The Amalgamated Union of Foodstuff and Cattle Dealers of Nigeria has commenced an indefinite strike, following the failure of the government to address the alleged killings of its members in parts of the country.
The union is also stopping its members from moving cattle
and foodstuffs to the southern part of the country.
A number of trailers transporting cows, tomatoes, onions, pepper, grains and other commodities were prevented from leaving a border town in Niger State to the southern part of the country on Friday.
As seen in reports that a video of a long line of trailers stopped by the union had circulated on social media.
The trucks, reportedly conveying agricultural goods owned
by Fulani cattle merchants, were reportedly stopped from entering the Jebba
town, Kwara State border town with Niger State on their way to the South-West
on Thursday.
One of our correspondents gathered that the stoppage might
not be unconnected with the threat of the national body of Miyetti Allah Cattle
Breeders Association of Nigeria to stop its members from supplying and selling
cattle to the South if the alleged eviction of Fulani herdsmen was effected by
some governors.
It was learnt that in compliance with the threat,
truckloads of cattle and foodstuffs, including tomatoes, pepper, onions and
beans, were prevented from entering Kwara State at the Jebba border with Niger
State on Thursday.
Speaking with one of our correspondents on the development
on Friday, the Financial Secretary of the AUFCDN, Kabiru Salisu, said a task
force set up by the union was enforcing the stArike in Niger State and other
areas.
He said the government had not reached out to the union on
its demands, hence the strike which he said was indefinite.
Salisu said, “There is a task force that we set up to
enforce the directive by the union that there would be no transportation of
cattle and foodstuffs to the South with effect from Thursday. So, the union set
up the task force to prevent sabotage.
“In the
communiqué we issued, we said the strike would start yesterday (Thursday), and
so, we have started the strike. Now, there is no loading of commodities to the
South, but those who attempted to violate the directive were stopped in Niger
State.”
Asked
to react to a statement by the Defence Headquarters that it prevented “some
unscrupulous elements” from stopping agricultural products being taken to the
southern part of the country, Salisu said the issue did not concern the
military.
“What is
the military’s business with our issue? We have sent our directive and we have
no issue with them. What is their business with us? Even if we have a problem,
it is the police we would invite and not the military.”
“Those
vehicles stopped in Niger State are still there; they won’t be allowed to move
to the South,” he vowed.
The
union’s President, Muhammad Tahir, had complained during a press briefing last
Sunday that foodstuff and cattle dealers had continued to suffer intimidation,
humiliation and destruction of their goods.
He
said the union complained about the situation to the Federal Government,
security services and the National Assembly without results, stating that it
would embark on a strike if nothing was done to stop the killing of its
members.
Tahir
demanded N450bn compensation from the government for the losses suffered by the
union members and the dismantling of illegal roadblocks on the highways.
Also,
confirming the stoppage of cattle and foodstuffs to the South on Friday, the
Coordinator of Miyetti Allah in Kwara State, Aliyu Mohammed, said the
development was true.
Mohammed
also claimed that his members were being killed.
“We are
not doing anything wrong and yet our people in the forests are being killed for
no just cause,” he said.
However,
the spokesperson for the state police command, Ajayi Okasanmi, said the command
was not aware of such developments in the state.
Meanwhile,
leaders of Jebba community in the Moro Local Government Area of Kwara State
have said they will carry out an eviction of all unregistered herdsmen in the
community on Sunday.
Speaking
with journalists in Ilorin on Friday, the son of the Oba of Jebba, Prince
Ibrahim Adebara, said the eviction directive would be carried out on some
herdsmen who had been trying to settle in the area after the ultimatum given to
them had lapsed.
He
said, “As a result of the activities of bandits, insurgents and kidnappers
being chased from some neighbouring states, the community decided, with the
help of some of the identified and registered herdsmen, to ask the new ones to
leave.
“Even
those who had been living with us said they couldn’t vouch for the new
settlers. So, they are being asked to leave to maintain existing peace. They
are staying at Mofara village in Jebba community here. They will be driven away
on Sunday and they are already aware of that.”
In
a related development, the Niger State Sector Commandant of the Federal Road
Safety Corps, Musa Mohammed, has said the ongoing unrest at the Jebba-Mokwa
road has nothing to do with an ethic war or political affiliations, but a
disagreement between road transport unions.
The
Niger State Police Public Relations Officer, Wasiu Abiodun, he said he was not
aware of the situation.
He
said he would find out and get back to one of our correspondents. But he had
yet to as of press time.
Reacting
to the issue on Friday, the Middle Belt Forum described as illegal the blockage
of food items to the South from the North at a Jebba village in Niger State.
The
President, MBF, Dr Pogu Bitrus, in a statement, said, “For such persons to
block food items being transported to the South from the North is not only
criminal but also intended to throw the entire nation into chaos.
Meanwhile,
the Defence Headquarters said it has restored order along Jebba-Kaduna road
where trucks conveying agricultural products from the North to the southern
part of the country were being prevented and turned back by some elements.
The
acting DHQ spokesman, Brig. Gen. Onyema Nwachukwu, in a statement on
Friday, clarified that following the tension generated by the
incident, joint troops comprising the military and other security agencies were
deployed to clear the Jebba–Kaduna road and have since restored normalcy in the
general area.
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