By Valentine Amanze
The Ekiti State Governor, Ayodele Fayose, has called on the military to direct its “Operations Python Dance and Crocodile Smile” to other
areas in Nigeria, especially the North Central states of Benue,
Plateau as well as North East states of Taraba and Adamawa where Fulani herdsmen are killing Nigerians and destroying farmlands worth
several billions of naira.
The governor, who described the reported threat by Miyeitti Allah Kautal Hore, a splinter group of Miyeitti Allah Cattle Breeders
Association, over the Benue State Anti-Open Grazing Law as reckless and open threat against the sovereignty of Nigeria, added that the silence of the President Muhammadu Buhari-led government over the Fulani herdsmen menace was a sign of complicity on the part of the
federal government.
In a statement in Ado Ekiti on Monday by his Special Assistant on Public Communications and New Media, Lere Olayinka, the governor said, “If the Federal Government does not want to be seen as protecting the Fulani herdsmen, attention of the Army’s python that is dancing in the Southeast and crocodile that is smiling in the Southwest and South South should be focused on the killer herdsmen.”
He said that the alarm raised by Benue State Governor, Samuel Ortom, over an
alleged plan by Miyetti Allah Kautal Hore to launch fresh attacks on
Benue State, should worry lover of peace in Nigeria, adding, “The moment a state governor begins to raise alarm as done by Governor Ortom, those playing ostrich to the Fulani herdsmen menace should know that they can no longer pretend that all is well.”
Accusing the federal government of always looking the other way
whenever Fulani herdsmen attack and kill Nigerians, Governor Fayose
Said, “On June 17, 2007, when clash between herdsmen and local farmers
in the Mambila area of Taraba State resulted in casualty from both sides – herdsmen and local farmers – soldiers were promptly deployed.
“However, the same federal government that responded swiftly when local farmers in Taraba State confronted the Fulani herdsmen, leading to casualties from both sides, never responded in such a swift manner to previous attacks carried out by the Fulani, even when villages of
the locals in the state were sacked.
“Within just 48 hours of the clash between the Fulani herdsmen and the local farmers in Mambila Plateau, the Taraba State police commissioner
moved in, army battalions moved in and a military surveillance
helicopter was dispatched. This did not happen when herdsmen were committing genocide against the villagers in Agatu in Benue State, Southern Kaduna, Kogi, Ekiti, and Delta states.
“Are we now to believe that it is only when Nigerians choose to defend
themselves against the killer herdsmen that the federal government will act swiftly?
“Like I have maintained, pastoralists do not have rights to destroy other people’s farmlands, invade homes and rape people’s wives and daughters? Rather, people who are into cattle farming should be able
to provide feeds for their animals and the federal government must not be seen as protecting the interests of the herdsmen against those of
other Nigerians.”




