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On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust - Politics - Nairaland

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On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by amnesty7: 9:27am On Oct 12, 2015
dailytrust.com.ng
On sending the nomads packing

An allegation often heard in Nigeria in recent times is that “the youths of nowadays” have departed from the path of hard work, obedience and respect for elders that youths were once known for. The assumption has always been that while the youths went haywire, elders have remained their old selves, wise, peaceable and measured. Fifteen years ago I was part of a delegation that went to try and resolve an intractable social problem. I developed a deep respect for our delegation’s leader because as soon as he sat down he told the other side, “Things will never get out of hand where there are elders!”
Well, not anymore. Evidence has just surfaced to indicate that “elders” in Nigeria have stepped forward and taken over the youths’ old role as firebrand, misdirected, devil may care, leap before you look and shoot-first-and-ask-questions-later. I am thinking here of the communiqué issued in Ibadan after an “emergency summit” of Yoruba elders. In attendance were such prominent persons as President of the Yoruba Council of Elders (YCE) Major General Adeyinka Adebayo, Sir Olaniwun Ajayi, Chief Ayo Adebanjo, Chief Idowu Sofola, Dr Frederick Fasehun, Bishop Ayo Ladigbolu, Prof Banji Akintoye, Prof Adetowun Ogunseye and Dr Kunle Olajide.
Pretending to be irked by last month’s abduction of former Secretary to the Government of the Federation Chief Olu Falae and the subsequent attack on his farm in Ondo State, the meeting issued an incendiary communiqué that, in effect, called for the expulsion of all nomadic pastoralists from the South West region. This gathering, which included lawyers, career soldiers and bishops, most of them very advanced in age, held ALL pastoralists responsible for a deed that was done by no more than ten people.
The communiqué read by Dr. Olajide said, “Yoruba leaders of thought both at home and in Diaspora had an emergency summit in response to the clear and present danger to the continued existence of our people… Despite the non aggressive disposition of the Yoruba, we have been victims of violent violations from our hostile neighbours from pre- colonial days to modern times. From the 18th century, the Fulani jihadists’ onslaught against the Yoruba through the travails of Chief Obafemi Awolowo through the June 12 saga with the latest wars declared on our people…The return of the herdsmen is a declaration of war on the Yoruba. Falae’s abduction is a continuation of attacks which these herdsmen have unleashed on our people over the years…”
Chief Femi Fani-Kayode, who not present at the meeting, later poured kerosene into the flames by saying, “Let this meeting be a warning to those that underestimate our resolve in this matter and that mistake our kindness and patience for weakness…If and when we are pushed to the wall we know exactly what to do. The killings, the rapings, the abductiOons and the desecration and pillaging of our land and farms by these Fulani herdsmen must stop or else there will be consequences.” No wonder that Chairman of the National Human Rights Commission Professor Chidi Odinkalu accused Fani-Kayode of hate speech.
Now, the kidnap of Chief Olu Falae was a heinous crime and people all over Nigeria were shocked when they heard of it. However, it was not the first ever kidnap case, in Nigeria or even in the South West. It is therefore difficult to see how it constituted a “clear and present danger to the continued survival” of the Yoruba. There must have been many other kidnap cases in the South West that did not get as much publicity as Falae’s case got, obviously because of the victim’s prominence. However, kidnaps are taking place in many other parts of Nigeria, many of them unreported in the media. In many cases they are perpetrated by local youths. A few years ago when kidnapping became such a huge menace in the South East, no one said that some other ethnic group was threatening Igbo existence, clearly because local gangs were perpetrating the crimes. Five years ago when the Secretary to the Kaduna State Government Waje Yayock was kidnapped in Kaduna and taken to Delta State, the Southern Kaduna Peoples Union [SOKAPU] did not say its people’s existence was being threatened by Southerners.
Nigeria’s ethnic groups are so thoroughly mixed up now that everyone is borrowing from everyone else in things good and bad. Food formulas that once belonged to particular parts of the country have been borrowed by others. Trades that were once identified with some ethnic groups have been infiltrated by others. It is no surprise that criminal enterprises invented by some people have been borrowed by others, especially when they prove to be lucrative and when in most cases the criminals escape punishment. There are no ethnic patents for trades or crimes.
Pastoralist youths did not invent kidnapping in Nigeria, nor are they the dominant force in the trade right now. There is however evidence to suggest that they are involved in it. Several kidnap victims in Kogi State and other parts of the North testified that their kidnappers spoke Hausa with heavy Fulfulde accent. But then, other kidnappers spoke with other languages and accents. In fact, even before kidnapping became a big game, stories were told in the past decade by highway robbery victims, especially on the Abuja-Kaduna highway, that they were robbed by men speaking Hausa with Fulfulde accents.
Like many other people, I was shocked when I first heard those stories because pastoralists are associated in most people’s minds with simplicity and lack of sophistication. Sure we knew that they could fight to the death to defend their cattle---and more recently to rustle them. Nigerians also learnt in recent years that pastoralists tend to avenge for an offence long after everyone else has forgotten about it, an attribute they share with pastoralists in other parts of the world. If the Yoruba Council of Elders were acting as elders, they would rather point to the protracted inter-communal conflicts in several Northern states and say, let us find peaceful ways of resolving the farmer-pastoralist problems in our areas.
One of the virtues of an elder, at least in the past, was the wisdom to seek to know why a problem that was not there before should suddenly rear its head. For example, after Falae was kidnapped and then released by suspected herdsmen and some suspected herdsmen later attacked and ransacked his farm, I expect a wise elder to say, “Chief, was there anything that happened between you and these people? There are many farms in Ondo State; why is it that they attacked your farm twice within a short time?” It is not the hallmark of an elder to believe the story told by one side and go ahead and act on it, however prominent the victim is and however criminal the other guy tends to be.
If everyone in Nigeria were to borrow the Yoruba Council of Elders’ style and criminalise whole ethnic and trade groups anytime one of them commits a crime, Nigeria will soon make the Balkan wars look like a tea party. Back in the 1970s when I was a very young man, every vehicle mechanic in Sokoto where I lived was a Yoruba man. Many times the mechanics offended me by pretending to repair my motorcycle, only for me to discover later that they messed things up. I did not qualify as an elder in those days but I never said as a result that all mechanics are useless or that all Yorubas should leave Sokoto. Instead I identified which mechanic messed up my motorcycle, subsequently boycotted him and then looked for a better mechanic [often in vain].
In fact, I will like to recommend to YCE my own small example in 1985 when a Ghanaian motor electrician called Kwame messed up my car’s kick starter. Day after day he spent the whole day repairing it, only for the car to be pushed to start. I finally lost my temper, glared at him and said, “I would have dealt with you if not because you share the same name with Kwame Nkrumah!”
http://www.dailytrust.com.ng/news/monday-column/on-sending-the-nomads-packing/114469.html
Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by Ngasky(m): 9:36am On Oct 12, 2015
If only we can call spade a spade

