Connect with us

COVER

Those Calling for Restructuring Want to Divide Nigeria – Suswam

Published

on

Share

Senator Gabriel Torwua Suswam (Benue North -East) is the Chairman, Senate Committee on Power. He comes to the Senate with the pedigree of an experienced legislator, having  served for two terms as Member of the House of Representatives(1999-2007). The former Governor of Benue State holds strong views on knotty political and economic issues in the country.

In this interview with  Politics Editor, JUDE OPARA and  Acting Business Editor, MATTHEW DADIYA,  Suswam, who holds a Ph.
D in Law, bared his mind on the state of the nation’s power sector, the performance of the 9th National Assembly and other critical issues in the polity. Excerpts.

Recently you made a public statement on politics in your party.

Can you restate your earlier published statement on what your party intends to do as regards issues of presidency and other major political offices of the party as we march towards another election circle?

Well, since the advent of party politics back in 1998, I have belonged to one party, I have been in PDP since I began politics in 1998 before I got elected in 1999, I have not changed party and I intend not to change party, and so I understand the PDP very well. I have also looked at how things are done in the party and so I wasn’t making a statement that was extraordinary.

The PDP in 2019 zoned the office of the president to the North, unfortunately that ambition of having their president from the North was not realized and so the belief is that in 2023 PDP would want to realize that ambition and so there is nothing extraordinary about it. If any person has any superior argument, he can contradict what I have said, I believe that is the normal thing, you say look, I will have things thing, and I have not gotten it and you want to take it away, that does not make any political sense.

So I think the rightful thing for us in PDP is to keep to that (arrangement). Subsequently, when PDP makes a statement that this is the direction we want to go, people will believe in them, but if we keep oscillating that this is zoned to you, even though you didn’t get it, we take it to another place, I don’t think people will be happy with that kind of arrangement. So the right thing is for the PDP to keep faith with what they did in 2019.

There is this clamour for Nigeria to be fine-tuned, some call it restructuring, some say it is true federalism. If you look at how the country was running before the military introduced this unitary system veiled as federalism, so what is your take on the call for a restructured Nigeria so that the clamour for Abuja will reduce. For instance the Ohaneze Ndigbo took you up, when you talked about the PDP zoning arrangement because they felt power should come to them?

Well, it depends on what you define as restructuring

Whether you call it Restructuring or True Federalism, what those demanding for it are saying in essence is; let us go back to what we were practicing before the military intervention, you can call it regional government or as we have them now, states, and also that some of the things we have on the exclusive list should be put in the concurrent list.

You see, devolution of power is not the same thing with restructuring. It is because of lack of understanding of what restructuring is that is creating this problem. For a Yoruba man, restructuring means something different to what it means an Igbo man. The restructuring to an Igbo man means something different from me from the northern part of the country. So we must agree,  whether it is devolution of power or restructuring we want.

What do you from the North understand as restructuring?

This talk about restructuring is pure politics and selfishness because this whole project called Nigeria came into being in 1914 and from then, all forms of governments have been tried. We tried the regional government, which was parliamentary system of government, we moved from parliamentary government into a presidential system and we are asking ourselves that we should go back to pre-independence, it means we don’t know what we are talking about. It is either we are making progress or we are not. We have made some substantial progress and then some elites because they felt they cannot access power, they came up with restructuring and once you put them in power, they will no longer talk about restructuring.

That is all. Its just about selfishness, it is not for any genuine concern for the Nigerian project. What I will think will make sense is devolution of powers and that simply means you restructure the fiscal part of the country.

The sharing formula should be fine-tuned so that the states should have more money than the federal government, that is what we need and not restructuring.

There is nothing like restructuring, what we need is devolution of powers, give the states some more powers than they have now and most states can stand on their own, but when you say restructuring, it simply means breaking up the country into different countries and people who are clamoring for that are only looking for a way to carve small enclaves for themselves there and become lords and not for any other reason.

