The Senate Ad hoc Committee on Security Infrastructure yesterday
expressed shock that President Muhammadu Buhari, his deputy, Yemi
Osinbajo, the National Security Adviser, Babagana Monguno, and the
Inspector General of Police, Ibrahim Idris, all ignored several warnings
of the planned attack on Logo and Guma local councils of Benue state.
Governor
Samuel Ortom of Benue State, who disclosed efforts to inform the
Federal Government of these warnings while meeting with the committee
that is investigating the breakdown of security infrastructure in the
country, also blamed security agencies for the unabated massacre
committed in the state by Fulani herdsmen since 2008.
In the
report of the committee’s visit to the state, which was made available
to journalists in Abuja,
Ortom stated that upon getting information on
the planned siege by the Fulani herdsmen he immediately wrote a letter
to the Vice President, Yemi Osinbajo, who was acting president, while
Buhari was away for medical treatment abroad.
According to
him, all attempts to get the vice president’s attention through the
letter failed, as he got no reply whatsoever from him.
Ortom
added that Buhari upon his return to the country, was also written to
many times, but no reply was also received from him on the issue.
The
governor further disclosed that additional efforts were made by the
state government to draw the attention of the National Security Adviser,
Babagana Monguno, through a separate letter, but that also yielded no
response.
In his submission to the committee led by the Senate
Majority Leader, Senator Ahmad Lawan, the governor said: “We wrote to
the Vice President on the planned attack on parts of Benue by Fulani
herdsmen, because the word was everywhere on the street, but he refused
to reply.
“When there was no response, and upon the return of Mr.
President, I personally went and intimated him, and also wrote. The
documents are here, I will hand them over to you. I wrote to him on the
planned attack by Fulani herdsmen because these threats were on the
streets,” Ortom stated.
He added that on October 7, 2017, “I
wrote to the Inspector General of Police, I told him of a planned attack
on our people. When there was no response, on October 27, 2017, I
reminded him that these people are planning to attack us, and that we
are law-abiding people; we have disarmed our youths, and we are looking
onto security agencies. And the way to do it is to arrest those people,
who were inciting the herdsmen to combat us, and we knew they were going
to come.
“These people were all over the place; on television,
in the papers doing various press conferences, and they eventually took
us to court. But we felt that it was a crime for anyone to incite people
against us for the purpose of killing or causing harm and destruction.
So
we expected them (security agencies) to act, but there was no action… I
also wrote to the Director General of the Department of State Security
(DSS). And when there was no action, I followed it up with a reminder on
October 27, 2017… Of course the National Security Adviser invited us
for a meeting twice, but the meetings were put off,” the state’s chief
executive stated.
Ortom, who regretted the way and manner
that his government’s complaints were handled added, “If I had wanted to
buy guns, I would not have waited. But if I bought guns and gave to
those people, would my people have been killed in the manner they were
killed? I disarmed the people and did not buy a single gun, I’m a
Christian, if I bought one I would say yes.”
On allegations that
Plateau Governor, Solomon Lalong, warned him against introducing the
anti-grazing law in Benue State, he said: “… How can you warn me? Am I
the governor of Plateau State, or am I his member of staff? Do I work
for him? I’m Governor of Benue State, and my responsibility is to do
what my people want. That is what democracy is all about. So, when you
castigate people about because you were induced by someone to make those
kinds of statements, then it’s unfortunate.
“Remember, this is
the same man, a double-standard person, who told me when I visited Jos
three weeks ago that he is under pressure by his people to put in place
the same law. He told me this, but he never warned me anywhere. He’s
just trying to use that to blackmail me. What crime have I committed?”
Ortom
continued: “Is this how we want to continue as a country? Where some
people are given privileges to be lawless?” he questioned.
Earlier,
the chairman of the committee, Lawan said the committee was put in
place to ensure a review of the country’s security infrastructure.
According
to him, the leadership of the upper chamber felt “this was necessary
due to the current rise of insecurity in Nigeria,” adding that “the way
our security apparatus is arranged, citizens are not properly and
effectively protected.”
Senator Lawan, who conveyed the Senate’s
condolences to the government and people of Benue State, however,
assured that the Senate would partner stakeholders and all security
agencies to ensure a lasting solution to the problem of insecurity
around parts of the country.
He also called on leaders to provide an enabling environment for citizens to be protected and go about their lawful activities.
Blaming
the spate of killings around the country on the failure of security
agencies, Lawan said, “I think something is amiss. It is either they
have deficiencies or they are not cooperating among themselves. It is
our wish that these killings should be the last to happen in our
country. We will cooperate and work with the executive, but we believe
the state and federal governments must continue to work together on
this. Those who perpetrated this crimes must be apprehended and
prosecuted,” he added.
Members of the committee, who visited the
state to investigate the recent killings include Senators Abu Ibrahim,
Sam Egwu, Abba Kyari, Barnabas Gemade, Biodun Olujimi, Joshua Lidani and
Emmanuel Paulker.
Meanwhile, the Christian Association of
Nigeria (CAN) Benue State Chapter, has insisted that the recent killings
were a deliberately planned jihad and not agitations for grazing as
claimed by sections and enemies of the state.
The state chairman
of the body, Rev. Akpen Leva, while fielding questions from journalists
in Makurdi, said the church, was firmly behind the governor, in full
support of ranching, stressing that herders that want to remain in the
state should embrace ranching as the people would no longer tolerate
animals and crops coexisting on a piece of land.
He added that they would remain firm until the herdsmen kill everybody in the state before they can take over Benue land.
The
CAN chairman, who expressed displeasure over President Muhammadu
Buhari’s inability to visit Benue State called on him to, without
further delay, visit the state himself to redeem his image.
The
National Conscience Party (NCP) has also condemned Buhari’s attitude
towards the rising level of insecurity in the country saying his failure
to rise up to his responsibility is suggestive of his conspiracy with
his Fulani kinsmen.
The National chairman of the party, Tanko
Yunusa, in a statement also insisted that the president must overhaul
his security apparatus, which he noted was biased.
He further warned the president against re-contesting saying his insistence to do so would spell doom for the nation.
Source: Guardian.ng
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