2 Likes

Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by playahata: 9:51am On Oct 12, 2015
A black man from a muslim father is in the white house as the president of America and over here in Nigeria, tribalism and religious intolerance is the order of the day! At least first of all hold your state governors, national assembly members representing your areas, home state local government chairmen accountable before killing yourselves over which tribe is superior over the rest.

1 Like

Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by ERODEDEAST(f): 10:10am On Oct 12, 2015
Everybody knows what would have happened if it was Aminu Kano or Balarebe Musa that was kidnapped by any Southern Tribe. .

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Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by Yujin(m): 10:43am On Oct 12, 2015
The fulanis are very intelligent people. I know this so well. See how the writer of the article glossed over the previous damages done by the fulani herdsmen to say 'only ten men'. When a plan is to be drawn to tackle and cut them to size they will appear to be very peaceful. It was the same strategy that they used to take over hausaland. The whole fulani population all over the world is not up to the population of any of the three major ethnic groups but see the way the hold sway in the politics of Nigeria. If that is not intelligence I don't know what to call it. The grazing routes they are desperately in need which they can use to claim other peoples land in future is the major reason the are heightening their attacks now. Very brilliant strategy I must say. Already they have taken over the lands of many minorities in the middlebelt and are edging for some in southern Nigeria. If the Yorubas give them the space in the SW I have no right to complain but I know that my people will not just defend our lands. Let me stop here.

4 Likes

Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by ArodewilliamsT: 10:51am On Oct 12, 2015
Yujin:
The fulanis are very intelligent people. I know this so well. See how the writer of the article glossed over the previous damages done by the fulani herdsmen to say 'only ten men'. When a plan is to be drawn to tackle and cut them to size they will appear to be very peaceful. It was the same strategy that they used to take over hausaland. The whole fulani population all over the world is not up to the population of any of the three major ethnic groups but see the way the hold sway in the politics of Nigeria. If that is not intelligence I don't know what to call it. The grazing routes they are desperately in need which they can use to claim other peoples land in future is the major reason the are heightening their attacks now. Very brilliant strategy I must say. Already they have taken over the lands of many minorities in the middlebelt and are edging for some in southern Nigeria. If the Yorubas give them the space in the SW I have no right to complain but I know that my people will not just defend our lands. Let me stop here.

...Succintly put.

1 Like

Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by SirNetwork(m): 10:52am On Oct 12, 2015
Why are we always chasing shadows ? All efforts should be channeled towards implementing modern methods of cattle rearing and stop this unnecessary accusations.

Anyway for your java programming projects/assignments my signature is there to help you.
Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by ArodewilliamsT: 11:05am On Oct 12, 2015
The fulani guy was trying to imply that fulas learnt kidnapping from southerners and that all killings and previous destructions visited on host communities were done by 'just ten people'.

I will not be suprised if some yoruba muslim sycophants are swayed by this 'peaceful' rhetorics engineered to futher blindfold them to the real truth about the fulani menace.

1 Like

Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by Musiwa419: 11:16am On Oct 12, 2015
ArodewilliamsT:
I will not be suprised if some yoruba muslim sycophants are swayed by this 'peaceful' rhetorics engineered to futher blindfold them to the real truth about the fulani menace.
chidozie udeogu, u neva change.
Btw, we all saw the reaction of Afenifere, we all read Femi Fani Kayode's article. It was an ibo man Prof Chidi Odinkalu the chairman of NHRC that called FFK a tribalist and said that the fulani's can rear their cattles anywhere in Nigeria.

