The Guardian (Nigeria)

Osibogun urges S’west govs to stop killer- herdsmen incursion into Yorubaland

- By Tobi Awodipe ( Lagos) and Rotimi Agboluaje ( Ibadan)

• Asks senators to boycott plenary if Lawan fails to withdraw comment • Pan- Yoruba group chides Buhari over increased insecurity • Wants FG to openly move against terrorists

AYORUBA leader and founder of the Yoruba K’oya Movement, Deji Osibogun, yesterday, urged South- West governors to stop the incursion of killerherd­smen into Yorubaland.

Osibogun, who spoke as a guest speaker at the lecture organised by the National Associatio­n of Public Affairs Analysts ( NAPAA) at Samonda, Ibadan, the Oyo State capital, said that

Yorubaland must be protected and that nobody could threaten the Yoruba on their land.

Osibogun said: “Stopping incursion into our territory is actually in the hands of the governors as the chief security officers of the states. They are supposed to provide security. They should go and provide for their people. They have done the Amotekun. Are the Amotekun operatives proper and well trained enough to provide security? The founder of Yoruba K’oya Movement also chided the Senate President, Ahmed

MLawan, over comment that South- West governors motivated the attacks on some northerner­s in Shasha market.

He, therefore, urged senators of Yoruba origin to boycott the Senate plenary if the Senate President failed to withdraw the statement. EANWHILE, a United States- based PanYoruba organisati­on, the Yoruba Alliance, has urged President Muhammadu Buhari to urgently address rising security problems hindering foreign investment­s and economic developmen­t in the country.

“Unless the Federal Government takes urgent measures to stem the tide of kidnapping­s, banditry, terrorism and other vices, Nigeria, which according to Global Peace Index Report, ranked 16th among the world’s most dangerous country, might slip into anarchy,” stated the group’s Chairman, Rotimi Oyekanmi and Secretary- General, Babajide Abatan.

In a communiqué issued after an emergency meeting in Maryland, United States ( U. S.), the group, an alliance of

Yoruba organisati­ons and clubs, said the Federal Government should stop foreign herdsmen from entering Nigeria.

It also stated that since the Fulani herders that inflict bloodshed on citizens of the nation are said to be mainly foreigners, said the Comptrolle­r- General of the Nigerian Immigratio­n Service ( NIS) should collaborat­e with the InspectorG­eneral of Police and all the service chiefs in achieving an effective enforcemen­t of immigratio­n laws and tighter border control, adding that a national livestock developmen­t policy should be initiated to prevent destructio­n of farmlands.

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