But if we sit down and say look; the sharing formula, let the federal government take may be 30% and states 70%; If you give states more power in terms of what they control from the federal government, that is the kind of thing we should be clamouring and agitating for and not restructuring because it means different things to different people, so it is devolution of powers that  people should be asking for and not restructuring.

Today, if an Igbo man becomes president, the Yoruba will say they are marginalized and call for restructuring of the country and once they have it, nobody talks of restructuring, ditto for the North, so there is nothing like restructuring, but devolution of powers is what we should be agitating for and not restructuring. I don’t believe in restructuring.

Let us talk about the situation in Benue. There has been a lot of issues in your constituency, herdsmen and farmers clashes, issues of banditry and insecurity, I know your constituency has been affected in the past with killings and destructions and other untoward things. What have been your efforts to address some of these issues?

The issue of insecurity is a national issue and not limited to any one place. Yes, there have been series of attacks even last night, if I show you my phone, all through the night the herdsmen came last night and attacked some of my villagers in my own immediate village.

In fact two people lost their lives and several of them are in the hospital as I speak to you now. Throughout last night, I didn’t sleep in time; I was communicating with the chairman of the Council.

Now that has become perennial and not just in the state but across the entire country. So what strategy is the government adopting in tackling this menace? That should be the question.

In the Senate, we have put this issue on the front burner almost every day we are sitting and it is not abating because I think the government has not adopted the strategy that can solve this problem and so we will continue to address it, otherwise people may seek for self-help and such will introduce confusion in the society because if now people lose confidence in the legitimacy of government to monopolize violence and address issues that threaten the welfare of the people, then that society becomes a failed state, so I don’t think we should allow ourselves to get to that level, but gradually we are getting to that level where people may seek self-help because government has shown incapacity to address the security challenges in the country. As members of the National Assembly in our individual capacity and collectively, we continue to urge the executive arm of government to be up and doing on its responsibilities.

But in the state, the governor of Benue has done everything humanly possible to address this issue, at one point he was vilified but now every person is engulfed in it and they can now feel the pains of what it means to come under such intense attack.

The herdsmen are controlled by people and so one would expect that the government should be more strategic in identifying the people who control them. Once you are able to do that, it will be easy to control the situation because the clashes between herdsmen and farmers are happening all over the country. The herdsmen carry cattle which is their economy, while the farmers’ economy, which is their farmlands are being trampled upon by the cattle.

So if the government has sworn to protect these two groups, then there must be a way of sitting them down together and identifying what the problem is, that has not been done so everybody is taking laws into their hands and this will continue. It is unfortunate that my constituency is most affected, we have done a lot in trying to mitigate the pains of these people, but it is not abating.

This is a very serious problem that the executive arm of government should do everything to stop otherwise, eventually, if we don’t take time we will have a lot on our hands that will overwhelm everybody.

Can you  give us an insight into your pet project of issuing scholarships to some of your constituents, we want to have an idea of what you are doing to mitigate the challenges of your constituents in the last one year as a Senator.

You know, being in the opposition, there is not much you can do in terms of extending patronage to your people, so what I have done is personal to them like students in the Law School are the ones that are targeted because they are vulnerable because the money involved in paying for their school fees and other associated things is so much. So I decided to assist them to pull through Law School. I am doing it as an individual because in the Senate, it is difficult as an opposition member to help people access patronage from government.

 I have done quite a lot, I have helped to source places of employment for some people and also in the budget of 2020, there are a couple of projects that we put there hoping that when they begin the implementation of the budget, they will see some signs and dividends of democracy, we are also keeping in touch in them and addressing their personal and community problems.

Considering the current conflict between the Joint Committees on Employment and Labour and the Minister of State for Labour, it seems the legislature wants to dabble into how the executive functions. This was the kernel in the disagreement with Minister Keyamo and  we  also understand that the National Assembly  went into micro-credits being given to people as palliatives for COVID-19 as well as many others, so what is your take in relation to the functions of separation of powers, doesn’t this compromise the oversight on the Executive?

Well, I think your question is contradictory. When you say compromise our oversight, which means we have the power to oversight and in another breadth you talk about compromising our integrity.

