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Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Politics / Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read (1418 Views)

Herdsmen, Farmers’ Clashes Not Buhari’s Responsibilty – Obasanjo / FG working “silently” to resolve herdsmen/farmers clashes – Lai Mohammed / Herdsmen, Farmers Clashes May Cause National Crisis – Oshiomhole, Mimiko (2) (3) (4)

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Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by BIGERBOY1: 10:59am On Aug 03, 2015
will shock Nigerians to know that more people have died as a result of Fulani/indigene clashes in the last half a decade than have died from terrorist activity occasioned by the Boko Haram terrorist sect. As horrific as individual Boko Haram activities are, they pale in comparison to the barbarous slaughter of over 500 men, women, and children in a single night of terror at Dogo na Hauwa village of Plateau State of 2010


Terrorist activities occasioned by the Boko Haram terrorist group have been largely localised in Nigeria's North-east save for some sporadic attacks in other parts of the North and the Federal Capital Territory.


However, Fulani/indigene clashes have occurred in every state of Nigeria bar none! Needless lives have been lost all over Nigeria in these clashes and this will continue in perpetuity if as a nation we do not take steps to change the conditions that give rise to these clashes.


Just as with the Romany Gypsies of Europe, it is very easy to blame this itinerant group of cattle herders, buying such an exercise would in my opinion be an exercise in futility. I share the same view as movie producer, J. Michael Straczynski, who famously said: "People spend too much time finding other people to blame, too much energy finding excuses for not being what they are capable of being, and not enough energy putting themselves on the line, growing out of the past, and getting on with their lives." Nigeria must grow out of her past and that cannot happen until Nigerians stop pointing in blame and starting pointing to solutions.


Even before there was a nation called Nigeria, the Fulani had been passing through several nations en route markets all over West Africa. Year in and year out, they followed established grazing routes and as long as their cattle had grass and vegetation to feed on, they coexisted in peace with communities along their grazing routes. But as West Africa became increasingly urbanised, it was and is a matter of time before increase in population put pressure on local communities to use the ancient Fulani grazing routes for farmland or residential purposes


It is the competition for the scarce commodity of land that has brought about friction between the Fulani's and the indigenous people along these reserves. So what do we do? What is the solution? Obviously we cannot do nothing and watch as people continue to die all over Nigeria.


We must do something and I propose that Nigeria should take the following series of steps.
We should restore the ancient grazing routes of Fulani pastoralists. Both the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and the Federal Ministry of Lands should work with the apex Fulani pastoral association, the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association, to revive these routes and where there have been farms or houses built on these routes, alternative routes must be found.


Next, the Federal Ministry of Agriculture should give a deadline of no less than 10 years to the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association to convert from pastoral cattle rearing to the modern business of cattle ranching in which cattle are reserved, reared and bred at a central location suitable for such purposes



Measurable timelines should be agreed with the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association for progress towards this objective and penalties for failure to progress towards these timelines must be clearly spelt out.


Next, the Federal Ministries of Finance and Defence must collaborate through their agencies to monitor and ensure proper taxation of the informal cattle rearing economy and also to ensure that the government can trace the whereabouts of individual Fulani clans. This can be done easily by identifying the cattle rearers entry point into Nigeria and stationing mobile border posts there with armed officials of the Nigerian Customs Service Department of Animal Control.


Upon entry into Nigeria, every cattle must be shot with a homing device which will enable Customs officials and the ministry of defence track each cattle as they enter Nigeria and to pin point their location anywhere within our borders These devices are cheap and practical.
There is a huge informal economy that is not taxed by the various governments in Nigeria. Tagging these cattle as they enter Nigerian soil will not just have positive security implications, it will also affect the economy positively as the federal government will have accurate numbers of the total cattle on the hoof that enters Nigeria and how much to charge as duty on each cattle.


