Friday, 29th March 2024
To guardian.ng
Search

Protest as herdsmen kill over 25 in Plateau, Delta

By Isa Abdulsalami Ahovi (Jos), Joseph Wantu (Benue) and Owen Akenzua (Asaba)
17 October 2017   |   4:35 am
No fewer than 29 people were allegedly killed by suspected Fulani herdsmen in Nkei-Dongwro near Miango in Bassa Local Government Area, Plateau State, yesterday.

Herdsmen

Groups allege plot by gunmen to invade Benue
No fewer than 29 people were allegedly killed by suspected Fulani herdsmen in Nkei-Dongwro near Miango in Bassa Local Government Area, Plateau State, yesterday.

A dusk-to-dawn curfew had earlier been imposed on Bassa following a series of attacks in the area. But the gunmen have been defying the curfew as the attacks usually take place in the night.

The National President of Irigwe Development Association and former member of the Plateau State House of Assembly, Sunday Abdu, confirmed that 29 people mainly women and children were killed by the gunmen.

According to Abdu, some men seen as soldiers took the victims to one classroom with a view to saving their lives as they had all abandoned their ancestral homes, but it turned out to be a disguise as the gunmen massacred them as soon as they were left vulnerable by their perceived protectors.

Abdu, who said the village was attacked before, expected that the place should have still have been under the watch of the soldiers.

The state government said it was a regrettable case of unprovoked gun attack which has characterised the vicious circle of violence in the Irigwe chiefdom of Bassa council.

Government’s reaction came through the Director of Press and Publicity to the governor, Mr. Emmanuel Samuel Nanle, in a statement.

The Senator representing Plateau North Senatorial District, Dr. Jonah David Jang, in a statement he personally signed, asked the government to reconsider another strategy as the curfew was not working. But he put the death toll at 23.

He said he received with a deep sense of sadness and outrage, the news of the incessant violent killings going on in Bassa Local Government, allegedly perpetrated by herdsmen who have become the usual suspects in that kind of coordinated attacks in the state, and others in the Middle-Belt.

“The attack on Tegbe Village, the failed attack on Nzoruvho Village on Saturday October 14th, 2017, and the most recent one on Nkiedonwhro Irigwe Chiefdom in the early hours of today October 16th, 2017 where about 23 persons were alleged to have been killed, are condemnable, no matter the justification”, he said.

The Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO) of the State Command, Mathias Terna Tyopev, said that though the incident happened, he could not give the actual casualty figure as he was still waiting for his divisional police officer to brief him on the incident.

The Plateau killing occurred as hundreds of women, many of whom are septuagenarians, in the wee hours of yesterday in Ebedei community, Ukwuani Local Government Area of Delta State protested naked against the continued attacks on residents of the community by herdsmen.

The protest, it was gathered, was informed by a series of attacks on the residents and their farmlands, and the alleged killing of two persons recently by the herdsmen.

Though the Police Commissioner, Mr. Zanna Ibrahim, had issued warnings against fresh hostilities in any Delta State community, the protesters were said to have exhausted their patience during an endless wait for response to their formal protest to the state government and security agencies.

The women took to various streets, raining curses on the herdsmen whom they alleged have destroyed their farm crops, and raped some of them.

According to one Otutu Chuks, who claimed to be a member of the community, the protesters marched past the Umutu Police Station in the area, expressing their anger over the destruction caused by the herdsmen before 6:00a.m. and returned to their various homes.

One of the protesters, Madam Eunice Anigala, said on telephone that the protest was informed by the pains suffered by the Ebedei community at the hands of the Fulani herdsmen. According to her, the protest will be on weekly basis until the herdsmen vacate the community.

The Commissioner for Information, Mr. Patrick Ukah, said the state government was committed to the protection of lives and property of the people, adding that security agents had been directed to maintain law and order at the flashpoints in the communities.

The police commissioner dismissed the protesters’ allegation, saying that peace had since returned to Ebedei community, in reaction to their earlier protest.

He said that the police would deal with anybody caught in any act capable of breaking down law and order, disclosing that a 24-hour police patrol of the community had been ordered.

Meanwhile, the major socio-cultural groups in Benue, including Mzough-u-Tiv, Idoma National Forum and the Ominiyi Igede have alerted the residents to alleged plans by herdsmen to attack Benue, urging the Federal Government to tackle the menace the way she is handling security challenges in the North East and Niger Delta.

The groups raised the alarm yesterday when they paid a visit to Governor Samuel Ortom at the People’s House Makurdi.

The Leader of the delegation and President General of Mzough-u-Tiv, Chief Edward Ujege, said the groups had received reports of alleged armed Fulani militia buildup and convergence at the Nigerian-Cameroon border and at the Agatu border with Nasarawa State to the North-West of Benue.

“It is being reliably gathered that leaders of the herdsmen have held clandestine meetings in Nigeria and abroad to visit mayhem and genocide on the people of Benue State.

“The plot is said to be multi-directional and aimed at simultaneously invading and attacking Benue from every angle so that there would be no escape for our defenceless people,” Ujege maintained.

The groups said their visit was necessary to alert the Federal Government, which they however said had relaxed over the issue.

Ortom promised that the state government would make land available to the Federal Ministry of Agriculture for the establishment of pilot ranches in the state.

Ortom stated that the provision of land was part of the state’s contribution to the collaborative efforts with the ministry.

He reiterated his position that the anti-open grazing law was intended to ensure lasting peace for farmers and herdsmen whom he urged to embrace dialogue and good neighbourliness.

0 Comments