Let me say this, the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, gives the power of appropriation to the National Assembly and it is in that same way we are vested with the power of oversight. Oversight function, properly defined, gives you the latitude to question and monitor what is going on.

Now in the process of questioning and monitoring, I don’t see how that is dabbling into the workings of other arms of government.

What happened with the Minister of State, Labour is just part of the functions that has been bestowed on the National Assembly that yes, we approved, we appropriated money for an item in the budget and we now said, okay you are going to employ 774,000 persons based on the approval that we have given and we said we will like to have a look at it and you say we should not look at it. If you employ 1,000 persons in my own local government as a Senator of the Federal Republic and you now think I should not know about it, then something is wrong somewhere.

This is the same thing that happened with the Social Investment money where N500 billion was expended and there is no record of it, nobody can identify who and who benefited from that money.

Now they also claimed to have shared N52billion Naira in just a few days and no person has been able to place his or her hand on how N52 billion was shared as palliatives. This is the same system they want to employ now, because if they say they have employed 1,000 in my local government and I look for who benefitted from my local government, I can’t find it. Is it right not to  scrutinize? 

We insist that we must know each and every person who is going to benefit from that, so I don’t see how that is a problem. In the first place, we approved the money for the programme, so why not allow us monitor its implementation?

There is nothing unusual just that people don’t want to be monitored, they want to embezzle some money, by just putting up some pseudo names and say these are the beneficiaries and you know at that point, it will be difficult for you to say anything. Even the media should ask these pertinent questions, why are they not ready to place everything on the table?

I come from a Constituency that has seven local government areas, it means that they will employ 7,000 persons in these local governments and I don’t know who those persons are. Is it the Minister sitting in the office here, who has never known those places and has never been there, what is the criteria?

They say they have appointed committees, to do what? If as a major stakeholder, I am not qualified to participate and know how it is organized to say look these are my people, I think the media should even question them more.

We have experienced it before, N52 billion was shared and I have continued to ask people from my constituency and no single person has come to testify he got that money, now it is 774,000 and you can imagine how much that would amount to, they just want to share it and say they have shared it to the people, and we are not going to allow that to happen. We have insisted that the process must be transparent and we must be involved so that we can monitor it.

COVER

CAC Reviews Service Fees for Efficient Services Aug. 1

Published

on

Share

The Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC)has said it has reviewed some of its service fees to enhance service quality, improve efficiency, and sustain digital transformation in its operations.The commission said this in a public notice it issued in Abuja yesterday.It said the increment which will take effect from Aug.

1, reflected prevailing economic realities and rising operational costs.
It said the adjustment followed engagements with key stakeholders.
The commission added that the review was to sustain prompt and technology-driven service delivery for Nigerians.“The review of fees is crucial to ensuring that the commission continues to provide prompt, efficient, and technology-driven services that meet the expectations of its stakeholders for the benefit of the Nigerian economy,” it said.
The CAC described the reviewed fees as modest and competitive.It said the changes would support its ongoing reforms to enhance transparency, accountability, and customer satisfaction.“The schedule of the revised fees has been published on the commission’s official website: www.cac.gov.ng, including a direct link to its resource section for easy access,” the notice said.The commission assured the public of its continued commitment to delivering high-quality services and maintaining the integrity of Nigeria’s corporate registry.It urged the public, business owners, and corporate stakeholders to visit its website for full details of the reviewed service charges and other resources. (NAN)

Continue Reading

COVER

Tinubu Woos Global Investment Community to Bridge $2.3trn Infrastructure Gap

Published

on

Share

By James Samuel, Abuja

President Bola Tinubu has reaffirmed the determination of his administration to close the nation’s $2.3 trillion gap through public-private partnership (PPP), while also urging the global investment community that Nigeria is ready and open for business.

