Tuesday, 25 February 2020 03:34

Delta community prohibits beef consumption over herders’ attacks

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A community in Delta State, South-South Nigeria, has placed a ban on beef to protest attacks on their people by herders.

The people of Uwheru in Ughelli North, Delta State, have been forbidden from eating or selling cow meat because of repeated attacks by herdsmen against farmers and residents of the kingdom.

The ban was imposed on Saturday at a meeting of Uwheru community. The meeting was attended by prominent indigenes of the area, including Commissioner for Higher Education in the state, Mr Patrick Muoboghare.

It quoted an unnamed source as saying, “By this ban, nobody can bring cow meat to any of the communities that make up Uwheru Kingdom for any function, be it burial or any other celebration.

“You can’t kill our people and expect us to be eating cow meat when our people can’t go to farm. The ban takes effect immediately.”

The Punch reported that at least 86 farmers in Uwheru have been killed in herdsmen related attacks in the past 12 years.

Fourteen people were feared killed recently when some herdsmen invaded Uwheru, prompting the community leaders to accuse Nigerian Army of complicity in the deadly attack.

The latest killings “began when herdsmen arrived the community with a large number of cows and destroyed farms.

“The youth mobilised and warded them off their farms, but the herdsmen regrouped, armed themselves and returned to the community and killed four persons at separate locations.”

Commissioner of Police in Delta state, Mr Hafiz Inuwa, later admitted that the police had received six exhumed bodies of farmers killed in Uwheru by suspected herdsmen.

Delta State governor, Mr Ifeanyi Okowa, condemned the attack and called on the police and military authorities to urgently restore peace in the affected communities.

Mr Okowa appealed to the Uwheru people to remain calm and show restraint.

Most of the beef consumed in Nigeria are from nomadic Fulani herdsmen. Nigeria is plagued by incessant deadly clashes between herders and farmers, which has spread from the country’s middle-belt region down to the south.

2019 Global Terrorism Index (GTI) report said herders killed more Nigerians in 2018, compared to the number of deaths caused by Boko Haram in the country.

The GTI report ranked Nigeria, for the fifth consecutive time, since 2015, as the third country with the worst impact from terrorism, globally.

 

PT


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