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Ignorance, poverty pushed herdsmen into crime – Miyetti Allah

The Secretary-General of Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN), Othman Ngelzarma, has said that herdsmen were pushed into crime and criminality due to ignorance and poverty occasioned by the theft of their over three million cows.

Ngelzarma, who spoke in Kaduna on Thursday while addressing the NEC meeting of Arewa Consultative Forum (ACF), led by Chief Audu Ogbe, said the simple solution to the problem was to resettle the pastoralists in order to educate them.

The MACBAN leader, however, stressed that “bigger criminals and merchants of crimes in the cities” were taking advantage of the ignorance of the young Fulani and their poverty to engage them in crime.

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While expressing appreciation to ACF for inviting MACBAN to its meeting as a way of seeking a solution to the challenges, Ngelzarma solicited the forum’s support to create a pressure group to prevail on the government to establish settlements for pastoralists in the country.

“When they get settled in a place, it will become easier for the government to give them education; it will become easier for them to enjoy all those things other citizens are enjoying in the country, but as it is now, they don’t enjoy anything from the government while they contribute more than any other society to the government because they supply the nutritional need to the Nigeria population.

“We have over 400 grazing reserves in the country but only three are in the Southwestern part of Oyo and Ogun. All the other grazing reserves are in the northern part, all put together having about five million hectares.

“If this can be utilized, it is enough to settle these landless people, they are the only landless people in the country; the pastoralists are landless. They stay in a place, when development comes, they move and leave the place. This is a very big challenge,” the MACBAN leader said.

Responding, the ACF Chairman, Chief Audu Ogbe, said the acronym RUGA was not a coinage of the present administration and not a Fulani word but the initiative of the British government which saw the problems coming since 1946.

The ACF chairman stressed the need to solve the issues of farmer/herder clashes.

“It was the British who saw this coming. There is a need to put cows in a good place where we can give them water and grass and secure them so that we can get better meat and milk.

“I thank the Miyetti Allah for the education they have given us and we assure them that we will continue talking.

“Kaduna, Kano and Niger have already offered land where we can put the cows. It is about government now developing the lands,” Ogbe said.

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