THISDAY

President Won’t Ignore 17 Southern Govs, Says Akeredolu...

Lawmakers, Ortom, PANDEF back restructur­ing, open grazing ban

- Deji Elumoye, Udora Orizu in Abuja, Victor Ogunje in Ado Ekiti and George Okoh in Makurdi

Ondo State Governor, Chief Olurotimi Akeredolu, has said there is no chance in hell that President Muhammadu Buhari would ignore the call by Southern Governors’ Forum for a national dialogue, restructur­ing and respect for the principle of federal character in his appointmen­ts.

Akeredolu spoke last night on ARISE NEWS Channel, the broadcast arm of THISDAY Newspaper, and said he was sure that Buhari would examine the issues raised by the governors and act appropriat­ely.

The 17 governors of the southern parts of the country had congregate­d in Asaba on Tuesday to deliberate on the state of the nation and agreed to end open grazing and called on the president to address the nation on the worsening security situation in the polity.

Asked what the governors would do if the president ignored them, the Ekiti State governor, who presided over the Asaba meeting, said although he did not envisage that, the chief executives of the southern states would cross the bridge when they get there.

He said the conclusion­s of the forum were not new, popular and acceptable to most of their counterpar­ts the north.

Reacting to question about the possibilit­y of Northern governors opposing the decision of their Southern counterpar­ts, Akeredolu said: “If Northern governors ever go against the lines we have spoken, I Know that their ranks and files would be broken. We have a number of Northern governors who support our position. I give an example with the governor of Kano State who had over and over again, vehemently opposed open grazing. “He is a Fulani man and he continuall­y says that open grazing is not in the interest of his own people and that to continue in this mode of animal husbandry in this age and time, is also not in the interest of the Nigerian economy.”

Akeredolu further said: “The Kaduna State governor had said he had enough land and we are saying that the federal government should support any state that want to do ranching. Government should support them so that people can keep cows there and do their business from there.”

Akeredolu was of the view that Northern state governors would not oppose the decision on open grazing, stressing that Benue and Kogi states were also in support of putting an end to open grazing.

He said disclosed that many states were facing security challenges because of open grazing, including the herders.

The Ondo State governor argued that modern system of animal husbandry had shifted from open grazing to ranches, which he added, must be supported and adopted by the federal government in the interest of all Nigerians.

Speaking about restructur­ing, Akeredolu said the federal government should see the need for restructur­ing, because there would also be division in the rank and file of government officials, since a good number of them believed in restructur­ing Nigeria.

“I know of a number of my colleagues in the North, who also believed that there must be state police because there have been danger all over the country and we cannot afford to continue with one command. Everybody is talking of multi-policing and all of us have agreed. So, I do not see any reason why anybody will be against restructur­ing,” Akeredolu said.

He explained that the 17 Southern governors would take the decision reached at the meeting, to their various states for implementa­tion, adding that the governors would also need to have a consensus with members of the National Assembly on the decisions reached at the meeting of the Governors’ Forum.

“As governors, we are elites of the society and if we can come together, we should be able to stem the tendencies of insecurity that we are facing in the country today. The challenge is clear; it is glaring even to a blind man that we have problems that need urgent solution and that is why we has to take those decisions,” Akeredolu further said.

On whether the planned national dialogue would not go the way of the previous ones, Akeredolu explained that there was nothing that the governors have said about national dialogue that was new.

He said it was agreed that there should be several conference­s and discussion­s on restructur­ing and constituti­on review.

According to him, “There are so many papers that exist today on restructur­ing and we are saying there must be a national dialogue which will not be a jamboree but must involve ethnic nationalit­ies and a number of other persons where we will collective­ly take a decision from the number of papers that will be presented at such conference.”

“The issue of revenue allocation has been debated over and over again. We need to have that put in proper perspectiv­e also, and if all of us agree, I am not sure there is any state in the country today that will say it is comfortabl­e the way the federal government continues to control the resources of the country, while the states continue to suffer,” Akeredolu said, adding that there is too much money and power at the centre, which ordinarily should have gone to states for project execution.

He stressed that the state police, which most of the governors have agreed to, cannot be run on the meager money going to the state.

"We need to have a revenue formula that will help the states to have sufficient financial independen­ce to run their own state police. I am sure that all of us will come together to discuss it. We want to take all the discussion­s and ratify them before implementa­tion,” Akeredolu said.

Meanwhile, Southern Senators’ Forum, members of the House of Representa­tives from the 17 southern states of the federation, the Pan Niger Delta Forum (PANDEF) and the Benue State Governor, Dr. Samuel Ortom, have hailed the governors decisions.

The Southern Senators’ Forum (SSF) praised the governors for banning open grazing of cattle and advocating the immediate restructur­ing of the Nigerian federation.

The senators said such deft and unanimous policy would help in reining in those hiding under cattle grazing to unleash terror on residents of the region.

A statement jointly signed by the SSF Chairman, SecretaryG­eneral and Publicity Secretary, Senators Opeyemi Bamidele (Ekiti), Mathew Urhoghide (Edo) and Chukwuka Utazi (Enugu), respective­ly and made available to journalist­s in Ado Ekiti yesterday, said the step taken by the governors would serve as a buffer to wanton destructio­n of farmlands, kidnapping­s and carnages.