1 Like

Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by PenSniper: 11:20am On Oct 12, 2015
If the claim of this writer to being an elder is true, then one can safely assume there are no elders worth the appelation where he comes from.

Glossing over the truth and dodging the real issue won't help you and your rampaging animals in the SW.

It takes a mental case to pretend not to know the infamous reputation of fulani herdsmen all over nigeria.

Well, you may call our leaders names to suit your ego but you and your ilks would do well to take FFK's words and the warnings by YCE serious otherwise you have another thing coming.

The Yoruba may be accommodating, hospitable and tolerant but there is a limit to provocations we can take.
The silent agility of a tiger does not signify cowardice but tact occasioned by civilization.

1 Like

Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by ArodewilliamsT: 11:22am On Oct 12, 2015
Musiwa419:
[s] chidozie udeogu, u neva change.
Btw, we all saw the reaction of Afenifere, we all read Femi Fani Kayode's article. It was an ibo man Prof Chidi Odinkalu the chairman of NHRC that called FFK a tribalist and said that the fulani's can rear their cattles anywhere in Nigeria.[/s]



Kwehehehe! Both FFK and Afeniferi are cowards and yes they conquered your kwara and yorubaland and can rear their cattles there.
You and your chidozie can go to hell in 200 different bits and pieces. grin

1 Like

Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by IDonShowNow: 11:28am On Oct 12, 2015
hmm
Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by shiinihost: 11:31am On Oct 12, 2015
ArodewilliamsT:




Kwehehehe! Both FFK and Afeniferi are cowards and yes they conquered your kwara and yorubaland and can rear their cattles there.
You and your chidozie can go to hell in 200 different bits and pieces. grin

dozzybaba calm down. You and your fellow lunatics can't do shiii.

1 Like

Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by LegatusGlaber(m): 11:32am On Oct 12, 2015
ok
Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by Musiwa419: 11:33am On Oct 12, 2015
ArodewilliamsT:




Kwehehehe! Both FFK and Afeniferi are cowards and yes they conquered your kwara and yorubaland and can rear their cattles there.
You and your chidozie can go to hell in 200 different bits and pieces. grin
chidozie, me and u don tey for dis game na

btw, ojuku is the greatest coward of all time. Apart from the fact that ffk bleeped his wife, he also ran away to abidjan after leading 3 million ibos to the slaughter ground

see aas kwarshiorkor take finish ur papa for biafra. No thanks to ojuku the greatest coward

1 Like

Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by ArodewilliamsT: 11:38am On Oct 12, 2015
Musiwa419:
[s] chidozie, me and u don tey for dis game na

btw, ojuku is the greatest coward of all time. Apart from the fact that ffk bleeped his wife, he also ran away to abidjan after leading 3 million ibos to the slaughter ground

see aas kwarshiorkor take finish ur papa for biafra. No thanks to ojuku the greatest coward[/s]

Ok. grin
Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by shiinihost: 11:40am On Oct 12, 2015
ArodewilliamsT:


Ok. grin

stop denying your identity man. we don tey for hia.

2 Likes

Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by ArodewilliamsT: 11:42am On Oct 12, 2015
shiinihost:


stop denying your identity man. we don tey for hia.

I've heard you. Mr Chris dozzybaba. grin

Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by Alfranco(m): 12:07pm On Oct 12, 2015
PenSniper:
If the claim of this writer to being an elder is true, then one can safely assume there are no elders worth the appelation where he comes from.

Glossing over the truth and dodging the real issue won't help you and your rampaging animals in the SW.

It takes a mental case to pretend not to know the infamous reputation of fulani herdsmen all over nigeria.

Well, you may call our leaders names to suit your ego but you and your ilks would do well to take FFK's words and the warnings by YCE serious otherwise you have another thing coming.

The Yoruba may be accommodating, hospitable and tolerant but there is a limit to provocations we can take.
The silent agility of a tiger does not signify cowardice but tact occasioned by civilization.
All I see in the write up are sentiments and justification of an archaic herding system without proffering solutions to the aggrieved 'old men'. As an elite, I wonder if the writer will be pleased to have as a son a 'Herdsman from Hell' and be proud or a cattle ranch owner with modern animal husbandry. The Yoruba has no problem cohabiting with anyone as long as he wants to subsist and let others live and vice versa in their domain.

1 Like

Re: On Sending The Nomads Packing By Mahmud Jega Daily Trust by PenSniper: 5:31pm On Oct 12, 2015
Alfranco:

All I see in the write up are sentiments and justification of an archaic herding system without proffering solutions to the aggrieved 'old men'. As an elite, I wonder if the writer will be pleased to have as a son a 'Herdsman from Hell' and be proud or a cattle ranch owner with modern animal husbandry. The Yoruba has no problem cohabiting with anyone as long as he wants to subsist and let
others live and vice versa in their domain.


Thats it.

1 Like

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