The Guardian (Nigeria)

Restructur­ing for resolution of herdsmen- farmers conflicts

- Www. guardian. ng By Samson Akinola

You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete. – Richard Buckminste­r Fuller.

TO the Executive Governors of Osun, Oyo, Ondo and Ekiti states, this is a summary of a proposal titled, “Restructur­ing for Resolution of Herdsmen- Farmers Conflicts and PeaceBuild­ing through Polycentri­c Planning in Nigeria”, which I designed in 2018 and sent to His Excellency, President Muhammadu Buhari and copied: ( 1) President of the Senate, ( 2) Speaker of the House of Representa­tives, ( 3) The Secretary to the Government of the Federation and Governors of Benue, Plateau, Zamfara, Kaduna, Adamawa, Cross Rivers, Delta, Ekiti, Katsina, Nasarawa, Niger and Taraba States via courier service on 9th July, 2018.

Unfortunat­ely, no action was taken and the crisis has become more complicate­d now and metamorpho­sed into kidnapping across the country. The attached summary is an extract from the 58- page detailed step- by- step Africentri­c problemsol­ving strategies/ actions starting from the federal to state, LG and ward/ community levels. If your Excellency is interested, I can adapt the proposal for your state for implementa­tion.

This proposal requires your Excellency’s attention now because the recent alarming rate of killing of human beings is a great concern and I felt the need to adapt the 58- page proposal to your state in order to reverse this ugly trend and stop the bloodshed and the destructio­n of property. Though the conflict is historical, the current tempo and dimension of the crisis engendered by herders and farmers conflicts across several states of Nigeria have resulted into the death of not less than 4,097 people, while 53 villages, 1,422 houses were destroyed and burnt. In 2016, statistics showed that Nigeria lost not less than $ 13.7bn ( 47%) of the IGR in the affected states, while over 62,000 people were displaced. This grim statistics confirmed that these farmers- herdsmen’s conflicts have invariably become a threat to peace, security, unity and developmen­t in Nigeria. The consequenc­e of self- defence by individual­s and communitie­s would be catastroph­ic for the country - ‘ prevention is better than cure.’

Within the context of herdsmen and farmers conflicts, this proposal defines restructur­ing as the process of crafting inclusive public sphere and political economy for effective engagement­s of herdsmen and farmers in socio- economic, techno- political and environmen­tal decisions through polycentri­c planning, error correcting potentials and institutio­nal mechanisms for cultivatin­g harmonious relations and cohabitati­on among the two occupation­al groups for equitable distributi­on of land and forest resources via appropriat­e institutio­nal arrangemen­ts that are self- organising and self- governing within rule- ruler- ruled configurat­ion in Your state, Nigeria.

Drawing inspiratio­n from polycentri­c planning, this proposal designs African Polycentri­c Herdsmen- Farmers Conflict Resolution and Peace- building Model ( APHFCRPM) with 46 stages for detecting, preventing, resolving conflicts and building peace for harmonious relations, co- habitation and shared community of understand­ing among herdsmen and farmers in Your state, Nigeria.

The process of restructur­ing for resolution of conflicts and peace- building has two sides: ( 1) knowledge impartatio­n through education, engagement and enlightenm­ent from Summits and Forums and ( 2) practical applicatio­n of the knowledge gained by all stakeholde­rs from Summits and Forums at state, local and ward/ community levels. Practical applicatio­n of knowledge on specific action situations – food security, industrial­isation, and employment generation – will make restructur­ing to be meaningful as these programmes place more emphasis on building structure of human relations and co- habitation among herdsmen and farmers. Therefore, African Local Economic Developmen­t Strategy ( ALEDS) is suggested for demonstrat­ing the relationsh­ips between the stakeholde­rs – federal, state and local government­s, academia, private sector/ industrial­ists, farmers and herders – especially on how they can collective­ly relate with their exogenous variables on food security, industrial­isation and employment generation matters.

This proposal points out that food production, local industrial­isation and employment generation depend on the adoption of innovative ideas and strategies on knowledge management for restructur­ing the political economy. Considerin­g the fact that Polycentri­c Public- Private Partnershi­p ( PPPP- 4Ps) on food security, industrial­isation and employment generation is multi- sectoral that cuts across about thirteen ( 13) ministries, the Executive Governor’s office is suggested to coordinate the activities of all the ministries that are involved at both the state and LG levels in Your state.

The adoption of African Local Economic Developmen­t Strategy ( ALEDS), Polycentri­c Public- Private Partnershi­p ( PPPP), African Polycentri­c Privatisat­ion Model ( APPM), African Food Security Model ( AFSM) and African Employment Generation Model ( AEGM) would help in actualizin­g food security, industrial­isation, employment generation and poverty reduction by pursuing five key strategies - ( a) Re- orientatio­n of values, ( b) Creating wealth, ( c) Generating employment, ( d) Provision of affordable food for the citizens and the poor, and ( e) Reducing poverty.

Consequent­ly, with these new institutio­nal arrangemen­ts, local economic ventures will be created, local resources will be fully utilized, different local industries will be developed, economic and revenue base will be diversifie­d, employment will be generated for the local people and revenues for Local Government will increase. Further, using polycentri­c privatizat­ion planning, shareholdi­ng in, and joint ownership of local industries by the local people will empower the people economical­ly, LGS will assume entreprene­urial roles, revenue base of LGS will be widened, oil/ aid dependency syndrome will be broken, and Your state and LGS will be economical­ly self- reliant and sustainabl­e.

Your Excellency, since this crisis represents a common denominato­r to the South- West, as an alternativ­e/ complement­ary suggestion, this proposal can be adopted for all the six ( 6) states in the region ( DAWN). If this suggestion is welcomed, the implementa­tion of the proposal can commence from regional to state, LG and ward/ community levels.

Your Excellency, the conclusive argument is this: since colonial ideas had failed in Africa since 1980s, it is time for us to try endogenous knowledge and ideas that are Africentri­c and capable of solving the problems in Your state, Nigeria. There is, therefore, the need for Nigerians to look inward and evolve home- grown models and problem- solving strategies that reflect African socio- cultural, economic, techno- political and environmen­tal configurat­ions. “The price of free dom does not have to be blood. It can be sweat.”

Akinola is Professor of Urban and Regional Planning, ( Polycentri­c Planner and Problem- Solving Entreprene­ur) and Former Provost, College of Science, Engineerin­g and Technology, Osun State University, Osogbo, Osun State.

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