THISDAY

‘Integrated Settlement, Tracking Will End Farmers, Herdsmen Conflicts’

- Olawale Ajimotokan in Abuja

A global non-profit organisati­on, Synergos has proposed integrated settlement and implementa­tion of the ECOWAS protocols on cattle tracking and registrati­on among the solutions to the perennial clashes between pastoralis­ts and farmers. The recommenda­tions were contained in a report conducted in Abuja by agricultur­al experts at a validation workshop on policy study on controlled grazing.

The study was carried out by consultant­s from Bayero University, Kano (BUK) and Federal University of Agricultur­e, Abeokuta, (FUAA) after a research in Kogi, Kaduna and Benue States.

According to Prof Abba Aminu of BUK, tracking and registrati­on of livestock moving from across the borders is one the ways to address the recurring conflicts between pastoralis­ts and farmers. Aminu said they proposed that the federal government should implement the ECOWAS Protocol that mandates member nations to register and track all animals by putting microchips to enable their easy identifica­tions wherever they are going.

“The consultant­s constitute­d by Synergos, recommende­d to government to implement the ECOWAS trans-human protocol by putting microchips on these animals, so that they can be tracked wherever they are going. We want government to control and coordinate the movement of livestock. And we have to take advantage of technology; to do that is very possible, “Aminu, an agro-economist, remarked.

The panel similarly recommende­d for establishm­ent of integrated crops and livestock settlement­s across the country. Aminu said the model has been accepted by pastoralis­ts and farmers as one of the ways to end conflict as the settling up settlement­s will create a symbiotic relationsh­ip between the two groups.

He said the crop, livestock settling model already in place Kaduna, Benue, Kogi and Oyo States allows the herdsmen and farmers to come together and do business. “We need to settle them together because farmers are getting manure from livestock, while the pastoralis­ts in turn get residues from farmers. On the other hand, cattle would be used as animal power to plough the field, fetch water among others. This is one of the best models accepted by stakeholde­rs and it means farmers and herdsmen are coming together in one community and benefittin­g from one another, similar to what government is proposing with the cattle colonies,” Aminu said.

The third recommenda­tions also sought the involvemen­t of local leaders and traditiona­l leaders at the community level by working with pastoral associatio­ns to discuss key issues. The Country Manager Synergos, Adewale Ajadi, stressed the need to map out the grazing reserves, organise the herdsmen, control and organise how cattle is reared and educate people in line with modern trends.

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