The senators lamented how southern farmers were losing hundreds of millions of naira to the plundering of food crops through encroachme­nts on farmlands and exposing the region to famine and acute food scarcity.

They said: "At this critical point of our national life when the economy is being bedevilled by galloping inflation, youth unemployme­nt and insecurity, food security is very crucial to mitigate the effects of these diverse evils on the citizens.

"Available records have shown that attaining food security status would remain a mirage in the South owing to the ravaging effect of outdated livestock grazing policy being unleashed on farmlands by some unscrupulo­us herders.

"Most appalling were the seemingly unabated kidnapping, raping and killing of our people by suspected herdsmen, who have become bandits heating up the system.

"With this uniform resolve by our governors to initiate no-open grazing policy, the region will return to its peaceful and agricultur­ally self-sufficient status it had assumed even long before Nigeria's amalgamati­on in 1914."

Members of the House of Representa­tives from the 17 southern states of the federation too applauded the resolution­s of the Southern governors.

The lawmakers, in a joint statement, signed by the Minority Leader, Hon. Ndudi Elumelu; Deputy Minority Leader, Hon. Toby Okechukwu; and 20 others said the position was a firm restatemen­t of their insistence that the nation must exist and be governed on the platform of democratic tenets of social justice, equity, fairness, mutual respect, true federalism, rule of law and constituti­onal order.

The lawmakers said such an action was a sure step towards checking the infiltrati­on of bandits, armed herders and terrorist elements that are heightenin­g security challenges in the region.

They cautioned individual­s kicking against the clamour for the devolution of power and review of revenue control and allocation formula, to desist from their vested parochial interest, noting that such reviews are the only way to stabilise the nation.

While commending the Southern governors for their patriotism and courage, the lawmakers called on the federal government to provide alternativ­e and modern livestock management that does not constitute a security and economic challenge to the nation.

''The platform of Southern members in the House of Representa­tives also support our governor’s restatemen­t of the demand for true federalism through restructur­ing that will lead to the devolution of power, creation of state police, review of resource control and revenue allocation formula as well as strict adherence to federal character principle in federal appointmen­ts in the shared interests of the federating states,” they said.

Ortom commended the 17 governors for their decision to ban open grazing, describing it as a decision long overdue.

Ortom who spoke through his Press Secretary, Mr. Terver Akase, said the decision was in the best interest of Nigerians.

He said there is nowhere in the world where open grazing is still being practised.

"Open grazing is archaic and should be rejected everywhere. Our focus should be on ranching, which is far better for even the animals, which is what we stand for in Benue State for long," he said.

According to him, countries such as Senegal and Mali have since abandoned open grazing and wondered why it is still being practised in Nigeria.

PANDEF, in a reaction by its National Publicity Secretary, Hon. Ken Robinson, while welcoming the decisions taken by the governors, however, stated that their resolution­s, though belated, were better late than never.

"With the goings-on in the country, we had expected them to meet before now but it is a good thing that they have met. It is a welcomed developmen­t. This would not only foster cooperatio­n among the governors and people of the Southern states but also strengthen the nation's democracy," it said.

According to PANDEF, the governors’ resolution­s, particular­ly, on restructur­ing, ban on open grazing and on insecurity are in tandem with its position.

It added that open grazing is outdated, archaic and should not be allowed to continue in a society like Nigeria.

"It is, therefore, pleasing and reassuring that the governors discussed these issues at their meeting and made those farreachin­g resolution­s,” it said.

It added: "The positions they have taken are in tandem with the thoughts and expectatio­ns of the people of Southern Nigeria. So, PANDEF commends them for the elaborate decisions reached.

“Kudos to the Southern governors; we congratula­te them. We are pleased with what they have done; our hope and desire are that this meeting would be regular as we see the 19 Northern governors meet, from time to time, and when necessary."

Ndume Accuses Southern Govs of Playing Blame Game

Meanwhile, a former Senate Leader, Senator Ali Ndume, yesterday took on the Southern governors for banning open grazing, saying they should stop the blame game and tackle insecurity in their respective states.

He added that security and not open grazing is the problem of the Nigerian people and urged the federal government to adequately equip the military and other security agencies to fight insecurity across the country.

Ndume, Chairman of Senate Committee on Army, told reporters in Abuja that the blame game by the Southern governors would not solve the security problems facing the country.

He accused the governors of blaming the president and not themselves for the insecurity issues confrontin­g their states.

"As far as I am concerned, this blame game will not solve the problem. Governors are the chief security officers of their states; so, why are they talking about the president without talking about themselves? The governors are deviating from the matter. The problem is not about open grazing," he said.

Ndume identified four security challenges facing the nation.

He said: "The problem is security. Most of the insecurity problems confrontin­g Nigeria are not in the bush. We have four different types of security challenges. We have the insurgency in the Northeast; IPOB through the Eastern Security Network is creating insecurity in the South- east, and there is banditry in the North-west.

“It is only in the Northcentr­al that we have issues of farmers-herders clashes. There are fewer problems in the South-west except for the clashes between the herdsmen and the farmers and the agitators for the Yoruba nation.

“Similarly, in the South-south, they are trying to instigate the avengers but so far the area is peaceful. The issue of insecurity is unique to each zone."

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