By PETER DURU, MAKURDI
This is certainly not the best of times for Benue farmers in Agatu,
Guma, Gwer west and Makurdi local government areas of the state given
the sustained and unrestricted attacks on communities in these areas by
Fulani herdsmen.
As at last count in the past 12 weeks no fewer than 400 persons,
including women and children, have been slaughtered in bizarre manner by
the invading herdsmen and their colluding mercenaries who also left
over 42 communities sacked and desolate.
Despite the outrage that had greeted the mayhem and wanton
destruction of lives and property, the invaders have persistently
sustained the reign of terror with impunity in the four local government
areas of the state. The recurring orgy of violence came to a shocking
climax last weekend when no fewer than 47 mourners were gunned down in
one fell swoop by suspected herdsmen in Agatu Local Government Area of
the state while carrying out the burial rites of two police officers
killed last Tuesday in Nasarawa State.
Vanguard Metro, VM, was told by a reliable source in Agatu that:
“The burial rites of the two slain police men were going on at
Okpachanyi village that Sunday when the armed herdsmen stormed the scene
and opened fire on the mourners, killing and maiming the people while
many escaped with bullet wounds”.
Lamenting the recurrent attacks on Benue communities by herdsmen,
Governor Gabriel Suswam who addressed newsmen on the issue hinted that
security had been beefed up round the bordering communities between
Benue and Nasarawa states in order to stem the attacks.
The Governor who had summoned a security council meeting in the wake
of the bloodbath said: “Soldiers and Police officers have been deployed
in all the affected communities and villages in order to stem the
repeated attack which is taking a dangerous dimension.”
Speaking on the crisis, Benue State Deputy, Chief Steven Lawani, who
led a state government fact-finding team to the crisis areas, said the
level of the devastation was totally outrageous and condemnable.
“What we saw was beyond imagination: villages and communities were
sacked, women and children have been rendered homeless because their
homes were burnt and destroyed. It is sad that today, human life seemed
not to be appreciate anymore unlike what was obtainable in the past when
the death of an individual elicits a lot of lamentations among the
people; it is just unfortunate,” Lawani added.
On measures taken by the state government to ameliorate the suffering
of the displaced, he said: “Already, government has directed the State
Emergency Management Agency to move into the three camps where the
people are taking refuge in Apa Local Government Area and provide them
essential items to assist them carry on with their lives pending the
return to their homes”.
Lawani, who also disclosed that some of the displaced persons were
taking refuge in neighboring Kogi State, said he had opened discussions
with his counterpart in that state in order to guarantee their comfort,
adding that the state government was doing everything possible to ensure
that the displaced persons returned to their homes.
He said the state government had already beefed up security in the
affected communities with the deployment of soldiers from the 72
battalion in Makurdi to complement the existing security structure on
ground in the communities.
In his reaction, a native of one of the affected communities and
Benue State Commission for Works and Transport, Mr. John Ngbede, who was
on the government’s fact-finding team that visited the effected
communities, disclosed that over ten thousand persons were rendered
homeless with over 18 villages sacked by the marauding herdsmen.
Ngbede said the displaced persons were currently camped at Ugbokpo, Ojantele and Odugbenhun in neighboring Apa LGA.
According to him: “What we saw was pathetic and heart-rendering.
Over ten thousand of the displaced persons who are mostly women and
children are currently taking shelter in the three villages without any
sources of livelihood”.
The Commissioner pleaded with the Federal Government to come to the
aid of the affected persons, lamenting that the level of devastation in
the affected communities was above the scope of the state government.
According to him: “Despite the magnitude of the devastation, the
invaders promised to come back after having sacked over 18 villages and
communities; that is the more reason why we are asking the Federal
Government to boost security around our bordering communities with
Nasarawa State from where the herdsmen invade our villages,” Ngbede
said.
In his reaction, the Police Public Relations Officer, PPRO, in the
state, Deputy Superintendent of Police Daniel Ezeala, said his office
was yet to get the full details of the crisis.
* Source the Vanguard Newspaper.

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