Herdsmen group wants federal government to compensate members affected in crisis
- The herdsmen group, Miyetti Allah, said its members affected in crises in the northeast were not well taken care of
- The group said over 1, 000 of its members have been killed and 20, 000 cattle rustled within the last eight months in various states
- It, therefore, called on federal government to compensate its members affected by crises in the country
The Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN) has appealed to the federal government to pay compensation to herdsmen affected by all forms of crisis in the country.
The national secretary of MACBAN, Baba Ngelzarma, made the appeal while briefing newsmen in Abuja on Sunday, January 14, on the position of the association to the crisis between farmers and herdsmen across the country.
Ngelzarma said the decision was the position of members reached at the end of its National Council meeting.
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He said that no fewer than 1,000 of its members including women and children have been killed and 20,000 cattle rustled between June 2017 and January 2018 during crises in various states.
The national secretary called for the setting up of a Federal Judicial Commission of Inquiry to access the killings in order to unravel the truth and offenders.
“We call on the government to pay compensation to victims of all crises to reduce their level of suffering.
“If the government accepts that, it is left for them to establish a committee that will go and access the level of damage.
“We have a document of members that were affected by the pastoralists in the northeast but what we discovered is that none of them were captured in the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) programme because they are not sedentary.
“Let the government compensate. That will help calm the situation very well,’’ he said.
Ngelzarma, who said the association had over 20 million registered members and no fewer than 50 million cattle, regretted that they were the most neglected farmers in the country.
He appealed to the federal government to set up a Federal Ministry of Livestock Development to attend to the multidimensional needs of the industry.
Ngelzarma said the association welcomed the current resolve by the federal government to address the lingering crises, adding that dialogue was the solution to the tackling the menace.
“We submit ourselves for any positive participation to restore mutual and harmonious relationship in the country.
“We dissociate ourselves from any other group or individual that is out to foment trouble in the country.
“We demand for immediate disarmament of all illegally armed militias across the country in the interest of peace, security and stability,’’ he said.
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The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Ngelzarma was accompanied to the briefing by the National President, Alhaji Muhammadu Kirowa and other members of the association from different states.
Legit.ng previously reported that the Emir of Kano, Muhammadu Sanusi II blamed the federal government for the killings in the north central part of the country.
The emir claimed 800 herdsmen were killed in Taraba in 2017 but the government failed to take action even when he presented evidence.
He said: “Some months ago in Mambilla, in one weekend, over 800 Fulani were murdered by Mambilla militias. The papers did not even go there to cover the story. Most of those wiped out were women, infants and the elderly..."
Mass burial organised by the Benue state government for victims of herdsmen attack - on Legit.ng
Source: Legit.ng