He said his administration would fast-track approvals for viable infrastructure projects in the country, saying what matters to the average Nigerian is the availability of basic infrastructure such as power, roads, health facilities and quality schools.
Tinubu spoke on Tuesday while declaring open the Nigeria 2025 Public-Private Partnership (PPP)Summit at the Old Banquet Hall, Presidential Villa, Abuja.The summit, organised by the Infrastructure Concession Regulatory Commission (ICRC), brought together key stakeholders across government and private sectors to advance collaboration towards closing Nigeria’s $2.
3 trillion infrastructure gap.Tinubu, who was represented by the Vice President, Senator Kashim Shettima, said Nigeria could no longer build a 21st-century economy on 20th-century infrastructure, noting that the era of government-only funding of capital projects was unsustainable.He said, “We are not seeking investors to carry burdens; we are opening opportunities to create value,” the vice president stated. “We want long-term partners ready to bridge our infrastructure gap with purpose, precision, and integrity.”He noted that the administration, which is over two years old, has taken bold steps to reform the economy, including the removal of fuel subsidy, liberalisation of the foreign exchange market, and optimisation of government revenue, all geared towards creating a more viable investment climate.“We have strengthened the ICRC, streamlined bureaucratic bottlenecks, and aligned our infrastructure processes with global best practices,” he said. “But policies alone don’t generate megawatts or build roads; what we need is collective action.”The President said the administration’s goal, guided by the National Integrated Infrastructure Master Plan (2020–2043), is to grow Nigeria’s infrastructure stock from 30–35 percent of GDP to at least 70 percent by 2043.He emphasised the country’s market potential, citing Nigeria’s population of over 230 million people and its projected rise to 440 million by 2050, making it the third most populous nation on earth. “One out of every four Black people is a Nigerian. There is no African market like this,” Shettima said. “But beyond investment, we need innovation, efficiency, and integrity.”He called on the global investment community not to be deterred by perceived risks but to recognise the immense opportunities to build sustainable projects that deliver real impact, from roads and power to clean water, quality education and healthcare.“Let this summit not be remembered for kind speeches—we’ve had those for decades—but for bankable projects, signed deals, and enduring progress,” he said.Reaffirming the administration’s commitment to swift implementation, Tinubu pledged that viable projects would be fast-tracked and that coordination across ministries and agencies would be ensured.He said, “Nigeria has turned the corner. We have crossed the Rubicon. We are on a path to sustained peace and development. We are ready, and we are open for business.”Earlier in his welcome address, Director General of the ICRC, Jobson Ewalefoh restated the federal government’s resolve to close Nigeria’s infrastructure gap, estimated at over $2.3 trillion, through strategic Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs).Speaking at the summit themed ‘Unlocking Nigeria’s Potential: The Role of PPPs in Delivering the Renewed Hope Agenda’, the ICRC boss described the event as a platform for national transformation.Ewalefoh applauded President Bola Tinubu for repositioning infrastructure as a key driver of inclusive growth and for promoting PPPs as a governance model rooted in innovation, efficiency, and accountability.Highlighting projects like the Highway Development and Management Initiative, the Egini Medical Infrastructure Scheme, and the Dasin Hausa Dam, the DG said Nigeria is laying the groundwork for sustainable, private-sector-led development.He assured investors of Nigeria’s openness to business, adding that the ICRC is committed to ensuring that all PPP projects are legally compliant, economically viable, and socially impactful.The DG also noted presidential reforms mandating full MDA compliance with PPP guidelines, commending Vice President Shettima and key development partners, including AfDB, NESG, Afreximbank, IFC, and Africa50.The summit continues with technical sessions on de-risking, project financing, and institutional alignment.

Continue Reading

COVER

End Herdsmen Invasions and Genocide in Benue Now!

Published

on

Share

The unending killings in Benue state – North-central Nigeria – climaxed to an extremely disgusting level last week, when at least 200 Benue indigenes were rounded up in their sleep and massacred in a three-hour killing spree by terrorists parading themselves as herdsmen. The tragic killings stunned the Nigerian nation as the chilling death toll remains the single-worst atrocity in a region which has witnessed an upsurge in attacks amid increasing signs that a concerted militant assault is underway to force entire communities to abandon their own region into the wilderness of despair.

