VIDEO: Soldiers escort Fulani herdsmen as they flout open grazing in South West zone
Some Nigerian soldiers have escorted Fulani herdsmen with their cows in Ijebu Ode, Ogun State as they flout open grazing despite the recent condemnation by southern governors
In a viral video, some soldiers are seen in the video leading cows along Ijebu Ode Road, in Ogun State.
A bystander who captured it on his phone could be heard expressing his disappointment at the situation which he described as an ’embarrassment to Nigerian citizens.’
This is happening amid worsening insecurity that has seen thousands of Nigerians killed, wounded or displaced by terrorists or bandits in Northern Nigeria or kidnappers or suspected Fulani herders in Southern Nigeria.
“To my greatest surprise, I am in Ijebu Ode at the moment and I can see where soldiers are now leading the ‘troupe of Maluu’ (herd of cattle). Look at their vehicles, they are the ones leading Maluu (cattle) of (Muhammadu) Buhari’s Moto, Buhari’s properties. Look at the whole military men controlling Maluu.
“It is a big shock to me that (Nigerian) Army now has turned to be cattle rearers in Nigeria. Look at their Hilux following Maluu, courtesy of the President of Nigeria. It’s a big shock to me and an embarrassment to Nigerian citizens.
“Thank you God for making us alive to see this, Amen,” he added.
Newsflash Nigeria had earlier that President Buhari while fielding questions in an interview with Arise Television on Thursday, said: “What I did was ask him (Attorney-General of the Federation, Mr. Abubakar Malami) to go and dig the gazette of the first republic when people were obeying laws.
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“There were cattle routes and grazing areas. Cattle routes were for when they (herders) are moving upcountry, north to south or east to west, they had to go through there.”
But speaking with The PUNCH, Ajibola Basiru, spokesman for the Senate, said the gazette that Buhari was referring to was a product of a decree promulgated in northern Nigeria in the 1960s, adding that the Land Use Act recognised by the constitution has rendered it ineffective.
“Nigerians should be concerned over whether the Nigerian president is actually getting the correct legal advice from his attorney-general and the legal team,” the senator said.
“As far as I am concerned, as a legal practitioner, there is nothing like grazing routes or grazing reserve law, in the laws of the Federation of Nigeria. There is nothing like that.
“There is no federal legislation that the president can implement over such matter. The executive powers of the president merely rely on the powers of the National Assembly to make laws, when you look at Section 5 of the constitution.
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“Any area where the National Assembly cannot make laws, and there is no express grants of powers to the president under the constitution, a purported exercise of power by the president in that regard will be null and void because it is inconsistent with the constitution by section 1(3) of the 1999 constitution.
“I am aware that there is a northern Nigerian law on reserve and grazing routes which was promulgated by a 1964 decree by the premier of the defunct Northern Nigeria region.”
The legislator said there is no way a decree for Northern Nigeria will be implemented as federal law.
“It is not a federal law unless the legal adviser to Mr. President is equating a northern Nigeria law, which is not applicable in the west, mid-west, and eastern region or in anywhere in the southern part of Nigeria, to be a federal or a Nigerian law,” he said.
“The president does not have the power to implement that law because it is not federal law. He can only implement federal legislation made by the National Assembly or deemed to have been made by the National Assembly.
“The grazing routes law is not a National Assembly law, so there is nothing for the president to implement. It is regrettable that the president has not been properly advised by his attorney-general and the legal team.”