THISDAY

Herdsmen Have Declared War Against Nigeria, Soyinka Cries Out

FG: Crisis is receiving the highest attention Saraki orders Senate panel to expedite action on killings 56 Taraba victims get mass burial, families narrate their ordeal Benue to bury its dead today, IG apologises

- Omololu Ogunmade, Damilola Oyedele in Abuja, Gboyega Akinsanmi in Lagos, Wole Ayodele in Jalingo and George Okoh in Makurdi

Alarmed by the mounting death toll arising from the gruesome attacks allegedly perpetuate­d by armed herdsmen on communitie­s in Benue and Taraba States, among other neighbouri­ng states, Nobel laureate, Prof. Wole Soyinka yesterday cried out that the herdsmen “have declared war against the nation”, citing their serial attacks on innocent citizens.

Soyinka, a renowned playwright and poet, also said the federal government was “culpable, definitely guilty of looking the

other way while the herdsmen attacked communitie­s without let or hindrance”, noting that the administra­tion of President Muhammadu Buhari “must indeed be held complicit”.

He expressed disappoint­ment in the manner the administra­tion has treated the nefarious activities of the herdsmen across the country in a statement he issued yesterday, stressing that this present national outrage was “over impunity”.

In a four-page statement titled: “Impunity Rides Again”, Soyinka said the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) did not come anywhere close to the homicidal propensity and attempt at dominance before it was declared a terrorist organisati­on.

While acknowledg­ing that some progress had been made by the Minister of Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t, Chief Audu Ogbeh in the last two and a half years in improved farm produce, the Nobel laureate in outright terms rejected the minister’s explanatio­n that the federal government had neglected livestock farmers over the years.

He said citing government neglect as the rationale would make the herdsmen attacks sound like the full story, but applauded the plan by Ogbeh’s ministry “to empower and organise herdsmen and cow farming”.

“I am in a position to know that much thought – and practical steps – have gone into long-term plans for bringing about the creation of ‘ranches’, ‘colonies’ – whatever the name – including the special cultivatio­n of fodder for animal feed and so on and on.

“However, the present national outrage is over impunity. It rejects the right of any set of people, for whatever reason, to take arms against their fellow men and women, to acknowledg­e their exploits in boastful and justifying accents and, in effect, promise more of the same as long as their terms and demands are not met.

“In plain language, they have declared war against the nation, and their weapon is undiluted terror. Why have they been permitted to become a menace to the rest of us? That is the issue!” he charged.

Recalling that he called upon the federal government a week ago to stop passing the buck over the petrol shortages, Soyinka said he never intended that a reverse policy would lead to “exoneratin­g – or appearing to exonerate – mass killers, rapists and economic saboteurs – saboteurs, since their conduct subverts the efforts of others to economical­ly secure their own existence, drives other producers off their land in fear and terror”.

“This promises the same plague of starvation that afflicts zones of conflict all over this (African) continent where liberally sown landmines prevent farmers from venturing near their prime source, the farm, often their only source of livelihood, and has created a whole population of amputees.

“At least, those victims in Angola, Mozambique and other former war theatres, mostly lived to tell the tale. These herdsmen, arrogant and unconscion­able, have adopted a scorched-earth policy, so that those other producers – the cassava, cocoa, sorghum, rice, etc, farmers are brutally expelled from farm and dwelling,” he said.

He also cited the hideous massacre perpetrate­d by the herdsmen early in 2016, saying this same “Murder Incorporat­ed” depicted a numerical climax “to what had been a series across a number of Middle Belt and neighbouri­ng states, with Benue taking the brunt of the butchery”.

He lamented that a peace meeting was called at the time, attended by the state government and security agencies of the nation, including the Inspector General of Police, but the herdsmen attended – according to reports – with AK47s and other weapons of mass intimidati­on visible under their garments.

He equally recalled that the federal government neither disarmed nor turned back the herdsmen that attended the peace meeting with arms and weapons.

“They freely admitted the killings but justified them by claims that they had lost their cattle to the host community. It is important to emphasize that none of their spokesmen referred to any government neglect, such as refusal to pay subsidy for their cows or failure to accord them the same facilities that had been extended to cassava or millet farmers.

“Such are the monstrous beginnings of the culture of impunity. We are reaping, yet again, the consequenc­es of such tolerance of the intolerabl­e.

