The Stone Age activities of Fulani cattle men can no longer be tolerated anywhere in this country. Every day or every other day, newspapers are awash with ugly stories of Fulani cattle men terrorising villagers and farmers whose only offence is that they refuse the cattle men the right to trample on their farms and means of livelihood.
The question now
is how long the rest of the country shall remain helpless in the face of
ceaseless onslaught of these men who ‘follow cattle’ about. It is ironic that
these fully armed men appear to be led by the cattle they follow every where
they go.
Nigeria governments
at both the federal and state levels are to be blamed for the Stone Age
operations of Nigeria’s cattle men from the Hausa-Fulani speaking regions of
the country. The problem and the attendant menace of the Fulani cattle men did
not start yesterday. This problem has been with the country for as long as
anybody in Nigeria can remember.
The issue at the
base of this escalating madness is very simple and basic. And because
successive governments in Nigeria have failed to tackle the issue and give it a
most simple solution has made it seemingly unsolvable. The cattle raised in
Nigeria as a significant part of animal husbandry need to be fed to survive.
They need grazing. All that is required is to provide places for them to graze.
Very simple. And when one considers the fact that Australia raises more cattle
than Nigeria, and that Europe and the Americas also feed on beef, which these
continents produce locally, one is at sea to understand why able bodied men are
let loose all over the country ‘following’ cattle about.
The Fulani
cattlemen originate from the desert and arid zones of the country. Their cattle
must be fed. These cattle live on grass and other leaves. These grasses and
leaves are found in areas outside of the Fulani political control. The Fulani
cattle men are therefore literally compelled to look southwards for grazing.
Because they know that farmers on whose plantations the cattle are likely to
find food will not take kindly to their crops being destroyed, the cattle men
are armed to the teeth to challenge and confront the farm owners. This has been
the recurring decimal in the relationship between cattle men and farmers whose
lands are routinely vandalised.
But why have
successive governments not learnt a lesson or two from other countries which
also feed their cattle without rampaging other people’s farms?
Some time in 1984,
this writer visited the Chambers of Commerce, Industry and Agriculture in
Madrid, Spain to follow up on the Fodder Technology, which Spain was then
marketing throughout the world. A courtesy visit was even paid to the Nigerian
Ambassador to Spain at the time, Ambassador Dove Edwin.
On my return,
several of the state governors were called upon to buy into the technology so
that no Fulani cattle man would ever need to go through the humiliating,
unhealthy, highly challenging ordeal of having to ‘follow’ cattle about
searching for pasture for their flock.
I came to the
conclusion after the frustrating experience that the then Northern leaders did
not really care about the ordeal of their fellow citizens. The Fodder
Technology still exists, and it has in fact been much further developed that
1,000 heads of cattle can be robustly fed all day, all week and all year round
on a space of less than four acres. I still cannot fathom why the Federal
Government, whose Ministry of Agriculture is by far the best performing
Ministry in this wobbled and rudderless administration, has not considered the
Fodder Technology to take our Fulani brothers out of the punishment they go
through trying to feed their cattle. By the way, the punishment the Fulani
cattle men go through is simply about exposure to inclement weather, bad
drinking water, trekking several hundreds of kilometres and the generally
unsettled life of the nomad.
Having said all that,
I believe it is high time the excesses of the Fulani marauders were checked.
Government should not appear helpless in the face of the recklessness of these
Fulani herdsmen who believe that they are above the laws of the land.
This country
cannot afford the kind of war and blood letting a national confrontation with
the Fulani cattle men will entail. Farmers in Ogun, Kwara, Osun, Oyo, Lagos,
Edo, Plateau, Benue, Nassarawa, Kaduna, Delta, Cross River and Akwa Ibom states
to mention a few are battle ready for vengeance should these unwanted intruders
dare flaunt their fangs again.
Nobody or any
section of this God damned country should behave as if they alone possessed
weapons of destruction. History has shown that there is no coward amongst the
nationalities that were yoked together by Lugard. The Ijaws had their Isaac
Adaka Boro. The Yoruba’s war heroes are simply too many, from Fabunmi to
Ogendengbe to Kurunmi to Ogunmola Olodogbo Keri-Keri! The Tivs are natural
warriors! The Lantangs, the Jukuns, so many ethnic nationalities to mention
have proven throughout ages that nobody can ride them roughshod.
The Fulani cattle
men should be told in no mistaken terms that they have exhausted whatever
tolerance given to them. This country ca no longer parade two separate laws:
one for the Fulani cattle men and another for the rest law abiding citizens of
this direction less country.
We have suffered
enough pain in the hands of our looting men and women in Abuja, their leaders
and their mobile toilets (sorry, their bed warmers) we can no longer allow
Fulani herdsmen to continue to rub salt on our festering sore.
Boko Haram will
pale into insignificance if the Fulani marauders are allowed to engulf Nigeria
in a raging, indiscriminate inferno.
There is yet a
saving grace: The Fodder Technology!
