Jos, 12 March, 2024 / 9:00 pm (ACI Africa).
A Catholic-inspired group of researchers, criminologists and human rights activists in Nigeria is concerned that a section of Nigerian authorities is planning to expand activities of jihadists in some parts of the West African country under the guise of state ranching projects.
In select farming communities in the West African nation, local leaders are being coerced into seceding parcels of land for ranching projects, a move which International Society for Civil Liberties and Rule of Law (Intersociety) says veils plans to resettle Fulani herders.
In a report shared with ACI Africa, Intersociety vows to resist any plans by Governors of Nigeria’s Enugu, Anambra, Abia, Imo and Ebonyi States to resettle Fulani herdsmen, who have been blamed for jihad-inspired atrocities against Christians in various parts of Africa’s most populous nation.
According to the Monday, March 11 statement signed by Emeka Umeagbalasi, Intersociety Board Chair and member of the Catholic Diocese of Onitsha, land that is now targeted by the Nigerian government for the supposed ranching projects, is “too tiny to grab for Fulani.”
Authorities in Nigeria have announced plans to create 119 ranches across various parts of the country, particularly in the South-East region “to quell the country’s herder-farmer conflict.” The Nigerian government launched the 10-year National Livestock Transformation Plan in 2019.