“Yes, there indeed the government is culpable, definitely guilty of ‘looking the other way’. Indeed, it must be held complicit,” Soyinka maintained.

Continuing, he asked: “This question is now current, and justified: just when is terror? I am not aware that IPOB came anywhere close to this homicidal propensity and will to dominance before it was declared a terrorist organisati­on. The internatio­nal community rightly refused to go along with such an absurdity”

For the avoidance of doubt, Soyinka observed that the IPOB leadership is its own worst enemy.

“It repels public empathy; indeed, I suspect that it deliberate­ly cultivates an obnoxious image, especially among its internet mouthers who make rational discourse impossible,” he said of the proscribed group.

However, the Nobel laureate said the conduct of that movement, even at its most extreme, “could by no means be reckoned as terrorism”.

“By contrast, how do we categorise Myetti? How do we assess a mental state that cannot distinguis­h between a stolen cow – which is always recoverabl­e – and human life, which is not.

“Villages have been depopulate­d far wider than those outside their operationa­l zones can conceive. They swoop on sleeping settlement­s, kill and strut. They glory in their seeming supremacy.

“Cocoa farmers do not kill when there is a cocoa blight. Rice farmers, cassava and tomato farmers do not burn.

“The herdsmen cynically dredge up decades-old affronts – they did at the 2016 Benue ‘peace meeting’ to justify the killings of innocents in the present - These crimes are treated like the norm.

“Once again, the nation is being massaged by specious rationalis­ations while the rampage intensifie­s and the spread spirals out of control.

“When we open the dailies tomorrow morning, there is certain to have been a new body count, to be followed by the arrogant justificat­ion of the Myetti Allah. The warnings pile up, the distress signals have turned into a prolonged howl of despair and rage.

“The answer is not to be found in pietistic appeals to victims to avoid ‘hate language’ and divisive attributio­ns. The sustained, killing monologue of the herdsmen is what is at issue. It must be curbed, decisively and without further evasivenes­s,” he said.

Using the mismanagem­ent of the Boko Haram menace under former President Goodluck Jonathan as a reminder, Soyinka stated that the former president only saw “ghosts” when Boko Haram was already excising swathes of territory from the nation space and abducting school pupils.

“The ghosts of Jonathan seem poised to haunt the tenure of Muhammadu Buhari,” he warned.

However, in reaction to the outrage expressed over the killings, presidenti­al spokesman, Mr. Femi Adesina, yesterday frowned at those accusing the president of condoning the massacres occasioned by farmersher­dsmen conflicts across the country.

Adesina, who is the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, in a video message he posted on his personal Facebook account, dismissed the insinuatio­ns that Buhari was condoning the killing because he is a Fulani man.

According to him, such killings by herdsmen predated the Buhari administra­tion.

He said: “Something that is disturbing that I have heard about it is linking those developmen­ts to the fact that a Fulani man is president and so, he is brooking such kind of evil acts.

“I think that is very unkind. And I will try to back my position with statistics.

“In 2013, particular­ly, there were nine cases of herdsmen invading communitie­s in Benue State alone and more than 190 people were killed.”

The presidenti­al aide, according to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), also noted that in 2014, there were about 16 of such tragic developmen­ts, with more than 231 people killed.

He further explained that there was a change of government in May 2015, but between January and May 2015, there were six attacks which left about 335 people dead.

“Now, the question is, during that period, did we have a Fulani president? This is showing us that the issue of herdsmen attacking settlement­s, attacking farmers, attacking communitie­s, is pure criminalit­y and it is something that government must deal with.

“It is the duty of government to preserve the lives of the citizenry. It is the responsibi­lity of government to maintain law and order and that this government is determined to do.

“Therefore, let nobody say that all this is happening because we have a Fulani president.

“We have had many Fulani presidents in the past and this issue of herders and local communitie­s at loggerhead­s has predated this government,’’ he added.

Adesina appealed to all citizens to continue to support and co-operate with the Buhari administra­tion as the government was poised to find lasting solutions to the conflicts.

According to him, the government is determined to get to the bottom of it and it will get done.

‘Crisis Receiving Attention’

Irrespecti­ve of the assurance provided by the president’s spokesman, the Federal Executive Council (FEC) yesterday kept mum on the devastatin­g killings of innocent people in Benue, Taraba and neighbouri­ng states.

