Fulani herdsmen have again attacked the farm of the former Secretary to the Federal Government, Olu Falae in Akure, barely two weeks after he was released from captivity of the herdsmen who had kept him for four days.
The herdsmen reportedly moved in their cattle into the farm situated at Ilado on the outskirts of the state capital at about 2am on Monday and destroyed a one-kilometre stretch of maize plantation.
Manager of the farm, Bruno Akhigbodemen, who conducted journalists round the farmland on Wednesday, said the herdsmen ran away before help could come after the workers they met in the farm had raised the alarm.
Akhigbodemen said, “The destruction visited on the farm is devastating. They invaded the farm and made their cows to eat and destroy our maize that covers over one kilometre.
“They came around 2am; one of the workers raised the alarm but before help could come they had destroyed the farm and fled. We quickly informed Baba (Falae) who immediately reported to the police.”
The farm manager said some detectives were thereafter drafted to the farm, but the spokesman for the state police command, Femi Joseph, said that he had not been briefed on the incident.
Falae’s Personal Assistant, Capt Moshood Raji, who also confirmed the attack, said, “Baba can’t be reached on telephone now because we just returned from the farm now and he is taking his rest.”
Raji also said that the elder statesman had reported the case to the State Commissioner of Police, Mike Ogbodu, and that “he (CP) had directed the State CID to move in.”
“We searched the people who were there yesterday but we could not arrest anybody. But the villagers told us that they saw them moving out of the farm on Monday morning. They said they were moving towards Owo area,” he added.
Curiously, the CP denied knowledge of the attack when contacted by on Wednesday. “I am not aware that any herdsmen attacked Chief Falae’s farm again, I’am not aware,” he said.
Meanwhile, the latest attack has attracted the anger of the pan-Yoruba group, Aferenife, which said further attacks would not be tolerated.
The Ondo State government also condemned the attack, which it described as “despicable.”
Afenifere leader, Ayo Adebanjo, said if nothing was done, the Fulani herdsmen could become too powerful and start oppressing the Yoruba just as they were doing to other ethnic groups in Benue, Plateau and Nasarawa states.
He said, “It is unfortunate that up till now, neither President Muhammadu Buhari nor the Federal Government has made a statement on the issue. We cannot sit down and continue to fold our arms. We cannot continue to allow these Fulani herdsmen to destroy our crops, kill our people and rape our women in the name of one Nigeria.
“Do they expect us to fold our arms and let this continue? This is what they have been doing all over the country. This never happened during the First Republic or the Second Republic.”
Adebanjo said the issue was one of the issues discussed at the National Conference and therefore, blamed the government for failing to find a solution to the crisis.
“Can’t the government confine them to grazing fields? Must we be compelled to continue to accommodate visitors that continue to kill and attack their hosts? We cannot continue to live together at the expense of our lives and property.”
The spokesperson for the Afenifere, Yinka Odumakin, said all Yoruba leaders under the aegis of the Oodua Foundation, would meet in Ibadan on Thursday (today) to take a stand on the matter.
He said the Yoruba had become tired of the frequent attacks and could no longer condone the situation.
He said, “All Yoruba groups will converge on Ibadan to discuss this matter. We have had enough. The Fulani have declared war on us by returning to Chief Falae’s farm. There will be an appropriate response from the meeting. We have had enough and Nigerians must address this issue once and for all.”
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