Blessing Joseph lies on
a sofa, her eyes fixed on the butt of a rifle that she says she won’t
hesitate to use if Fulani herdsmen come back to her remote village in
central Nigeria.
The 19-year-old student isn’t the only one. Teenagers and even young
boys carry machetes and daggers in villages in the Agatu area of Benue
state.
“My father told me not to go out without holding a cutlass with which I
can defend myself if attacked,” David Inalegwu, a nine-year-old primary
school pupil, told AFP.
As Blessing watches, youths pass around a jerrycan of local gin,
discussing a spate of attacks in February blamed on heavily armed Fulani
herdsmen from neighbouring Nasarawa state.
Community leader James Ochoche Edoh said more than 20 Agatu villages
were affected near the river Benue that forms the border with Nasarawa.
“Approximately 500 people or more could have been killed,” he claimed,
in an unverified figure repeated by the former leader of Nigeria’s
Senate, David Mark, who represents the district.
“The recent attacks took us by surprise,” said Edoh in the main Agatu
town of Obagaji. “Families have been separated or killed.”
– ‘No just cause’ –
Violence blamed on Fulani herdsmen has given Nigeria’s government
another security headache in addition to Boko Haram Islamists in the
northeast and militants in the oil-producing south.
The worst affected villages in February’s attacks were Okokolo, Adagbo,
Akwu, Aila and Odugbeho. Residents told AFP nearly 50 people were killed
and more than 1,000 properties ransacked or razed.
“The Fulanis killed our kinsmen, burnt or destroyed 327 of our houses in
this village and for no just cause,” said Christopher Onah, the chief
of Okokolo.
Onah picked up spent cartridges from the ground and showed the damage to
his rice and yam barns, a motorcycle and generator. His home was
ransacked, as were the churches, mosque and schools.
“There’s nothing left for us again after the the attack,” said Anyebe
Peter, a farmer in Adagbo, where seven people were killed and 250 houses
were burnt down.
In Akwu, 30 people died and more than 600 houses were destroyed as well
as a medical clinic.
Peter, whose 27-year-old son was shot and is still in hospital, said
locals face food shortages.
Despite the presence of troops, residents said they were still afraid.
“Soldiers told us to leave our homes and gather in one place for better
protection. So, now we sleep in the Catholic church,” said Onah.
– Revenge attack –
According to the Global Terrorism Index 2015, “Fulani militants” killed
1,229 people in 2014, up from 63 the previous year, making them “the
fourth most deadly terrorist group” in the world.
Boko Haram, whose insurgency has left at least 20,000 people dead since
2009, heads the list, followed by the Islamic State group and the
Taliban.
But attacks blamed on Fulani, driven more by a need for increasingly
scarce resources such as land and water rather than radical ideology,
are not a new phenomenon.
There have been frequent clashes between the semi-nomadic people and
sedentary farmers because cattle have strayed onto land planted with
crops.
A total of 847 deaths were recorded in five states, including Benue, in
the religiously mixed “Middle Belt”, where Nigeria’s mainly Muslim north
meets the largely Christian south.
With Fulani Muslim and farmers mostly Christian, religion adds an extra
dimension to longstanding ethnic tensions and mutual suspicion.
Edoh said February’s attacks appeared to be in revenge for the death of a
Fulani leader and the theft of his cattle, which was blamed on the
mainly Christian Agatu.
– Grazing reserves –
Police in Benue say Agatu has now returned to “relative calm”, while
President Muhammadu Buhari, himself an ethnic Fulani, has belatedly
ordered a crackdown on raiders.
“The government will not allow these attacks to continue,” Buhari said
in late April, ordering security forces to “secure all communities under
attack by herdsmen”.
Agriculture Minister Audu Ogbeh said “the ultimate solution to the
Fulani farmers frequent clashes will be to establish grazing reserves
for the herdsmen”.
But the main umbrella body of Fulani herdsmen’s groups has accused Benue
state of opposing the proposal.
The national secretary of the Gan Allah Fulani Development Association,
Saleh Bayeri, did not deny the Agatu killings were to avenge the 2013
deaths of some leaders and their families.
“Fulanis do not forgive such killings. The problem we have now is that
the Fulani are being vilified, provoked, attacked and killed and when
they retaliate they are accused of terrorism,” he said.
Villagers take up arms after Fulani attacks them in Enugu
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