By tagging the cattle, Nigeria will not only increase her revenue base in a world of falling oil prices, but we will have the additional benefit of knowing in real time where each herd of cattle are within our borders and how to proactively deploy our police and military for internal security issues to prevent Fulani/Indigene clashes Nigeria has too many intellectuals who know how to analyse problems and give angles to them. But we do not have enough minds working on solutions. We will make more progress if our public intellectualism is geared towards solving than the analysis of challenges. Nations make more progress when their leaders are more concerned with accepting responsibility than with apportioning blame.


This is the mindset to solving the Fulani/indigene and all other similar and related incidences of insecurity. We should be looking for solutions and those in authority should reward such intellectual efforts by adopting them. It should be clear to the discerning that terrorism, Fulani/indigene clashes, ethnic and religious strife and corruption are not really the problem of Nigeria. They are merely the symptoms of our problems. The main problem Nigeria has is that we have moved from a nation of about 50 million people in 1960 when we got independence from Britain, to a nation of close to 200 million people today.


While our population has quadrupled, opportunities have not quadrupled and in some cases they have reduced rather than increased. So the problem is that we have more people competing for fewer resources and when you have this scenario, civil strife is inevitable.
Factor in the dwindling revenue from oil, which is what fuelled our unprecedented population growth, and the situation is even more dire. The job of a leader in this type of situation is not to point a finger and say you are to blame and you are not to blame. No!


The job of a leader is to surround himself with people who know the root cause of problems and can come up with creative solutions to them because as Albert Einstein said: "No problem can be solved from the same level of consciousness that created it". If we have a roadmap for the future where cattle can be ranched in Nigeria by the Fulani and any other group that want to go into this form of business, Nigeria can become an exporter of beef thus turning a problem (Fulani/Indigene clash) into an opportunity. Some might read this and think this is far fetched, but they would be wrong.


About 10 years ago, a certain Fulani man named Abubakar Bukola Saraki introduced modern cattle ranching to Shonga in Kwara State when he, as Governor of Kwara State, invited the White Zimbabwean farmers that had lost their lands in Robert Mugabe's land redistribution programme to Nigeria. Saraki's government assisted the White Zimbabweans with financing, land and other necessary resources needed to resettle them in Nigeria. These farmers have successfully and profitably ranched cattle at Shonga and are contributing significantly to the economy of Kwara State and Nigeria without clashing with local farmers and other indigenes


As a matter of fact, rather than clashes with the indigenes, they are employing the local farmers and indigenes and Shonga has become an epitome of peaceful coexistence in Nigeria. If one Fulani man in the person of Saraki can do this, then other Fulani can do it as well. There is money in cattle ranching. Make no mistake about it.


Take Argentina for example, 3 per cent of all exports out of Argentina is beef which provides an annual revenue of $5 billion to the Argentine government. Argentina provides 7.4 per cent of the world's beef exports and this is a market that has not been exhausted. There is room for growth in the global market for beef exports and Nigeria can key in to this by harnessing the resources of the Fulani through modern cattle ranches that will provide the domestic market with inexpensive beef and improve Nigeria's balance of trade position by exporting beef and cattle to other nations.


This will provide revenue for the government and jobs for the people. This is Ben Murray Bruce and I just want to make common sense!

Cc: lalasticlala

http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/integrating-the-fulani-into-modern-day-nigeria/216392/

4 Likes

Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by Andyg: 11:00am On Aug 03, 2015
Good one

1 Like

Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by Andyg: 11:01am On Aug 03, 2015
Good one






FP op

1 Like

Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by Katastrofy: 11:03am On Aug 03, 2015
hmmmmm

1 Like

Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by gabe15(m): 11:07am On Aug 03, 2015
nice one ben
Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by Boss13: 11:07am On Aug 03, 2015
Nice one Senator Ben Bruce. Now engage your colleagues and put this idea to work.

3 Likes

Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by BushidoBlue(m): 11:08am On Aug 03, 2015
The problem is that many people will avoid this thread and yet blame GEJ for the next problem long after he has left office.

