SOUTHERN SENATORS AND GOVERNORS REACTS ATTACKS BUHARI’S GRAZING BILL
Senators and governors from the Southern
bloc have initiated moves to stop the National Graz¬ing Bill which the
Executive arm of government plans to send to the National Assembly.
The
bill, according to the Minister of Agriculture, Chief Audu Ogbeh, is
designed to check the incessant clashes be¬tween Fulani herdsmen and
farmers by creating special graz¬ing reserves for the herdsmen in
various parts of the country.
But Southern States’ gov¬ernors and
senators, who ex¬pressed their opposition to the bill, have vowed to
shut it down whenever President Muham¬madu Buhari presents it to the
National Assembly for passage.
The move of the Southern political leaders came as the Senate on Tuesday
declared that no such proposed law had been forwarded to the National
As¬sembly by the Executive for con¬sideration.
The proposed law, which has a huge
financial implication on the Federal Government, has already split the
senators along ethnic lines.
Some Senators, who spoke with The
AUTHORITY on the bill, said they would only sup¬port it if it provides
for stiffer sanctions for herdsmen who use their cattle to destroy farm
crops of poor farmers across the country.
The opposing lawmakers de¬clared that it
would be wrong to use the national budget to fund cattle rearing, which
is a major private business in the North.
The Senators asserted that they would
demand for the fi¬nancial compendium of the pro¬posed Grazing Bill ahead
of its presentation.
A senator from the South East zone, who did not want his name in print,
said that the only thing anybody in the South would sup¬port in the bill
would be punish¬ment for herdsmen who destroy peoples’ farm crops.
He lamented the damage the herdsmen and
their cows had done in the South East zone by destroying farm crops
without any check by security agents.
Indeed, there was a mini-dra¬ma on the
floor of the Senate on Tuesday when Senator Enyin¬naya Abaribe (PDP,
Abia) drew the attention of his colleagues to speculations in the social
media over claims by the Presidency that its “Bill on the Establishment
of a National Grazing Commis¬sion” had passed the second read¬ing on
the floor of the Senate.
Abaribe, who raised a Point of Order
under Order 43, said he had been inundated with over 1,000 calls from
his constit¬uents and the public on the pre¬sent Senate passing the said
bill.
He recalled that the bill on grazing
reserves was presented during the 7th Senate by Senator Zaynab Kure
(Niger), who is no longer in the Upper House, but the bill was rejected.
The third term Senator not¬ed that his
reason for raising the Point of Order was to seek expla-nation on when
the bill was dis¬cussed on the floor of the Senate to the extent of it
scaling first and second readings.
He said: “This personal ex¬planation has
to do with a series of calls on the issues. I have got¬ten more than
1,000 calls over the weekend and this has to do with something I
consider is not be-fore the Senate; a phantom thing that is not before
the Senate.
“It is about something called the
Grazing Reserves Commis¬sion and everybody is calling me and people are
sending me text messages to the extent that when I explained to some of
my constituents that there is no such thing before the Senate, they now
turned around to say ‘the only reason why you are saying so is that you
never go to the Senate plenaries; you must be an absen¬tee member.’
“And when I asked where the information was coming from, they said it was from the social media”.
Responding, the Senate Pres¬ident, Dr
Bukola Saraki, who apparently didn’t want to go into another round of
contro¬versy with the Presidency, sim¬ply said he had noted Abaribe’s
complaint, whilst vacating his seat at about 11.45am to attend his Code
of Conduct Tribunal (CCT) trial.
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