Before the wanton killings, Church leaders in Benue had sought help to relocate huge numbers of internally displaced persons (IDPs) who had for years taken refuge in Yelewata and its environs following frequent ferocious attacks by terrorists on communities across the state.
The victims had no choice other than to flee from their ancestral lands to neighbouring towns and villages for safety. This has been the experience of the innocent victims across the length and breadth of the state for more than a decade now. It is curious that despite all the steps taken by the federal and sub-national governments to address the ugly security situation, there has been no headway. The situation has become a shameful embarrassment to the federal government, which has all along been paying lip service to the precarious security situation in the state, totally oblivious that the primary responsibility of government is essentially the provision of security and welfare to the citizenry.A troubled Governor of Benue state, Rev. Fr. Dr. Hyacinth Alia, while reacting to the Yelewata massacre, condemned the tragic blood-letting of his people and called for calm.”My beloved people of Benue state, I address you this morning with a heart weighed down by grief, but strengthened by duty. Last night, terror descended on Yelewata, in Guma Local Government Area, where over two hundred of our brothers and sisters were brutally murdered by terrorists masquerading as herders. Entire families were wiped out. Children, women and elders, slaughtered and burnt in the shelter of their homes.”Two days ago, two communities – Mtswenem and Akondotyough Bawa in Makurdi LGA were attacked and 25 people killed. This is evil in its purest form — and I condemn it with every fiber of my being.”Let this be clear: this was not an isolated incident. Our people have endured too many massacres — in Ukum, Logo, Katsina-Ala, Kwande, Agatu, Otukpo, Apa, Gwer West, Gwer East, and elsewhere. These killings are not just numbers. These are our people — people with names, dreams, and families. This government will no longer speak in cautious tones or diplomatic restraint”, he stated, pointing out that “to every grieving family, I say: I see you. I feel your pain. And I will not let this pass as just another tragedy.”This morning, I have formally reached out to request an immediate one-on-one audience with His Excellency, President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. I intend to meet with him personally — not just to convey our sorrow, but to demand clear and decisive federal action. Benue has carried this burden for far too long”The governor directed the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) to coordinate the temporary relocation and settlement of the displaced persons at the Makurdi International Market premises and provide for their basic needs. All relevant government agencies should be on standby to support SEMA whenever they are called upon. To forge a new path going forward.The governor summoned an emergency high-level meeting to hold in Makurdi.Those invited include: the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, all serving Members of the National Assembly from Benue State, leaders of the State House of Assembly, Local Government Chairmen, traditional rulers, religious leaders, and security chiefs resident in the state will also be in attendance.