1 Like

Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by Fabrolistic: 11:13am On Aug 03, 2015
Andyg:
Good one

as if you read it.
Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by drnoel: 11:18am On Aug 03, 2015
BIGERBOY1:
will shock Nigerians to know that more people have died as a result of Fulani/indigene clashes in the last half a decade than have died from terrorist activity occasioned by the Boko Haram terrorist sect. As horrific as individual Boko Haram activities are, they pale in comparison to the barbarous slaughter of over 500 men, women, and children in a single night of terror at Dogo na Hauwa village of Plateau State of 2010


Terrorist activities occasioned by the Boko Haram terrorist group have been largely localised in Nigeria's North-east save for some sporadic attacks in other parts of the North and the Federal Capital Territory.


However, Fulani/indigene clashes have occurred in every state of Nigeria bar none! Needless lives have been lost all over Nigeria in these clashes and this will continue in perpetuity if as a nation we do not take steps to change the conditions that give rise to these clashes.


Just as with the Romany Gypsies of Europe, it is very easy to blame this itinerant group of cattle herders, buying such an exercise would in my opinion be an exercise in futility. I share the same view as movie producer, J. Michael Straczynski, who famously said: "People spend too much time finding other people to blame, too much energy finding excuses for not being what they are capable of being, and not enough energy putting themselves on the line, growing out of the past, and getting on with their lives." Nigeria must grow out of her past and that cannot happen until Nigerians stop pointing in blame and starting pointing to solutions.


Even before there was a nation called Nigeria, the Fulani had been passing through several nations en route markets all over West Africa. Year in and year out, they followed established grazing routes and as long as their cattle had grass and vegetation to feed on, they coexisted in peace with communities along their grazing routes. But as West Africa became increasingly urbanised, it was and is a matter of time before increase in population put pressure on local communities to use the ancient Fulani grazing routes for farmland or residential purposes


It is the competition for the scarce commodity of land that has brought about friction between the Fulani's and the indigenous people along these reserves. So what do we do? What is the solution? Obviously we cannot do nothing and watch as people continue to die all over Nigeria.


We must do something and I propose that Nigeria should take the following series of steps.
We should restore the ancient grazing routes of Fulani pastoralists. Both the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and the Federal Ministry of Lands should work with the apex Fulani pastoral association, the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association, to revive these routes and where there have been farms or houses built on these routes, alternative routes must be found.


Next, the Federal Ministry of Agriculture should give a deadline of no less than 10 years to the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association to convert from pastoral cattle rearing to the modern business of cattle ranching in which cattle are reserved, reared and bred at a central location suitable for such purposes



Measurable timelines should be agreed with the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association for progress towards this objective and penalties for failure to progress towards these timelines must be clearly spelt out.


Next, the Federal Ministries of Finance and Defence must collaborate through their agencies to monitor and ensure proper taxation of the informal cattle rearing economy and also to ensure that the government can trace the whereabouts of individual Fulani clans. This can be done easily by identifying the cattle rearers entry point into Nigeria and stationing mobile border posts there with armed officials of the Nigerian Customs Service Department of Animal Control.


Upon entry into Nigeria, every cattle must be shot with a homing device which will enable Customs officials and the ministry of defence track each cattle as they enter Nigeria and to pin point their location anywhere within our borders These devices are cheap and practical.
There is a huge informal economy that is not taxed by the various governments in Nigeria. Tagging these cattle as they enter Nigerian soil will not just have positive security implications, it will also affect the economy positively as the federal government will have accurate numbers of the total cattle on the hoof that enters Nigeria and how much to charge as duty on each cattle.


By tagging the cattle, Nigeria will not only increase her revenue base in a world of falling oil prices, but we will have the additional benefit of knowing in real time where each herd of cattle are within our borders and how to proactively deploy our police and military for internal security issues to prevent Fulani/Indigene clashes Nigeria has too many intellectuals who know how to analyse problems and give angles to them. But we do not have enough minds working on solutions. We will make more progress if our public intellectualism is geared towards solving than the analysis of challenges. Nations make more progress when their leaders are more concerned with accepting responsibility than with apportioning blame.


