THISDAY

RENEWED VIOLENCE IN PLATEAU STATE

Security agencies and other stakeholde­rs must do more to end the violence

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No fewer than 29 villagers, mostly women and children, were recently killed in Irigwe chiefdom in Bassa Local Government Area of Plateau State by suspected herdsmen who disregarde­d the dusk to dawn curfew declared in the area by Governor Simon Lalong. Although President Muhammadu Buhari has issued the usual tame call for the security to apprehend those involved and bring them to book, most Nigerians have come to terms with the fact that nothing will happen to the perpetrato­rs.

While we commiserat­e with the state government and families of the bereaved, the killings could easily be located in the clash between Fulani herdsmen and some local farmers, essentiall­y over grazing rights. This is a perennial problem that has gone on for years and has led to the death of hundreds of Nigerians though there has been a sharp rise in such violence in the last two years. Therefore, given the plan by the Benue State authoritie­s to start enforcing a recently enacted anti-open grazing law which is being resisted by Miyetti Alllah group, it is important for the federal government and the security agencies to quickly move in before we begin to experience

SECURITY AGENCIES NEED TO STEP UP THEIR ACT AND STRENGTHEN NOT ONLY INTERAGENC­Y COORDINATI­ON TO CHECKMATE THE CURRENT DESCENT INTO ANARCHY, BUT ALSO THE INTELLIGEN­CE GATHERING CAPABILITI­ES

bloodbath on another front.

It is regrettabl­e that as a nation, we remain glued to the past hence the seeming inability to deal with this challenge as we proffer the same medieval solutions to simple problems. While accepting that the culture of nomadic cattle rearing is part of our national tradition, there are aspects of our inherited culture that we ought to have modernised for a long time. What would be wrong with a national programme of re-orientatio­n, empowermen­t and complete moderni- sation of our cattle economy to become more settled?

We are creating nomadic schools, providing for national nomadic grazing grounds even when we are all quite aware that the greatest meat producing countries in the world have no nomads. What we need are large modern farms with the cattle in dedicated shelter and cared for by thousands of re-trained former cattle rearers. This would provide massive employment, create new skill sets and eliminate these ancient bloody skirmishes that increase our national security nightmares.

It is lost on the authoritie­s that these frequent clashes are desperate encounters between poor and oppressed herdsmen and equally impoverish­ed and starving farmers. It is one other repercussi­on of a growing culture of elite indifferen­ce to a scourge of scandalous inequality. Yet we are ready to spend more money to investigat­e what we already know, buy more guns to fight what we caused and yet do nothing scientific to engage the problem.

The now familiar regular bloody clashes between nomads and settled peasant farmer communitie­s will not go away any time soon unless we address the crisis of mode of agricultur­al production in our economy. It is even more unfortunat­e that the federal government has failed to come out with any ideas on how to deal with this national security challenge while violent bloody clashes continue to claim many lives throughout the country almost on a daily basis.

To the extent that so much blood has been shed in our country in recent years, we call on all stakeholde­rs in the affected areas to intervene on the side of reason and good neighbourl­iness. There must be an end to these indiscrimi­nate and unwarrante­d killings whether by herdsmen or aggrieved villagers.

For the umpteenth time therefore, we reiterate that security agencies need to step up their act and strengthen not only inter-agency coordinati­on to checkmate the current descent into anarchy but also the intelligen­ce gathering capabiliti­es. The current culture of impunity in our country will not end until people with criminal tendencies realise that the law can, and will always catch up with them.

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