Governor Alia maintained:”We are not APC or PDP. We are not Tiv, Idoma, Igede, Etulo, Abakpa, Jukun, Akweya, Nyifon or Igbo. We are Benue people under attack, and we must respond as one big family.”We will no longer wait to be killed before reacting. We will take the war to the doorsteps of those who bring war to us. With the support of the President and Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Bola Ahmed Tinubu, GCFR, we will resume full implementation of the Anti-Open Grazing and Ranches Establishment Law. All herders with animals grazing freely on any inch of Benue land are hereby advised to comply or face the consequences.”I have directed immediate reinforcement of security in our border communities. Tactical units from the military and police are being deployed. The Benue State Government is also working to strengthen joint operations and support local intelligence networks. But beyond force, we are building unity. The call now is for community vigilance, intelligence sharing, and neighborly solidarity. Our enemies thrive when we are divided. They fall when we stand together”Alia thanked the youths for raising their voice against oppression. I have seen your handwriting and videos on social media.”I have not been asleep, but I am reinvigorated by your admonitions. Continue to be alert, not lawless. Be courageous, but coordinated. Do not take laws into your hands, but never again let our communities be taken by surprise.To every citizen: mourn, but also rise. Cry, but never give-up. We shall overcome”, he stated, reiterating that his message was not of fear, but of defiance.Speaking at Yelewata, the epicenter of the massacre, less than 12 hours after the atrocity, the town’s parish priest, Father Ukuma Jonathan Angbianbee, described how he and other IDPs narrowly escaped death, dropping to the floor of the church’s presbytery at the sound of gunfire. He said: “When we heard the shots and saw the militants, we committed our lives to God. This morning, I thank God I am alive.”The daily massacre in Benue in the past one year, coupled with the current killings is being falsely described in some quarters as reprisals killings. This is a gross misrepresentation and a great fallacy because from whichever angle one looks at the wanton and deliberate blood-letting, one sees that it is an obvious misnomer that has been happening in the state to the chagrin of a traumatized people. And this is nothing but genocide and ethnic cleansing orchestrated by the invading Fulani herdsmen-backed militia.The Yelewata killings, which began on the night of Friday, June 13, 2025, saw dare-devil heavily armed herdsmen targeting displaced families and setting fire on their buildings, while they were asleep, and macheted and shot to death those who attempted to escape from the blaze. Eye witnesses said the IDPs escaped their camps and moved into the market square in Yelewata, Guma Local Government Area, near Makurdi, when the terrorists stormed the place shouting “Allahu Akhbar” (“God is great”), before engaging in their killing spree.In a first-hand report given to Catholic charity Aid to the Church in Need (ACN), local clergy said that earlier the same evening, police had repelled the attackers as they tried to storm Yelewata’s St Joseph’s Church, where up to 700 IDPs lay sleeping.The priest said Yelewata had absorbed thousands of IDPs from neighbouring villages – as it was considered relatively safe, lying on the main road to Abuja – but now was largely deserted, with many taking refuge in nearby Daudu and Abagena.Father Jonathan further revealed that he and his colleagues identified the attackers as herdsmen and that the attack was carefully coordinated, as the militants accessed the town from multiple angles and used the cover of heavy rains to mount their assault.He said: “There is no question about who carried out the attack. They were definitely herdsmen shouting ‘Alahu Akhbar’ during the onslaught.

The Reverend and other Clergy in Makurdi Catholic Diocese criticized the security response to the attack, saying that the police, who stopped the militants from accessing the church, were poorly equipped and were unable to prevent the attack on the nearby market place.Pope Leo XIV did not hesitate to react to the gory killings, saying he was praying for those “brutally killed” in the terrible massacre – most of them IDPs “sheltered by the local Catholic mission”.The Pope said he was praying for “security, justice and peace” in Nigeria, adding that in his thoughts especially were the “rural Christian communities of the Benue State who have been innocent victims of violence.”The senseless attack comes amid a spike in attacks on Benue state around the Makurdi region, which has about 80 percent Catholics.Church leaders have repeatedly called for international help, saying that a jihad militant plan is underway to seize land and ethnically cleanse the region of its Christian presence.On his part, former Senate President, Senator David Mark, strongly condemned the recent wave of violent attacks on several communities in Benue state by suspected armed herdsmen, which have resulted in huge loss of lives and the destruction of property worth billions of naira. Senator Mark in a statement said in the past few weeks, the affected areas include Otukpo, Agatu, Apa, Ohimini, Okpokwu, Ado, Ogbadibo, Gwer-West, Gwer-East, Katsina-Ala, Logo, and Ukum local government areas. He expressed deep concern over the killings and kidnappings, especially the most recent ones in the Otukpo axis and Gwer-West, where youth protests erupted in response to the killings.He further appealed to the youths across Benue communities to remain vigilant and promptly report any suspicious movement or individuals to security operatives, emphasizing that prevention is key to avoiding further tragedies.Senator Mark also issued a strong warning against the stereotyping of any ethnic group, stressing that reprisal attacks were not the solution and could further escalate tensions in the region.“There should be no stereotyping of any ethnic group or reprisal attacks on any group of people due to these unfortunate incidents,” he cautioned.While commiserating with families affected by the attacks, he prayed for the repose of the souls lost. “I commiserate with those who lost their loved ones to the marauders. May their souls rest in peace,” Senator Mark summed up.DAILY ASSET has followed closely and reported previous incidents of herdsmen attacks on communities in the North Central and especially Benue state and our documentation points to a direction of a carefully planned action by persons or groups whose interests to displace local communities and take over land is no longer in doubt. These killings have been made possible with the sophistication of the weapons carried by the attackers.The country must not be oblivious of the fact that a major security threat confronting Nigeria is the proliferation of small arms and light weapons and it’s attendant consequences – deteriorating security challenges in all nooks and cranny of the country.