This is the mindset to solving the Fulani/indigene and all other similar and related incidences of insecurity. We should be looking for solutions and those in authority should reward such intellectual efforts by adopting them. It should be clear to the discerning that terrorism, Fulani/indigene clashes, ethnic and religious strife and corruption are not really the problem of Nigeria. They are merely the symptoms of our problems. The main problem Nigeria has is that we have moved from a nation of about 50 million people in 1960 when we got independence from Britain, to a nation of close to 200 million people today.


While our population has quadrupled, opportunities have not quadrupled and in some cases they have reduced rather than increased. So the problem is that we have more people competing for fewer resources and when you have this scenario, civil strife is inevitable.
Factor in the dwindling revenue from oil, which is what fuelled our unprecedented population growth, and the situation is even more dire. The job of a leader in this type of situation is not to point a finger and say you are to blame and you are not to blame. No!


The job of a leader is to surround himself with people who know the root cause of problems and can come up with creative solutions to them because as Albert Einstein said: "No problem can be solved from the same level of consciousness that created it". If we have a roadmap for the future where cattle can be ranched in Nigeria by the Fulani and any other group that want to go into this form of business, Nigeria can become an exporter of beef thus turning a problem (Fulani/Indigene clash) into an opportunity. Some might read this and think this is far fetched, but they would be wrong.


About 10 years ago, a certain Fulani man named Abubakar Bukola Saraki introduced modern cattle ranching to Shonga in Kwara State when he, as Governor of Kwara State, invited the White Zimbabwean farmers that had lost their lands in Robert Mugabe's land redistribution programme to Nigeria. Saraki's government assisted the White Zimbabweans with financing, land and other necessary resources needed to resettle them in Nigeria. These farmers have successfully and profitably ranched cattle at Shonga and are contributing significantly to the economy of Kwara State and Nigeria without clashing with local farmers and other indigenes


As a matter of fact, rather than clashes with the indigenes, they are employing the local farmers and indigenes and Shonga has become an epitome of peaceful coexistence in Nigeria. If one Fulani man in the person of Saraki can do this, then other Fulani can do it as well. There is money in cattle ranching. Make no mistake about it.


Take Argentina for example, 3 per cent of all exports out of Argentina is beef which provides an annual revenue of $5 billion to the Argentine government. Argentina provides 7.4 per cent of the world's beef exports and this is a market that has not been exhausted. There is room for growth in the global market for beef exports and Nigeria can key in to this by harnessing the resources of the Fulani through modern cattle ranches that will provide the domestic market with inexpensive beef and improve Nigeria's balance of trade position by exporting beef and cattle to other nations.


This will provide revenue for the government and jobs for the people. This is Ben Murray Bruce and I just want to make common sense!

Cc: lalasticlala

Put all these in a bill so it would be passed into law. This form of foresight is all we seek in our legislators not silly people making bills to marry children

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by IdisuleOurOwn(m): 11:19am On Aug 03, 2015
Nice piece of advice.

1 Like

Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by zimoni(f): 11:19am On Aug 03, 2015
All I can say is.....


Alaabaa.

Nansense.
Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by whirlwind7(m): 11:25am On Aug 03, 2015
Well...as innotivative as this solution seem, nothing really stops the herdsman from removing and destroying a tracking or homing device embeded just underneath the skin of his cattle.

The idea is superb....that is, until the agency charged with procuring the devices begin to inflate the contracts, or it's personel collude with the herdsmen and tag just a fraction of the incoming cattle....

Lots of things to consider. Fulani herdsmen just don't like the idea of cultivating, processing and producing livestock feeds. They do not want to pay for it either. They believe that nature should take care of that aspect for them, in the form of natural forages and pastures.

What's more, most of these cattles are owned by wealthy northern political elites. That they haven't really done much to discourage the nomadic lifestyle of their people speaks volumes.
Times have changed, but they'd rather live in the past. I would really love to see this idea implemented, just so that I can see how the herdsmen and their employers respond to it.

3 Likes

Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by Nobody: 11:47am On Aug 03, 2015
A thinking senator
Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by BIGERBOY1: 11:55am On Aug 03, 2015
whirlwind7:
Well...as innotivative as this solution seem, nothing really stops the herdsman from removing and destroying a tracking or homing device embeded just underneath the skin of his cattle.

