Ummmh
African men!!!!!!! The town union’s President-General, Mr
Anthony Enu, spoke about the issue when he testified in the commission of
inquiry into the killing of people in Nimbo community on Monday.
The Eke Town Union in Udi
Local Government Area of Enugu State has decried the increasing rate of divorce
occasioned by alleged rape from suspected herdsmen.
Enu said that the situation
had become scandalous because no man would take in a woman who had been messed
up by suspected herdsmen.
“The herdsmen are
consistently raping our women and daughters infecting them with serious
diseases thereby causing indirect divorce in our communities,” he said.
“If my wife is messed up by
the herdsmen, why should I take her in again? This will mean that what is
holding her will hold me.”
According to him,
communities in the area have had their fair share of attack by the cattle
breeders, adding that no fewer than 10 people had died as a result.
Enu recounted how three
residents of Ogui village, Iloafonsi Ofokansi, Aniago Egbo and Josephat
Maduweke, were killed in cold blood by suspected herdsmen in 2002.
He said, “Mr. Isreal Eneje
was working on his farm with his daughter when the cattle breeders took their
animals to his farm. He protested and told them to go away and they ended up
killing him.
“They have killed many of
our people in the past and in each case we report to the police station at 9th
Mile.
“The herdsmen are now
assuming to be landlords and have been harassing our people. They should leave
our communities in peace.”
Meanwhile, the Agu Umabor
Town Union in Nsukka Local Government Area has said that it is opposed to the
creation of grazing reserves in their area.
The Secretary of the union,
Mr. Livinus Odo, said this when he testified in the tribunal on their activities
of the suspected herdsmen in the area.
Odoh appealed to the
South-East caucus in the National Assembly to give a block opposition to the
legitimisation of any form of grazing bill.
“They should vacate our
communities because we don’t have enough farmland not to talk of the one for
grazing. The herdsmen have committed atrocities in our communities and it has
been a difficult time for our people and we appeal to the government to save us
from this menace,” he said.
He narrated the experience
of one Nnabuike Odo, a commercial motor-cylists, who on May 10, 2016, was
almost killed because he made a comment, which some herdsmen found offensive.
“They shot at him but he
was so fortunate to escape their bullets,” Odo said.
“We have abandoned a
particular road leading to our community because of them. My people have
abandoned agriculture because of the herdsmen and we are helpless.”
The Chairman of the panel,
Justice Chukwuma Eneh, said that the commission would accommodate all
complaints and forward same to the state government.
“We will accommodate your
story in our report and see if the government will do something to help you,”
Eneh said.
Shame on those men, they will die a destitute
ReplyDeleteThe men should be ashamed of themselves
ReplyDelete