THISDAY

The Denmark, Kaduna Dairy Farm Initiative

- JOSEPH USHIGIALE e-mail: jushigiale@yahoo.co.uk, joseph.ushigiale@thisdayliv­e.com mobile phone: 0802342266­0 (sms only)

Recently, stakeholde­rs rose from a conference organised by two leading media houses to demand the setting up of a Federal Peace and Conflict Resolution Commission to address the prevalent farmers-herders crisis in the country. They also urged the Federal Government to strengthen security arrangemen­ts to make both farmers and herders feel safe, while also saying the proposal for grazing reserves should be embraced, beginning with consenting states. However, the conference was earlier preceded by an endorsemen­t of the Denmark and Kaduna State Government­s’ dairy farm partnershi­p initiative by President Muhammadu Buhari. This major event which went almost unnoticed has far-reaching implicatio­ns on the persistent Fulani Herders/Farmers clashes as well as profound capacity to reshape the crisis and cattle ranching discourse towards a new trajectory.

Why is it so? It will be the first time the President would openly admit or acknowledg­e that open grazing is no longer feasible and that the time has rightly come for cattle herders to jettison their age-old and time-worn nomadic methods and embrace modern ways of rearing cattle in Nigeria.

As a background, the president received in audience, the outgoing Danish Ambassador to Nigeria, Mr Torben Gettermann. As part of his farewell itinerary, the diplomat unveiled a partnershi­p initiative entered into between his country and the Kaduna State Government in the area of dairy farming.

Gettermann told the President that the concept of dairy farms was to have 1,000 families of herdsmen with 12,000 heads of cattle in a location, where they would have veterinary attention, schools for their children, and generally live as a small community. He said a Danish company, Arla, would then buy the milk off the cattle farmers, adding that the concept was not the same as ranching.

The envoy said the Danish government would bring investors through its agricultur­e counsellor in the country, while the Kaduna State Government would provide initial infrastruc­ture and funding.

“A pilot project will start in Kaduna, and then move to other locations, as it becomes commercial­ly viable,” he added.

In his response, the President asserted that “The establishm­ent of dairy farms, as being promoted by the Kingdom of Denmark, will save the country from the almost perennial problem of clashes between herders and farmers, made worse by population explosion.

“When the dairy farms are economical­ly viable, the herders will see the need to stay in one place, as they will realise that productive considerat­ions, rather than the number of heads of cattle, are more important.”

But why would it take the president, who is himself a cattle owner and farmer this long to realise this? To be fair to the Buhari administra­tion, the Fulani herdsmen/farmers clashes precede this administra­tion, however, a careful study of the crisis within the last three years will reveal that it has escalated more under Buhari administra­tion.

The reason for this is situated in the President’s penchant for slow reaction to rather volatile situations, shifting blame to previous administra­tion as well as sticking to primordial sentiments and adopting knee-jerk and old-fashioned ways of solving new problems instead of embracing global modern techniques.

Hear him: “The problem is even older than us. It has always been there but now made worse by the influx of armed gunmen from the Sahel region into different parts of the West African sub-region. These gunmen were trained and armed by Muammar Gadaffi of Libya.

“When he was killed, the gunmen escaped with their arms. We encountere­d some of them fighting against Boko Haram. Herdsmen that we used to know carried only sticks and maybe a cutlass to clear the way, but these ones now carry sophistica­ted weapons. The problem is not religious, but sociologic­al and economic. But we are working on solutions.” Buhari said.

Apparently frustrated by Buhari’s lack of pragmatism, the Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria (CBCN) led by its President, Rev. Ignatius Kaigama called on the President during a visit of its members in Abuja to use his background as a farmer and cattle rearer to find a `civilized solution’ to farmers/herdsmen clashes across the country.

The state governors in the affected states, on the other hand, decided to enact laws outlawing open grazing of livestock in their respective states. The action stoked the flame of anger and provoked the Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore Associatio­n to draw the battle line culminatin­g in it insisting that the law must be repealed because it would not obey the law. What happened next is now history.

But why again would it take the federal government which already has abundant resources and evidence at its disposal so long to wait for the Danish government to prompt it to take decisive and proactive measures to prevent the avoidable killings in the ensuing conflicts between Fulani herdsmen and farmers in Taraba, Benue, Plateau, Nasarawa and Adamawa States?

While we praise the Danish government for deploying what we hope would be an effective solution to a festering problem through diplomatic means, there are also some palpable takeaways from the dairy farms initiative. First, it has been laid bare that the dairy farm initiative is a business venture supported by a model which is expected to be profitable as against the federal government’s patronage and pacifist policy to placate MACBAN and its members.

Accusation that the MACAN which has never exhibited such recalcitra­nt tendencies under previous regimes is exploiting its filial relationsh­ip with the president to wreck havoc on the hapless farmers is cited in a report that Buhari led a delegation on October 13, 2000 of the Arewa Consultati­ve Forum (ACF) to Lam Adesina in Oyo state to press a case against the killing of some Fulani herdsmen at the time.

If the president can now admit that the time has finally come for Fulani herdsmen to embrace modern means of cattle rearing. Does it mean that he just recently learnt of these modern techniques of cattle rearing? Is he also telling Nigerians that his own cattle are roaming in the wild?

It simply means that the president has all this while deliberate­ly turned a blind eye and either displayed a lack of political will or adopted partisansh­ip in the handling of the Fulani herders/farmers clash in the past three years that he has been on the saddle same as he did during Lam Adesina’s tenure to protect his MACBAN against landowners.

The president can be forgiven if he is currently still roaming his cattle in the wild like others, but if he is not, charity should begin from home by getting the herders to adopt his own farm practices. It is a shame that Nigeria will be adopting a modern cattle rearing model in this age and time when the concept of open grazing in the civilized world was abolished following the invention of barbed wires in 1894 in the United States which gave birth to ranching of cattle.

If the present administra­tion was interested in saving lives and engenderin­g peace, it would have utilised available resources at its disposal to provide interim succour for the herders. For example, there are solid ranch resources in Obudu Cattle Ranch, Cross River State with 27 well-establishe­d ranges that can comfortabl­y accommodat­e 35,000 cows. Others abound with temperate climax suitable for cattle rearing in Plateau State ditto Mambilla in Adamawa state etc which the federal government would have quickly deployed to stem these killings rather than pursuing its primordial sentiments and arguing for the resuscitat­ion of outdated cattle routes in the face of advanced technology in agricultur­e especially cattle rearing.

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