The idea is superb....that is, until the agency charged with procuring the devices begin to inflate the contracts, or it's personel collude with the herdsmen and tag just a fraction of the incoming cattle....

Lots of things to consider. Fulani herdsmen just don't like the idea of cultivating, processing and producing livestock feeds. They do not want to pay for it either. They believe that nature should take care of that aspect for them, in the form of natural forages and pastures.

What's more, most of these cattles are owned by wealthy northern political elites. That they haven't really done much to discourage the nomadic lifestyle of their people speaks volumes.
Times have changed, but they'd rather live in the past. I would really love to see this idea implemented, just so that I can see how the herdsmen and their employers respond to it.
Nice points u raised, but I still think it is better than doing nothing. Definitely the bill if sponsored can be refined further and other checks added

1 Like

Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by tinkinjow: 12:11pm On Aug 03, 2015
There's no place in the modern world for nomads. Full Stop

1 Like

Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by oduastates: 12:16pm On Aug 03, 2015
From which historical book is Bruce reading his crap?
Their movement down south is as recent as the 90's and this is as a result of drought brought about by climate change and wars and civil strife brought about by insecurity and religion.
Many of them are not even Nigerians.
Their route was through adamawa to Cameroon and from there , to Central Africa .
They should go and ranch their animals and buy animal feed like others . Milk production will pay for the cost of feeding .
The onus is on their leaders to educate them .
How come no such route exist in Ghana ,Ivory Coast etc
I will tell you why .
Because those countries have totally slam their borders shut because of their baggage .

3 Likes

Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by cleatoris: 12:18pm On Aug 03, 2015
The only workable solution is for cattle owners to build ranches for their livestock, including their herders (who are not even different from the animals which they rear), and confine them there.

They should allow the farmers and their families to farm in peace and enjoy the fruits of their labour.

2 Likes

Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by ERODEDEAST(f): 12:29pm On Aug 03, 2015
Building Ranches will not be accepted by the owners of this cattle in govt including their Life patron.

Fool.ani herdmen have a purpose and its working out perfectly.

1 Like

Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by knowledgeable: 1:42pm On Aug 03, 2015
BIGERBOY1:
will shock Nigerians to know that more people have died as a result of Fulani/indigene clashes in the last half a decade than have died from terrorist activity occasioned by the Boko Haram terrorist sect. As horrific as individual Boko Haram activities are, they pale in comparison to the barbarous slaughter of over 500 men, women, and children in a single night of terror at Dogo na Hauwa village of Plateau State of 2010


Terrorist activities occasioned by the Boko Haram terrorist group have been largely localised in Nigeria's North-east save for some sporadic attacks in other parts of the North and the Federal Capital Territory.


However, Fulani/indigene clashes have occurred in every state of Nigeria bar none! Needless lives have been lost all over Nigeria in these clashes and this will continue in perpetuity if as a nation we do not take steps to change the conditions that give rise to these clashes.


Just as with the Romany Gypsies of Europe, it is very easy to blame this itinerant group of cattle herders, buying such an exercise would in my opinion be an exercise in futility. I share the same view as movie producer, J. Michael Straczynski, who famously said: "People spend too much time finding other people to blame, too much energy finding excuses for not being what they are capable of being, and not enough energy putting themselves on the line, growing out of the past, and getting on with their lives." Nigeria must grow out of her past and that cannot happen until Nigerians stop pointing in blame and starting pointing to solutions.


Even before there was a nation called Nigeria, the Fulani had been passing through several nations en route markets all over West Africa. Year in and year out, they followed established grazing routes and as long as their cattle had grass and vegetation to feed on, they coexisted in peace with communities along their grazing routes. But as West Africa became increasingly urbanised, it was and is a matter of time before increase in population put pressure on local communities to use the ancient Fulani grazing routes for farmland or residential purposes


It is the competition for the scarce commodity of land that has brought about friction between the Fulani's and the indigenous people along these reserves. So what do we do? What is the solution? Obviously we cannot do nothing and watch as people continue to die all over Nigeria.