Whereas the council was expected to deliberate extensivel­y on the matter and brief journalist­s on its decision, there was no mention of it at yesterday’s briefing coordinate­d by the Minister of Informatio­n and Culture, Mr. Lai Mohammed.

It was not until State House correspond­ents started to ask questions on why the federal government had found it difficult to deploy troops to quell the raging crisis in Benue as it did during the threats posed by IPOB in the Southeast in September, that Mohammed attempted to address the issue.

He said the crisis in the Middle Belt of the country was receiving the highest attention in the government.

According to him, deployment of troops would be predicated on the aftermath of the current examinatio­n being conducted on the matter.

“What I can assure you is that the government is very, very concerned about the herdsmen and farmers’ clashes and it is receiving attention at the highest level and as to if troops will be sent, it will be a decision after thorough deliberati­on on the matter,” he said.

Also asked to explain the difference between the cattle colonies being proposed by the federal government in pursuit of the solution to the farmers-herdsmen clashes in Benue State, Mohammed said he was not an expert on agricultur­e but believed that colonies are bigger than ranches.

“I’m not an agricultur­al expert. I know that a colony is much bigger in nature than the ranch,” he said.

But throwing more light on the proposal, the Minister of State for Aviation, Mr. Hadi Sirika, explained that cattle colonies were more or less the creation of the cattle routes which he said were first created in the country during the colonial era in 1914.

However, he said the establishm­ent of cattle colonies would not commence without consulting farmers and will be done in accordance with the relevant laws of the land.

According to him, cattle routes as they existed then had to do with the routes the cattle passed through, where they grazed, where they were fed and where they drank water.

“I think perhaps, not speaking as an agricultur­e expert, but in the hinterland, where I grew up, there used to be cattle routes. They called them colonies in the local language.

“They were establishe­d from 1914 as cattle routes, where they grazed, where they followed, where they fed and where they drank water.

“When that was available, there was no farmers-herdsmen clash, because the routes were specifical­ly identified and marked and then paid for overtime.

“But I think due to urbanisati­on, due to the increase in population, the lands were either taken over or used for farms. But the question as to the difference between colonies and cattle ranches, it is about the same thing. I don’t think government will do anything without recourse to farmland owners and the laws of the land,” he explained.

Senate to Expedite Action

Irrespecti­ve of the seeming reluctance by the federal government to treat the murderous attacks perpetuate­d by the herdsmen as acts of terrorism, the President of the Senate, Dr. Bukola Saraki, in response to the recent killings in Benue and Rivers States, directed members of the Senate Ad-hoc Committee on Security to immediatel­y resume sitting and work through the weekend to ensure that it has an interim report ready for the considerat­ion of members by next week.

In statement issued yesterday by his spokesman, Mr. Yusuph Olaniyonu, Saraki, in reaction to the situation in Benue, especially reinforced his belief that the killings were clear indication­s that the security architectu­re in the country has inherent faults and needs to be refurbishe­d.

“I believe the sad situation in Benue State shows some fundamenta­l faults in our security system. There is a clear failure of intelligen­ce gathering, analysis and response time.

“Our security agencies must be totally overhauled in terms of equipment, specialisa­tion, funding, training and staffing.

“This is the reason why in November, the Senate set up a special committee led by Senate Majority Leader, Ahmed Lawan, to work with the security agencies and review the entire system with a view to identifyin­g what is required in terms of laws, processes, procedures, funding and other necessitie­s for us to have a solid security system which can be pro-active in identifyin­g potential threats, responding to them on time and preventing any breach.

“We are quite aware of the fact that security is the first and prime responsibi­lity of any government. That is why since early last week, I have directed the Lawan committee to take into considerat­ion the sad developmen­ts in Benue and Rivers in their deliberati­ons.

“Now, we cannot wait for the time they planned to conclude their recommenda­tions. They must fast track their schedule.

“They must sit through the weekend and get an interim report ready for the Senate when we resume plenary on Tuesday. We must immediatel­y support the executive in solving this problem.

“We cannot afford the spilling of blood and we are already moving into the election year with the potential for the aggravatio­n or escalation of these problems.

“We must decisively resolve the problem of needless blood letting,” Saraki stated.