Thus, the daily loss of human lives and property at the sub-national level as it is the current case in Benue state is due to the menace of small arms and light weapons flooding the country. It is regrettable that over a long period of time, the Ministry of Defence and the intelligence community have failed to devise a strategy to control the illegal flow of these arms into the country, a situation which has reduced Nigeria’s war against insurgency, banditry and criminality to a child’s play. For the campaign against insecurity to succeed, the federal government must map out strategies to curtail the proliferation of small arms and light weapons bedeviling the country. This must move beyond rhetorics.Given the gargantuan nature of the crisis, the Nigerian state has been used as a microcosm to examine the emerging and changing trend of small arms and light weapons proliferation on the African continent.A study, facilitated by the United Nations (UN) programme of action on small arms and light weapons pointed out that the technology, particularly internet, could become a game changer and redefine the nomenclature of small arms and light weapons proliferation but the inability of the security operatives to effectively infiltrate such internet spaces to keep abreast and track criminal activities remains a serious setback.The study pointed that the calamities associated with small arms and light weapon proliferation in the 21st century are serious challenges confronting countries in Africa with Nigeria occupying terrifying and frightening position. This drawback grossly affects the nation’s political, economic, and socio-cultural development. And it is profoundly expedient for a robust intelligence gathering mechanism through effective policing across the length and breadth of the country to counter the yoke of small arms and light weapons proliferation.Again, the unending stockpiling of illicit weapons continues to threaten not only the country, but global peace and security. This is exacerbating the plight of civilians in strife-torn countries worldwide. The misuse, illicit transfer and destabilizing accumulation of small arms and light weapons and ammunition, remain a defining factor in undermining peace and security at the national, regional and global levels, a disturbing development which has deeply aggravated situations for vulnerable populations already suffering from conflicts.Despite the pledge by President Ahmed Tinubu to curtail the menace of insecurity, many Nigerians are still being needlessly cut down by the crossfire of armed robbers, kidnappers, criminals and insurgents, who perpetuate their nefarious activities due to unending proliferation of small arms and light weapons. As terrorists and organized criminal groups continue to inflict harm and chaos because of the country’s weak institutions, there is a compelling need to retool and strengthen the nation’s intelligence gathering institutions to mop up illicit small arms and light weapons in the country. DAILY ASSET so submits.On the killings in Benue, the constant refrain from Abuja, which urges Benue people to either “reconcile” or “learn to live with their neighbours”( the attackers) is a painful display of ignorance at its worst level. The attackers usually advance from their hideouts and camps in neighbouring states especially Nasarawa, where they come to cause mayhem. Their one precondition to peace appears to be control of the ancestral lands of the local farmers for grazing of their cattle. Since there could hardly be any compromise on this, violent confrontation becomes inevitable.We condemn in the strongest possible terms the repeated wanton killings by the suspected Herdsman and their militia. The bloodletting cannot go on without end. And this is the time.We urge the Federal government to abandon rhetoric and and truly mobilize the federal forces to quell this revolt, which has all the potentials to further destabilise the country if not nibbed in the bud.In order to detect and prevent the movement of illicit small arms and light weapons across state borders effectively, states must develop and implement comprehensive border security management strategies and engage all relevant national agencies to strengthen, sustain and consolidate the campaign against insecurity and illicit trafficking of small arms and light weapons in the country,

