Home Headlines Herdsmen Have Made Our Villages Inaccessible –Taraba Residents

Herdsmen Have Made Our Villages Inaccessible –Taraba Residents

0
62

Some residents of Kona community in Jalingo and Ardo-Kola local government areas of Taraba State on Thursday alleged that they could not access their homes despite deployment of security in their villages.

Some of the residents who spoke to our correspondent including Mr Danlami Kwambo, Musa Notari and Augustina Yatai, said though soldiers had been drafted to some of the communities, the people were still afraid to return home.

Organic Creame

This, they claimed, was because the people were still being killed by suspected Fulani herdsmen.

They alleged that most of the communities in the hinterland were without security personnel and they had been taken over by herdsmen.

“I want to suggest that the government should bring the stakeholders of both herdsmen and our community leaders to a roundtable so that they can have a dialogue on how to end the killings.

“We want to go back to our homes but the herders are grazing on our farms in the remote areas so we are afraid to go back.

“Soldiers have been deployed in Janibanibu which is on the outskirts of Jalingo, but the rest of the villages are still no go areas. My maize and melon farms on over 10 hectares of land have been destroyed by cattle and so it is with other people. I want to call on the government at all levels to end the crisis,” Kwambo said.

The Chief of Kona, Kuru Augustine Njanmeng, had on Wednesday alleged that herdsmen had taken over 17 Kona villages they sacked in May and June.

Njanmeng had while addressing some journalists said herdsmen were comfortably grazing on the farms of the displaced people and killing anyone who attempted to enter the sacked villages.

The monarch called on the government and the international community to intervene in the crisis with a view to bringing the displaced persons back to their ancestral homes.

But the State Police Command through the Police Public Relations Officer, DSP David Misal, said the allegations were untrue as the command had drafted patrol teams to the affected villages.

Misal, who said the police were not aware of the occupation of communities in the area by herdsmen, called on the monarch to submit a formal complaint to the office of the Commissioner of Police if he had any. [PUNCH]

 

Latest News
Kill Terrorists, Bandits Instantly, Defence Minister Urges Security Agencies, Says Insecurity To Become History SoonRethinking How Nigeria Supports SME GrowthFrom Nutrition To National Security: A Governance Lesson In Coordination & OwnershipStanbic IBTC Capital Named Nigeria's Best Investment Bank at 2026 Global Banking and Finance Review AwardsNNPC Seals Six Gas Deals To Boost Industrialisation, Energy SecuritySenate Queries N943m Allowances Paid to North-West Development Commission BoardStanbic IBTC Bank's Economic Forum Charts Nigeria's Path Through A Shifting Global EconomyTHE YEWA AWORI SOCIO-ECONOMIC BLUEPRINTS FOR THE YAYI ERA AND BEYONDEMHF Opens Heritage Event Hall, Unveils Vision For Africa’s Premier Music Heritage CentreNigeria’s Youngest Chartered Accountant, 16-Year-Old Danielle Osasere, Honoured At MFM Prayer CityThe Kick Of A Dying Horse: Rejecting The Retrogressive Agents Of Darkness In YEWA-AWORI LandNigerians Must Embrace Production, Entrepreneurship To Become Great- Emir of DutseTASFUED Holds Formal Investiture Ceremony for Sixth Substantive Vice-ChancellorOlodo Uprising: Carter Efe mirrors our collective disaster“I’m No Fraudster” — Adeyemi Fires Back at Presidency Over PFIPC Controversy