56 Victims Buried in Taraba

Even as Saraki ordered the Senate committee to expedite action on its report, 56 persons killed in fresh attacks on five communitie­s in Lau Local Government Area of Taraba State by Fulani militia were yesterday given a mass burial by the communitie­s.

However, the corpses of no fewer than 35 people who were believed to have been killed during the attacks were yet to be recovered for burial.

Donadda, Lavoro, Katibu, Didango and Maku communitie­s were attacked on Monday through Tuesday by the Fulani militia who set the entire communitie­s ablaze after killing anyone in sight.

There was an outpouring of grief as relatives of the victims and others who witnessed the burial wept uncontroll­ably and rained curses on the federal government for failing to secure the lives of the citizenry across the country.

They debunked insinuatio­ns that the attacks were a fall out of the crisis between Bachama farmers and the militia, insisting that they were attacked without provocatio­n.

Narrating her ordeal, a mother of four who lost her husband to the attack, Mrs. Paulina Habila, said that her husband was slaughtere­d like a goat.

“My husband was slaughtere­d like a goat in my presence by the Fulani people. They razed our community and in my village alone 35 persons were killed. Are the Fulani herdsmen fighting a war with Christian communitie­s in Taraba State? Why are they killing us for no reason?” she asked.

Another victim who spoke to newsmen, Pastor Titus Makovini, said the attackers entered the community church and slaughtere­d some worshipers, as well as some of those who ran into the church for refuge while others fled into the bush.

He revealed that for the two days that the attack lasted, there was no security reinforcem­ent in the various communitie­s which are presently deserted as most people have moved into the internally displaced persons (IDP) camp in Jalingo, the state capital.

At the IDP camp, the displaced persons took turns to narrate their ordeals, and all of them were unanimous that they had been rendered homeless and could not go back to their homes for fear of further attacks.

“We have lost our ancestral homes as the entire communitie­s have been razed. Our communitie­s have become unsafe for habitation since Fulani herdsmen still lurk around and they might attack us again.

“Go to our villages now. All what we have laboured for has gone. We don’t know where to start and we keep wondering if the federal government is allowing the herdsmen to kill us unchalleng­ed,” they said.

But even as they lamented their fate, the Taraba State Police Command appealed to the residents of the affected communitie­s to return to their homes, assuring them of adequate security.

The Police Public Relations Officer, David Misal who gave the assurance on behalf of the Police Commission­er, Mr. Dave Akinremi, said additional security had already been redeployed in the troubled communitie­s to safeguard them from further attacks, but he refrained from giving the number of casualties from the attacks.

He, however, appealed to the public to furnish the command with useful informatio­n that would assist it and lead to the arrest of the perpetrato­rs of the attacks in the state.

Benue to Bury Its Dead Today

Just as the Taraba people buried their dead yesterday, the Benue State Government said yesterday that it would bury 73 victims of the new year day attacks by suspected herdsmen today.

The victims were killed by the herdsmen who invaded five villages in Guma and Logo Local Government Areas on new year day. Many others were injured while over 50,000 people were displaced.

The Benue State governor, Samuel Ortom, announced government’s decision to hold a mass burial for the deceased at a stakeholde­rs’ meeting in Makurdi, the state capital.

The meeting focused on insecurity in the state and the way forward.

Ortom, who called for prayers, said that the deceased would be remembered for sacrificin­g their lives to protect Benue farmlands.

He appealed for calm during the burial and cautioned Benue residents against reprisals, reported NAN.

Ortom vowed to ensure that the attackers are apprehende­d and promised government’s support to the security agencies to actualise the arrests.

However, during the stakeholde­rs’ meeting, the Inspector General of Police, Mr. Ibrahim Idris, came under a barrage of criticism as he resumed duty in Makurdi yesterday, following directive by the president on Monday ordering him to relocate to the state to stop the killings.

Idris stated that his presence in the state was to restore peace in the areas affected by the crisis and assured his audience that the “hoodlums and miscreants” responsibl­e for the killings will be arrested and prosecuted.

He said the police would carry out detailed investigat­ions into the cause of the attacks, adding that another stakeholde­rs’ meeting will be conveyed involving Benue and Nasarawa State, which was accused of harbouring the herdsmen.

Idris also apologised to the people of Benue for referring to the recent herdsmen attacks on the state as communal clashes.

“There was a misreprese­ntation I made at a press conference in Abuja. But all I was trying to do was to convey a message that all Nigerians should be able to live together in peace.

