Soldiers arrest 92 herdsmen in Abuja (photos)

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Just In: Soldiers arrest 92 herdsmen in Abuja (photos)About 92 armed herdsmen on a revenge mission, arrested by men of the Guards Brigade of the Nigerian army in Abuja

– About 92 Fulani herdsmen have been arrested in Abuja
– The herdsmen claim they were on a mission to recover their stolen cows
– Security operatives say the herdsmen were heavily armed as of the time of their

arrest

About 92 armed herdsmen on a revenge mission, arrested by men of the Guards Brigade of the Nigerian army in Abuja
About 92 Fulani Herdsmen have been arrested in Abuja by soldiers of the Guards Brigade of the Nigeria Army.
According to the assistant director, army public relations of the Guards Brigade, Captain Bashir Jajira, 36 of the suspects were arrested by the troops at a military checkpoint between the Federal Capital Territory and Nasarawa state.
The suspected herdsmen were said to have told the soldiers that they were on a mission to recover their stolen cows.
Captain Jajira noted that 56 other herdsmen who were also armed were arrested by the soldiers at a military checkpoint at Dantata, along the Abuja Airport Road.
Herdsmen in Abuja 4
The Punch reports that the troops recovered ‘one pump action gun, 19 cartridge dane guns, 118 cartridge ammo, 28 cutlasses, 3 jack knives, 14 sticks, 7 torch lights, certificate of occupancy, assorted charms and hard drugs.’
Jajira said: “A group of 36 herdsmen in Diana Truck and Toyota Camry car with registration number Abu Kuje 994 FX and Niger SUL 541 XA were intercepted and arrested at 177 Guards Battalion location by Keffi checkpoint.
“During the interrogation by troops at the checkpoint, they claimed to be going to Nasarawa Local Government in Nasarawa state.”
He said that the arrested herdsmen would be handed over to the police for prosecution.
The arrest comes just as President Muhammadu Buhari has ordered the deployment of military to all parts of the country currently witnessing bloody clashes between herdsmen and farmers.
Herdsmen in Abuja 2
The senior special assistant to the president on media and publicity, Garba Shehu, disclosed this while featuring on a breakfast programme of Channels Television, Sunrise Daily, on Monday, April 18.
The programme was monitored by one of our correspondents in Abuja.
Shehu said there was no truth in the claim that Buhari had been largely silent on the issue of the clashes.
He recalled that the President had taken the issue before the National Council of State with a view to getting state governors’ inputs to the solutions.
In the meantime, he said the government was contemplating carving out of grazing reserves for cattle rearers.
Meanwhile, no fewer than 23,000 Internally Displaced Persons in the Agatu Local Government Area of Benue State are battling with the problem of shelter as the rains set in.
The chairman, caretaker committee, Agatu Local Government Area, Mr Joseph Ngbede, stated this on Monday when Governor Samuel Ortom visited Ugbokpo, Ojantele and Ataganyi communities of the Apa Local Government Area, where the camps of the IDPs are located.
The IDPs are Benue indigenes displaced during the clashes involving Fulani herdsmen and Agatu people.
Ngbede said that only the LGEA Primary School at Ayila was standing in the over 20 villages destroyed in Agatu by herdsmen, maintaining that some of the displaced persons insisted on going to their farms to see what was left of their crops.
On the feeding of the displaced persons, the chairman said the items donated by individuals, government and non-governmental organisations as well as emergency management agencies at the state and at federal levels were being distributed to them on a daily basis.
Herdsmen in Abuja
He said those not displaced were also contributing towards the upkeep of the IDPs.
He explained that the three villages of Ocholonya, Abugbe and Odugbeho that were occupied by herdsmen had been secured by soldiers.
Meanwhile, the state’s deputy governor, Benson Abounu, has said that Agatu people have been rescued by soldiers.
In the same vein, Moor council ward in Kwande local government area of Benue state has once again been sacked by marauding Fulani herdsmen.
This is despite efforts by the federal and Benue state governments to end clashes between herdsmen and farmers.
Armed clashes between the Fulani and local farmers dating back to 2013 have left over 100 persons dead, scores sustaining varying degrees of injuries and close to 8,000 displaced.



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