The governor said that he was an advocate of Ebonyi people living peacefully with the Fulanis.
Gov. David Umahi of Ebonyi has threatened to arrest herdsmen in the state who flout his directive of not wandering with their cattle around the state.
Umahi
made the threat in Abakaliki on Saturday while inaugurating a committee
to check disputes between communities and herdsmen, saying that he had
given the last warning on the issue.
He said that
the committee had enormous task because of incessant cases of cattle
moving around in the state and destroying crops and others agricultural
produce.
“Cattle must be in one location and
the owners should search for food to feed them because our lands are
occupied with agricultural ventures.
“I recently inspected areas we planted flowers and trees in the new city and beheld cattle all over the place.
“I
asked my Aide De Camp (ADC) to ascertain if one leaf was eaten by the
cattle because I would have ordered the arrest of the people rearing
them.
“It will be difficult for us to
feed ourselves when cattle move around and likewise to achieve our ‘one
man, one hectare policy’,” he said.
The
governor said that he was an advocate of Ebonyi people living peacefully
with the Fulanis, some of whom had been in the state for over 70 years.
“The
issue is not where the herdsmen come from because I will resist the
cattle movement even if they are owned by Ebonyi indigenes.
“I
will readily offer assistance to the herdsmen to enable them keep the
cattle at a place because I will hate to see the cattle eating the rice
that I laboured to cultivate.
“I borrowed N2
billion for the rice projects across the state and the Federal
Government also invested funds which will break my heart if the cattle
eat the produce.
“We can do without
cattle but cannot do without food as it is proven that the dung from the
cattle destroys the asphalt used to construct roads.
“The
moment the dung drops on the road, it burns the asphalt due to its
high-acidic nature and this is one of the major reasons for road
failures across the country,” he said.
Umahi
commended the commissioner of police in the state for her efforts in
preventing escalation of the disputes and urged the committee to tour
the 13 local government areas to ensure that the directive was obeyed.
Chairman
of the committee, Mr Augustine Nwakwagu, thanked the governor for his
efforts in ensuring peace between the herdsmen and communities in the
state.
“We are lucky not to record serious
cases of disputes between these categories of people as the committee’s
inauguration is instructive to avert such grave occurrences,” he said.
On
her part, the Commissioner of Police, Mrs Peace Ibekwe-Abdallah,
thanked the governor for inaugurating the committee and pledged that
they would work assiduously in ensuring that his directives were heeded.
The
News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the committee consists of
heads of security agencies in the state, traditional rulers, local
government areas caretaker committee chairmen, and other stakeholders
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