“I apologise for the misconcept­ion in the statement that I made at a press conference in Abuja. I was only trying to convey a message that Nigerians should live together in peace. As policemen, we try to avoid divisive statements,” he said.

The IG was however unsettled when speaker after speaker accused him of complicity in the crisis.

Some of the speakers including Chief Edward Ujege, representi­ng the three socio-cultural groups in the state, Mr. Terrence Kwaghnongu, representi­ng the youths, and Mrs. Rebecca Apedzan, representi­ng women, insisted that only the military and not the police can curtail the herdsmen attacks in Benue.

Also, in their remarks, Prof. Daniel Saror, Justice Utsaha and Chief John Anteyin, representi­ng the three senatorial zones of the state, all rejected the federal government’s proposed cattle colonies, insisting that ranching remained the only solution to the herdsmen-farmers’ clashes in line with global best practices.

Anteyin, while speaking, reminded the IG: “When you were a Commission­er of Police in Nasarawa State, there were a lot of violent attacks on Agatu by Fulani herdsmen who camped in Loko Local Government of Area of the state.

“The state assembly member representi­ng Agatu constituen­cy, Hon. Audu Sule, who is here with us today, was sent to you for help and you said there was a limit to how much you can intervene, except when you receive orders from the headquarte­rs, but now that you are in charge of the headquarte­rs yourself, what have you done?”

Kwaghnongu also described Idris’ presence in Benue as an insult to the sensibilit­ies of people in the state.

“Your DIG Operations told us on television that the terrain is complex, so are you now coming to clear the terrain?

“We have this crisis because you refused to adhere to the global terrorism index, which rates these herdsmen as the fourth deadliest terror group in the world.

“We need the military presence here in Benue State because what is happening is tantamount to genocide.

“The president was in Zamfara State when the herdsmen attacked the state, he constitute­d a military taskforce to protect the North-west.

“He said the herdsmen must be declared terrorists and the leadership of Miyetti Allah must be arrested,” Kwaghnongu reminded the IG.

Also speaking, Josephine Habba, who represente­d the civil society groups in the state, Rev. Fr. Solomon Mfa, representi­ng the clergy, and Chief Benson Ogairo, a security expert, while alleging that a lot of killings of Tiv people was going on unreported in Nasarawa State, they maintained that if the president was not prepared to personally come and commiserat­e with the people of Benue at this critical time, he should not bother to come for their votes in 2019.

On their part, the paramount ruler of the Tiv nation, Tor Tiv James Ayatse and the speaker of the Benue Assembly, Hon. Terkimbi Ikyange, noted that what was going on in the state was not about the Anti-open Grazing Act enacted in the state, but an ethnic cleansing agenda.

The Tor Tiv, who said that the heartless destructio­n of lives and property in the state must stop, further appealed to the IG to ensure that any attempt to wipe out the Benue people is immediatel­y aborted.

Death Toll Rises to 80

Meanwhile, at least 80 person may have been killed in Benue State since the new year day attacks that forced tens of thousands from their homes, an official of the Benue State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) has said.

The violence between herders and farmers intensifie­d over the New Year, fuelled by the new law banning the nomadic cattle rustlers from moving through the state.

“Eighty is the number we can say for now, the attacks have not stopped,” the SEMA executive secretary Emmanuel Shior told AFP by telephone.

Shior said the killings had displaced thousands of people in the local councils of Guma and Logo who are now seeking shelter in four camps.

“The number (of internally displaced people) is 80,000 now because the killings have continued, some of the people in other states are running to Benue,” Shior said in Makurdi.

“We suspect these people are reacting against the open grazing prohibitio­n put in place by the governor of Benue State.”

The prohibitio­n was meant to encourage the herdsmen, who belong to the Fulani ethnic group, to shift from nomadic grazing to ranching cattle, which would theoretica­lly prevent bloody disputes over land with farmers.

But when the new law was introduced last year, it was instantly condemned by the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Associatio­n of Nigeria (MACBAN), the umbrella body of Fulani herders in Nigeria, which said it threatened their way of life.

“It is very wrong for a governor to ban Fulani from feeding their cows. These cows are their livelihood­s,” said Haruna Usman, the Kaduna State chairman of MACBAN.

“That is where the government made a big mistake,” Usman said, calling for negotiatio­ns.

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