Okezie Ikpeazu, governor of Abia, says the state government
pays herders N100,000 for each cow killed as a result of clashes between them
and farmers.
The state government on Tuesday accused herders of
kidnapping citizens of the state and of destroying farmlands with cows grazing
openly.
Despite banning open grazing in June 2018, herdsmen have
reportedly continued to violate the law in the state.
Speaking on Wednesday on Channels Television’s Sunrise
Daily, Ikpeazu said the same sum is also paid to farmers whose farmland is
destroyed by stray cows.
The governor said the initiative is meant to gain the trust
of the people and to prevent them from taking the law into their own hands.
Asked what the state government is doing to enforce the law
against open grazing, Ikpeazu said: ”We have a strong mechanism with which we
deal with the normal and usual cattle herders. We have what we call
farmer/herder conflict resolution committee from the state where the CP is
chairman to the local governments where the executive chairmen of various local
governments chair, and members of that committee include the Miyetti Allah, the
DSS and DPO of the various local governments up until the state. And we pay
compensation of about N100,000 for any cow that is killed on account of a
misunderstanding between the farmers and the herders and pay the same amount
for farmland verified to have been trampled on or destroyed by stray cows.
“We have used that to make sure that at least, we give some
succor and buffer so that when people disagree, they can wait for that
committee to look into the matter instead of taking laws into their own hands.
But that is not to say that we have not recorded a spike in the activities of
these criminal elements that come in kidnap, rape and kill farmers. More often
than not, some of these criminal elements don’t even have a cow. We are
targeting those people and we are going to punish them.”
Ikpeazu said the best way to solve the issue of
farmer/herder crisis is for the federal government to tackle the root cause of
the problem.
“Nigeria is not diagnosing the problem properly. The
problems we face in this country are existential,” he said.
The Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) on Tuesday said the
Eastern Security Network (ESN), its security arm, will commence the
implementation of the anti-grazing law in the south-east.
IPOB had issued a 14-day ultimatum to south-east governors
to enforce the anti-grazing law.
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And how much is paid for every human life lost in the crisis?
ReplyDeleteIt's worth nothing to them.
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