READ THE NEXT BIG STEP ANAMBRA STATE GOV, OBIANO TOOK AGAINST FULANI HERDSMEN
Obiano said that before the growing menace of the Fulani herdsmen in the country, he had set up a special committee to foster peace between farmers and the cattle grazers in the state.
The committee, the governor noted, was made up of the leaders of the
Hausa-Fulani community in the state, government officials, security
agents and some representatives of agrarian communities across the
state.
Obiano said, “This committee has made the herdsmen to pay compensation
to communities whose crops were destroyed by their cattle seven times in
the past. And we have also paid compensation to the herdsmen when one
community breached the peace against them. That is the nature of our
engagement with them in Anambra State.”
He warned that his administration would deal ruthlessly with the
herdsmen should they become “needlessly hostile against their host
communities.”
Obiano added, “There is routine helicopter surveillance across the
borders of the state to ensure that any suspicious gathering of
people(herdsmen) or curious movements across the borders are quickly
picked up and analysed by security experts.”
The governor commended Anambra workers for their support to his
administration, saying “if Willie is working, then the workers are also
working.”
He restated his administration’s commitment to workers’ welfare.
Obiano added that the state government would consider a salary increase
for workers once there was an increase in the state’s Internally
Generated Revenue.
The Chairman of the Nigeria Labour Congress, Anambra State chapter,
Jerry Nnubia, had commended Obiano for putting up an excellent
performance since he took over two years ago.
Meanwhile, as the various pressure groups in the southern part of the
country threaten to move Fulani herdsmen from their communities because
of recent killings in Enugu and other southern states, the National
Coordinator of Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association, Mr. Garus
Gololo, has said such an action may ignite national crisis.
Gololo told one of our correspondents, “It is only in Oyo that there are
up to 2,000 herdsmen; in other parts of the South-West, they are not
more than between 200 and 800 while in the North, there are over 30
million southerners.”
According to him, many of the southerners have big houses in their
original homes especially in Igbo land but such houses are empty because
a lot of them are staying in the North.
He said the National Assembly had intervened in the crisis between
farmers and herdsmen, insisting that “if the herdsmen have not committed
offences that warrant their being forced out of the South, they should
not be forced out.”
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