While historians have
disputed the account that Rome’s emperor, Nero, played away on a fiddle as the
city burned, the phrase nevertheless has become synonymous with doing too
little or nothing in a time of great crisis.
The
Guardian Nigeria report continues:
Nigerians
had repeatedly accused the Buhari government of poor handling of attacks by
herdsmen across the country. But with the recent Benue State massacre, it
appears the criticisms are rising to a disturbing climax.
Last
week, herdsmen in Benue staged coordinated attacks in three local government
areas, killing about 50 persons and wounding hundreds. The incident followed an
orgy of killings in Rivers and Kaduna states where dozens lost their lives.
Chief
Edward Ujege, president of Tiv socio-cultural organization, Mzough-u-Tiv,
dismissed a statement credited to Inspector General of Police Ibrahim Idris
suggesting the Benue tragedy was a result of communal clashes.
The
IGP mocked the souls of children, pregnant women, old men and youths murdered
in cold blood by armed Fulani herdsmen, Ujege said.
He
insisted that facts on the ground did not indicate clashes between groups but
rather a well-planned, foretold and unprovoked invasion by cattlemen who had
vowed to resist the state’s anti-open grazing law.
“When
the Benue State governor, Samuel Ortom, signed the law on May 22, 2017,
officials of the Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore came out publicly to state that they
would mobilise and invade the state, to resist the law,” Ujege said in a
statement.
“They
equally said the crisis in Benue was a struggle for natural resources, since
their coming to the Benue valley predated the present inhabitants. Their
position was widely published by media across the globe.”
Ujege
called on President Buhari to direct security agencies to arrest and prosecute
the National President and Secretary of Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore, Abdullahi
Bello Bodejo and Saleh Alhassan.
Also,
the National President of the Pentecostal Fellowship of Nigeria, Rev. Dr. Felix
Omobude, yesterday, expressed concern at the lackluster approach of security
agencies in bringing persons behind the crisis to book.
“PFN
believes it’s time our security forces performed their primary duty of
protecting the lives and property of Nigerians. Government at various levels
should stop paying lip service to tackling atrocities committed by these
herdsmen, suspected to be of Fulani extraction, nationwide. This
decimation of communities with destruction of lives and properties must stop,”
he said in a statement.
He,
however, called on “all well-meaning Nigerians to continue to exercise
restraint even in the face of provocative and unwholesome activities of armed
herdsmen and keep praying for peace and unity of Nigeria.”
Pastor
Enoch Adeboye, General Overseer of The Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG),
also condemned the killings.
Represented
by his aide, Pastor Johnson Odesola, during a church service at RCCG
headquarters, Ebute-Metta, Lagos, the cleric said he was puzzled by “the
silence of the government as regards various attacks by Fulani herdsmen.”
He
said: “The government should do something as it appears that the will to take
positive action on this unnecessary protracted problem is conspicuously
lacking.
“My
worry is that since the mayhem by these Fulani herdsmen is being treated with
levity, with no single person brought to book, it translates to the assumption
that the evil work is approved. It is not enough for the government to say
something; it has to act decisively.”
But
Vice President Yemi Osinbajo warned Nigerians against politicizing the
killings.
“We
must recognize that as dangerous and as deadly and heartless as these killings
are, there is also the danger of allowing politics to play a part. This could
lead to what we sometimes describe as ‘pouring petrol into an already burning
fire’.
“We
must not permit the politicization of this tragedy. One of the reasons why, for
years, Boko Haram thrived, was because of the politicization of the insurgency.
There were those who were planning to benefit politically from the tragedy and
they painted the opposition, then, as the perpetrator,” Osibanjo said during an
inter-denominational service commemorating the 2018 Armed Forces Remembrance
Day.
Meanwhile,
a farmer in Ojah, Akoko Edo Local Government Area of Edo State reportedly lost
his wrist in an attack by five herdsmen at the weekend.
It
came as a group, Ochie Igbo, yesterday held a meeting with the leader of the
Hausa community in Ebonyi, warning: “We don’t want herdsmen invasion in the
South East. We won’t tolerate any attack by herdsmen on our people.”
A
traditional ruler in Demsa Local Government Area of Adamawa State, Gladstone
Teneke, also expressed concern over a meeting Buhari held with some northern
emirs leaving out Christian leaders from areas affected by herdsmen attack.
“Last
year, my territory recorded more than four attacks with the killing of over 100
people. As president of Nigeria, if there is any issue, you should listen to
both parties,” he said.
On
the Benue incident, rights group, Socio-Economic Rights and Accountability
Project (SERAP), appealed to the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights, Prince Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, urging him to hold a special session to
address the issue.
On his part, the Managing Director of Nigerian Export Processing Zones Authority, (NEPZA), Emmanuel Jime, in Abuja yesterday, called on security agencies to match words with action and bring the culprits to justice.
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