We must do something and I propose that Nigeria should take the following series of steps.
We should restore the ancient grazing routes of Fulani pastoralists. Both the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and the Federal Ministry of Lands should work with the apex Fulani pastoral association, the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association, to revive these routes and where there have been farms or houses built on these routes, alternative routes must be found.


Next, the Federal Ministry of Agriculture should give a deadline of no less than 10 years to the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association to convert from pastoral cattle rearing to the modern business of cattle ranching in which cattle are reserved, reared and bred at a central location suitable for such purposes



Measurable timelines should be agreed with the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association for progress towards this objective and penalties for failure to progress towards these timelines must be clearly spelt out.


Next, the Federal Ministries of Finance and Defence must collaborate through their agencies to monitor and ensure proper taxation of the informal cattle rearing economy and also to ensure that the government can trace the whereabouts of individual Fulani clans. This can be done easily by identifying the cattle rearers entry point into Nigeria and stationing mobile border posts there with armed officials of the Nigerian Customs Service Department of Animal Control.


Upon entry into Nigeria, every cattle must be shot with a homing device which will enable Customs officials and the ministry of defence track each cattle as they enter Nigeria and to pin point their location anywhere within our borders These devices are cheap and practical.
There is a huge informal economy that is not taxed by the various governments in Nigeria. Tagging these cattle as they enter Nigerian soil will not just have positive security implications, it will also affect the economy positively as the federal government will have accurate numbers of the total cattle on the hoof that enters Nigeria and how much to charge as duty on each cattle.


By tagging the cattle, Nigeria will not only increase her revenue base in a world of falling oil prices, but we will have the additional benefit of knowing in real time where each herd of cattle are within our borders and how to proactively deploy our police and military for internal security issues to prevent Fulani/Indigene clashes Nigeria has too many intellectuals who know how to analyse problems and give angles to them. But we do not have enough minds working on solutions. We will make more progress if our public intellectualism is geared towards solving than the analysis of challenges. Nations make more progress when their leaders are more concerned with accepting responsibility than with apportioning blame.


This is the mindset to solving the Fulani/indigene and all other similar and related incidences of insecurity. We should be looking for solutions and those in authority should reward such intellectual efforts by adopting them. It should be clear to the discerning that terrorism, Fulani/indigene clashes, ethnic and religious strife and corruption are not really the problem of Nigeria. They are merely the symptoms of our problems. The main problem Nigeria has is that we have moved from a nation of about 50 million people in 1960 when we got independence from Britain, to a nation of close to 200 million people today.


While our population has quadrupled, opportunities have not quadrupled and in some cases they have reduced rather than increased. So the problem is that we have more people competing for fewer resources and when you have this scenario, civil strife is inevitable.
Factor in the dwindling revenue from oil, which is what fuelled our unprecedented population growth, and the situation is even more dire. The job of a leader in this type of situation is not to point a finger and say you are to blame and you are not to blame. No!


The job of a leader is to surround himself with people who know the root cause of problems and can come up with creative solutions to them because as Albert Einstein said: "No problem can be solved from the same level of consciousness that created it". If we have a roadmap for the future where cattle can be ranched in Nigeria by the Fulani and any other group that want to go into this form of business, Nigeria can become an exporter of beef thus turning a problem (Fulani/Indigene clash) into an opportunity. Some might read this and think this is far fetched, but they would be wrong.


About 10 years ago, a certain Fulani man named Abubakar Bukola Saraki introduced modern cattle ranching to Shonga in Kwara State when he, as Governor of Kwara State, invited the White Zimbabwean farmers that had lost their lands in Robert Mugabe's land redistribution programme to Nigeria. Saraki's government assisted the White Zimbabweans with financing, land and other necessary resources needed to resettle them in Nigeria. These farmers have successfully and profitably ranched cattle at Shonga and are contributing significantly to the economy of Kwara State and Nigeria without clashing with local farmers and other indigenes


As a matter of fact, rather than clashes with the indigenes, they are employing the local farmers and indigenes and Shonga has become an epitome of peaceful coexistence in Nigeria. If one Fulani man in the person of Saraki can do this, then other Fulani can do it as well. There is money in cattle ranching. Make no mistake about it.


