THISDAY

Senate Okays Bill to Ban Open Grazing, Some Northern Senators Kick

Passes bill to increase judicial office holders’ salaries Proposed gold reserves law scales second reading

- Sunday Aborisade

The Senate yesterday passed for second reading a bill which seeks to ban open grazing and establish a national agency for the regulation and management of ranches in Nigeria.

The document was titled: “A Bill to Establish a National Animal Husbandry and Ranches Commission for the Regulation, Management, Preservati­on and Control of Ranches Throughout Nigeria; and for Connected Purposes, 2024.”

It was sponsored by Senator Titus Zam, an All Progressiv­es Congress (APC) member representi­ng Benue North-West Senatorial District in the National Assembly.

Zam in his lead debate noted the increasing wave of violent conflicts that erupt from pastoralis­ts and farmers interactio­n in Nigeria.

He said such conflicts had assumed a war-like dimension “with far reaching negative impact on the people and country as a whole.”

He said the Senate cannot afford to look on while the country burns into ashes as a result of violent clashes between sedentary farmers and nomadic herders.

The Senator said: "As stakeholde­rs in the Nigeria project and elected representa­tives of the people, doing so would amount to abdication of our statutory and leadership responsibi­lities.”

He said the menace of farmers and herders crises could easily be cured through a legislativ­e therapy banning open grazing in Nigeria.

Zam lamented that the Nigerian State had continued to pay lipsservic­e to the challenge of farmers and herders altercatio­n without addressing it in concrete terms in line with internatio­nal best practices of animal husbandry.

He said, “Every effort (was) is laced with manoeuvres that speak to our ethnic and political biases or sentiments, thus resisted by the people.

“This 10th Senate has a date with history. We must rise in one accord to sort out this problem of herders-farmers violent conflicts that would, if allowed to linger longer, consume even more lives and properties than the civil war of 1967-1970.

“Therefore, now is the time to put a permanent stop to the endless circle of attacks and counter attacks by our people and their external collaborat­ors.

“Now is the time to adopt internatio­nal best practices in animal husbandry. Now is the time to bring about a law to stop open grazing. It is old fashioned, hazardous, burdensome and must be discarded.”

He said the bill proposes ranching as the only viable alternativ­e for cattle breeding in Nigeria and advocates for the urgent need to transit from traditiona­l livestock keeping method to the modern methods which are safer and healthier to both the herds and the herders.

He said the bill further proposes that ranches would be establishe­d in the pastoralis­ts state of origin without forcing it upon other states or communitie­s that do not have pastoralis­ts as citizens.

He said interested parties in livestock business must seek and obtain approvals of their host communitie­s to establish ranches for the purpose of peaceful co-existence.

Senators Eyinnaya Abaribe, Danjuma Goje, Senator Garba Musa Maidoki, Senator Barau Jibrin, Senator Adamu Aliero and Kawu Sumaila supported the Bill.

They however objected to a clause in the lead debate which said pastoralis­ts should establish ranches in their state of origin.

Abaribe said he was of the view that the bill could be a solution to the clashes between farmers and herders if properly managed.

He recommende­d the amendment of the constituti­on and the Land Use Act to simplify the management of lands within the respective states.

Abaribe noted that while some herders were peaceful and engaged in legitimate animal business, there were also the criminal elements sponsored to destabilis­e communitie­s.

“Farmers are under threat, and what that has led to is the food crisis that we face in Nigeria today”, he added.

Making his contributi­on, Senator Sunday Karimi (Kogi-West), suggested that the best way to go was for every state to establish ranches.

He said, “I appreciate my colleague for introducin­g this bill.

This is a national problem, and we all know this. We can't just sit and do nothing as responsibl­e parliament­arians.

Before now, the North had cattle routes, which have been taken over by property owners. Now cattles roam the whole country. All states must be ready to establish cattle ranches,” he said

A former Governor of Gombe State, Senator Mohammed Goje, drove the north’s position further when he observed that the bill was discrimina­tory by proposing to restrict the herders to a particular geographic­al location.

“There are many angles to this issue of farmers and herders. We have to tackle the problem holistical­ly. These Fulanis are Nigerians,“he maintained.

The same view was held by the Chairman, Senate Committee on Sports, Senator Suleiman Abdulrahma­n-Kawu, who said the bill would breach the constituti­onal rights of the herders.

He said, “The bill is totally against the constituti­on of Nigeria. The bill will even compound the problem of the herders and the farmers. You can't propose a law to attend to a particular group or section of the country only. This bill is not holistic and we will fight it till the end,” Kawu stated.

However, the President of the Senate, Sen. Godswill Akpabio, while rounding off the debate, urged all senators to be calm by letting the bill go for a public hearing.

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