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Tuesday, November 23, 2021

Declare state of emergency over herders-farmers crisis, group tells FG

The group blamed the government for allowing the crisis to linger and affecting “almost every sector of the economy.”

• November 23, 2021
Killer Herdsmen
Armed Herdsman

Stakeholders at an Inclusive Forum for Accountable Society (IFAS) meeting want the federal government to declare a state of emergency on herders and farmers crisis.

The stakeholders met on Tuesday in Lokoja where they observed that the crisis had been allowed to linger for too long and affected almost every sector of the economy.

The meeting was organised by three development partners – ActionAid Nigeria, Participation Initiative for Behavioural Change in Development (PIBCID) and the Global Community Engagement and Resilience Fund.

In his opening remarks, the chairman of IFAS, Hamza Aliyu, urged Nigerians to stop denigrating ethnic nationalities over farmers-herders clashes as “not all herders are Fulani and not all Fulani are herders.”

He said that disparaging an entire race over the negative activities of a few was not a healthy approach to solving the problem.

“The security problem is not between Fulani and farmers but between herders and farmers,” he stressed.

Mr Aliyu also expressed regret that the herders-farmers clashes had assumed a national dimension.

“We are proposing a State of Emergency to the government to bring in the needed resources to solve this problem at once.

“Not just the finances but the needed human resources, the critical thinking facility of the government to bear on this problem so that we can solve it once and for all.

“State of Emergency is not to shut down the democratic system or the civic space.

“It simply means we should be able to deploy resources to help the communities to install structures that will address the issues squarely,” he said.

Speaking at the meeting also, the executive director of PIBCID, Halima Sadiq, said the declaration of a state of emergency was necessary because the livelihoods of community members were at stake.

“We have been talking about zero-hunger in line with the Sustainable Development Goals and we are also talking about boosting agriculture by promoting women and youth participation.

“We know that 75 per cent to 85 per cent of rural dwellers are farmers while the remaining 15 per cent engage in passive farming.

“When you destroy farmers’ crops and take their lands from them, it affects their livelihoods,” she said.

In his contribution, Onoja James, chairman of the Igalamela-Odolu Local Government Council of Kogi, said traditional rulers and community leaders in whose domains herders and farmers clashed should be held accountable.

He submitted that some traditional rulers indulged in collecting money from herders to allocate lands to them.

Mr James added that the herders subsequently lay claim to such land and assumed absolute control of the area, hindering farming and other productive activities. 

(NAN)

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