In doing this, the birth of state police which has been delayed for a long time can no longer wait. The National Assembly must pass the necessary laws for state police to emerge. The absence of state police coupled with the failure of the Nigeria Police Force to handle the crisis has made many to canvass the arming of local vigilante and youth groups to confront the herdsmen. This seems quite attractive in the circumstance but will surely be counterproductive in the long run as there could be no guarantee to what the young people with guns in their hands could do in a nation where the population is ravaged by hunger and poverty.The Federal Government should as a matter of urgency and necessity establish military bases around the areas mostly ravaged by the herdsmen attacks in Guma, Makurdi, Gwer-West, Logo, Agatu, Apa, Logo and Katsina-Ala LGAs.The Benue state government should also commence immediate implementation of the Anti-open grazing Law, which has the potential to restrain the herders from coming into collusion course with the framers. If there are conflicting or ambiguous clauses in the Law, it should be immediately strengthened for implementationTo demonstrate that the blood-thirsty herdsmen have no federal backing as some have insinuated, the Police must arrest and fish out the perpetrators of this heinous crime and bring them to justice.In the interim, a comprehensive relief package should immediately be made available to the IDPs in the affected areas by the federal government.DAILY ASSET commiserates with all those who have lost their loved ones in the series of attacks as well as their means of livelihoods. We urge the federal government to support the vulnerable IDPs to regain their battered economic lives and restore the damaged social infrastructure like schools, churches, markets, hospitals, etc. The federal government should lead in the reconstruction effort.Finally, we warn that for too long we have played too much politics with the lives of innocent Nigerians. We have been lucky with this misnomer but nobody knows what tomorrow holds if we continue in this direction. There is therefore no more room for procrastination. There must be an immediate end to the regime of herdsmen attacks on farming communities in Benue and other states with the accompanying needless bloodletting. DAILY ASSET has warned!

Continue Reading

Read Our ePaper

Top Stories

Economy26 minutes ago

CBN Takes Steps to Strengthen Banking Sector, Issues Routine Transitional Guidance

ShareThe Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), has introduced time-bound measures for some banks still completing their transition from the temporary...

Economy32 minutes ago

Cybercrime: First Bank Invests N15bn to Protect Systems From hackers in 5 months –CEO

ShareFirst Bank HoldCo Plc says it has spent more than N15 billion to protect its systems against criminals between January and...

JUDICIARY50 minutes ago

Man Seeks Divorce After 17 years, Citing Loveless Marriage

Share One Moshood Kolobo of Temidire Community, Oko-Olowo area, Ilorin, on Wednesday applied to the Area Court, Centre-Igboro, for the dissolution...

Economy1 hour ago

GTCO Begins Deduction of USSD Fee From Airtime Balance

ShareGuaranty Trust Holding Company (GTCO), says it will begin the deduction of Unstructured Supplementary Service Data (USSD fee from the...

CRIME1 hour ago

Man Remanded for Allegedly Raping Physically Challenged Teen

Share An Ikorodu Chief Magistrates’ Court on Wednesday remanded a 50-year-old man, Linus Anozie, in a correctional center for allegedly...

General News2 hours ago

Amazon CEO Says AI to Reduce Number of Workers Needed

Share Amazon’s management on Wednesday said that it expects that artificial intelligence (AI) software will reduce the number of office workers...

JUDICIARY2 hours ago

Police Arraign Man Over Alleged Assault 

Share The Police in Lagos on Wednesday arraigned a 36-year-old man, Joseph Obuseh, in a Badagry Chief Magistrates` Court for allegedly...

DEFENCE3 hours ago

Police Grant Pastor Adefarasin Bail, Recover Stun Gun

ShareThe Police Command in Lagos State says it granted Pastor Paul Adefarasin, the Senior Pastor of House on the Rock...

NEWS8 hours ago

DHQ Rebuts Allegation of Internal Sabotage in Benue Massacre

ShareThe Defence Headquarters (DHQ) has dismissed the allegation suggesting that internal sabotage within the Nigerian military contributed to the tragic...

NEWS8 hours ago

Benue killing: NAF Deploys More Air Assets in Op Whirl Stroke

Share As part of sustained efforts to restore peace and stability across the North Central region, the Nigerian Air Force...

Copyright © 2021 Daily Asset Limited | Powered by ObajeSoft Inc