Take Argentina for example, 3 per cent of all exports out of Argentina is beef which provides an annual revenue of $5 billion to the Argentine government. Argentina provides 7.4 per cent of the world's beef exports and this is a market that has not been exhausted. There is room for growth in the global market for beef exports and Nigeria can key in to this by harnessing the resources of the Fulani through modern cattle ranches that will provide the domestic market with inexpensive beef and improve Nigeria's balance of trade position by exporting beef and cattle to other nations.


This will provide revenue for the government and jobs for the people. This is Ben Murray Bruce and I just want to make common sense!

Cc: lalasticlala

http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/integrating-the-fulani-into-modern-day-nigeria/216392/

This is a complete idiotic write up period. Ben Bruce is becoming an instrument to be used by the northern oligarch for the preservation of the ss slavery status. I didn't bother reading the whole write up, when he mentioned about restoring the original grazing routes. Their is zero economic, social and political advantage to that in today's nigeria or west Africa for that matter. He recognized the increase in Nigeria population and urbanization, but what about the rest of the continent population hitting 2 billion mark with over 70% urbanization by the year 2050?. Isn't the same population increases and it's impacts like urbanization, increase in demand for food, housing, transportation , power and etc that we are witnessing innovative reforms in those sub sectors. In agriculture, Agro business, electronic wallets and etc were introduced. Why not innovative Ranching establishment, were by prospective investors can invest in instruments like futures, call, put or selling short. All these and much more will expand that sub sector to an innovative level as the population and urbanization increases." Fulanis are apostles of Islam for centuries" and one primary key factor of that evangelism has always being their cattle Routes period. Don't forget, that cattle routes were instrumental to the 100%destruction of the American Red Indian population during the cow boy era of the 18th century, before the beautiful innovative Ranching and it's money making wheel of Fortune was introduced. I hope the same faith doesn't befall on our brothers in benue, and middle belt before it's too late. As climate change resistant seeds are being introduced, climate change induced cattle migratory "Routes" should not be expanding even if, it's supported by international bodies who already knew the negative socio economic, ethnic, political antecedents of it. China with their billion population have solved the migratory routes problems of their hordes with a balanced outcome should be a pointer to Nigeria, West Africa and Africa.
Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by mikolo80: 3:10pm On Aug 03, 2015
drnoel:


Put all these in a bill so it would be passed into law. This form of foresight is all we seek in our legislators not silly people making bills to marry children
would really love to see the implementation of the rfid tagging at over 1500 boarder crossings.very funny man always talking of ideal instead of what is practical

all farmers need is plenty rat poison and bear traps

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by drnoel: 5:15pm On Aug 03, 2015
mikolo80:
would really love to see the implementation of the rfid tagging at over 1500 boarder crossings.very funny man always talking of ideal instead of what is practical

all farmers need is plenty rat poison and bear traps


Bros rightly said but the first step would be to have it on draft, then pass it into law. Then we start talking about how to implement it over the years. It will not be easy to implement when one thinks about how porous our borders are but if cattle foraging is outlawed and cattle ranching is seriously encouraged u will see some silent millionaires suddenly getting interested in this area.
Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by mikolo80: 12:36am On Aug 04, 2015
drnoel:



Bros rightly said but the first step would be to have it on draft, then pass it into law. Then we start talking about how to implement it over the years. It will not be easy to implement when one thinks about how porous our borders are but if cattle foraging is outlawed and cattle ranching is seriously encouraged u will see some silent millionaires suddenly getting interested in this area.
well o RI yen so na
Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by Abagworo(m): 1:19pm On Sep 23, 2015
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Re: Senator Bruce's Solution To Fulani/farmers Clashes In Nigeria - A Good Read by wasco24: 1:34pm On Sep 23, 2015
cheesy

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