is certainly a way forward. That’s the practice in all progressiv­e societies.

But we should also take care not to conflate“Fulani,”“cattle herding,” and “criminalit­y.” The media have unwittingl­y conspired to construct an image of all Fulani cattle herders as inhuman outsiders.That’s wrong. Those of us who grew up with Fulani herding communitie­s know that this image is false. The vast majority of cattle herders are peaceful and law-abiding and are, in fact, in some cases, also victims of the new marauders.

As I pointed in my tribute to my father a year ago, my father was raised by Fulani herders for the first 11 years of his life. My grandfathe­r had herds of cattle that Fulani herders kept in trust for him. I also have adoptive Fulani cousins that my uncle and my aunt raised.

My grandfathe­r had a love child with a Fulani woman; the love child, a woman who had three children with a Fulani man, was brought back to live with us-along with her three children. I know many people who have similar connection­s with the “bush” Fulani.

Whatever we do, it helps to remember that the vast majority of Fulani cattle herders are everyday Nigerians who have lived relatively peacefully in their communitie­s for centuries. money, “contentmen­t is not the fulfillmen­t of what you want but the realizatio­n of how much you already have”. Comparing yourself with others makes finding contentmen­t a million times harder. With contentmen­t, one is able to build a personalit­y founded on integrity and reputation. A contented person commands a lot of respect from the society. He also becomes one of those that enjoy the love and mercy of Allah (SWT). A mind blessed with contentmen­t is a mind blessed with piety.

No matter our individual or collective situations; no matter the quality of our life; no matter the measure of our material possession­s; no matter the dictates of modernity or modern life; if we remain contented, it is better and pays off. Allah (SWT) has promised in Qur’an14:7 that He will not only improve upon our lots but will also add more favours to us. If, however, we choose not to appreciate Allah’s kindness and intangible gifts, the Omnipotent is most severe in His punishment­s. Certainly, Allah loves those who are contented and grateful. It takes a sincere faith for a person to attain contentmen­t. May Allah (SWT) guide us from becoming “tools” in the hands of man’s worst enemy (Satan), amin.

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