Photo: Aminu Abubakar/IRIN, Displaced Fulani families take shelter in a school in Kaduna's Birnin Gwari district
Source: IRIN
KANO, 19 June 2013 (IRIN) - Incessant deadly attacks on Fulani
settlements and villages in northern Nigeria by armed bandits - made up
partly of disgruntled Fulani who themselves have lost cattle - are
threatening herds and upping tensions in northern Nigeria.
Gangs of heavily armed bandits prowl the vast Dajin Rugu forest which
spans several hundred square kilometres across Zamfara, Katsina and
Kaduna states and Niger State in central Nigeria, according to Fulani
leaders.
In February 2012 alone, over 23,000 Fulani herders poured into Cameroon
from Nigeria's northeastern state of Taraba, following deadly clashes
with farming communities, according to the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders
Association of Nigeria (MACBAN), an umbrella association of Fulani
herders. The gangs steal herds, loot and burn homes, and assault women
in the attacks, according to Fulani leaders.
Many of the armed bandits are Fulanis who have joined gangs involved in
cross-border armed robbery and cattle-rustling in Nigeria, Niger, Chad,
Cameroon, Senegal and Mali.
"Twenty years of conflict has bred criminals among the Fulani who have
lost their cattle. All they know is herding, and without cattle, life is
devoid of meaning," said Saleh Bayeri, national secretary of MACBAN.
"So they turn to highway robbery and raiding the herds of their kinsmen
whom they begrudge for not coming to their aid in their predicament."
"Ugly trend"
Thousands of herders in northern Nigeria's Kaduna State have fled their
homes since 8 June 2013 following raids by cattle rustlers over May and
June that killed at least 16 people, according to officials and local
vigilantes. On 13 June armed bandits launched a pre-dawn raid on
Kwasa-Kwasa village in Birnin Gwari District of Kaduna State, killing
five people, including two soldiers and three local vigilantes guarding
the village against possible attacks, Adamu Sarkin-Noma, head of a
vigilante group in the village, told IRIN.
"This ugly trend is compounding the dilemma of the Fulani herders who
are caught in a vicious cycle of conflict, with farmers over-grazing
land that has forced thousands of nomads to flee into neighbouring
Cameroon, along with their cattle," Bayeri said.
The level of violence - both between these gangs and between Fulani
nomads and farmers - has been stepped up over recent years as guns
proliferate.
Some of the gangs have sponsors who supply them with arms in return for a
share of the spoils, Ali Kwara, a local hunter in northern Nigeria
involved in combating armed robbery and cattle rustling, told IRIN.
Weapons are readily available on the black market in northern Nigeria.
Boko Haram (BH) leader Abubakar Shekau has, in several video messages,
made reference to the ethno-religious killings in Plateau State,
including the attacks on Fulani nomads, and has threatened to avenge the
killings of Muslims in the region. Although BH has carried out bombings
on churches and some Christian neighbourhoods in Jos (Plateau's
capital), none was linked to the nomads-farmers conflict.
However, BH claimed rersponsibility for the 8 July 2012 attack on a
funeral of some 50 Christians killed in reprisal attacks by suspected
Fulani nomads the day before in Gashis District, Plateau State. Many
people, including the Nigerian government dismissed BH claims as cheap
propaganda.
Vigilante gangs
Villagers in the affected areas, particularly Zamfara and Kaduna states,
have formed vigilante gangs to combat the bandits. Kwara runs a
vigilante outfit that hunts down bandits across the north alongside the
police. "Looking at the sophisticated guns the Fulani bandits are using
in their operations it is clear they have sponsors and some of them are
among the elite in society, including MACBAN," he told IRIN.
According to Kwara, much of the cattle rustling is controlled and funded
by a cartel including chiefs, politicians and lawyers who can provide
legal aid to the bandits in court when arrested.
Bayeri agrees with Kwara. "It is a fact that in some areas Fulani
leaders are complicit. This is why we want to be involved in the
government effort at combating this menace by exposing them."
Kwara also accused police of supplying weapons to the bandits in return
for money. "On many occasions armed robbers we arrested mentioned the
names of their arms suppliers, including policemen who we reported to
the police authorities."
But some of the vigilante groups have also been accused of carrying out
extra-judicial killings of suspected bandits, which in turn, lead to
reprisal killings.
Call for joint military, police unit
More coordinated efforts by the local authorities and security forces is
needed to try to temper the violence, said Kaduna State information
commissioner Saidu Adamu. "A military battalion is grossly inadequate to
patrol the vast forest. We are in touch with Zamfara, Katsina and Niger
state governments to forge a common front in dealing with this security
threat," he told IRIN.
Shehu Hammayidi, a community leader from Unguwar Tsamiya, a village in
Faskari District, Katsina State, urged the Nigerian government to
establish a special joint military and police unit on cattle rustling as
an effective approach to quelling the violence.
But any efforts that do not involve MACBAN will not work, warned Bayeri,
saying that only it can mobilize community surveillance to track
bandits on the scale needed.
"These criminals are a transnational syndicate of renegade Fulani nomads
who know the forest very well, and no amount of military deployment can
check their activities without the involvement of MACBAN," he said.
MACBAN knows who some of the criminals are and is willing to expose
them, he said, but has been rebuffed by local authorities whom, he says,
mistakenly blame all of MACBAN for being complicit in the violence.