After a close door meeting at the Government House on Saturday, the Chairman, Eha-Amufu and Fulani Communities Peace and Reconciliation Committee, Mr Tony Edeh, said the two sides had agreed to set up a joint taskforce tackle the incessant attack.
To stop
the continuous killings and destruction property by killer herdsmen, the
Eha-Amufu communities in Isiuzo Local Government Area of Enugu State and the
Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria have set up a joint task
force to provide security in the area.
Communities
in Eha-Amufu such as Mgbuji and Agu-Amede Autonomous Communities have witnessed
ferocious attacks ranging from kidnapping, killing and burning of property of
locals by suspected killer herdsmen.
The recent
incidents were the kidnapping of 15 farmers in Mgbuji and the killing of two,
with the kidnapping of three others in Agu-Amede Autonomous Communities in
July. No fewer than 20 farm settlements in the two communities were also sacked
and properties burnt.
Edeh said
the groups agreed to set aside their differences and continue to live together
in peace.
According
to him, a committee with members from both sides was inaugurated and mandated
to reconcile the two groups and work out a sustainable solution to the spate of
insecurity in the area.
The
committee chairman said the groups had been able to find a lasting solution to
the problems.
He said
the committee also agreed on a number of things on how to forestall such
incidences that led to the mistrust between the pastoralists and their host
community.
“We have
agreed on a number of things on how to move forward and make sure that the
conflict is resolved. It is better to follow peace and we have all agreed that
we will continue with peace.
“In no
distant time, we will start the implementation of those necessary steps in
order to continue to live together peacefully,” Edeh said.
Also, the
Anglican Bishop of Eha-Amufu Diocese, Bishop Daniel Odinga, described the peace
and reconciliation deal as a good one.
Odinga
said that it was good that both parties involved in the conflict met to resolve
the issues.
“The
meeting was a good one because the people involved in the conflict have come
together to resolve the issues. We have agreed to start relating well and stop
all the kidnap and attacks.
“It is for
us now to articulate our points and meet the government to come in and be
involved in settling the matter completely so that we will live in peace like
before,” Odinga said.
Furthermore,
a representative of the Fulani community and South-East Zonal Chairman, Miyetti
Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria, Alhaji Gidado Siddiki, commended
the process.
Siddiki
said it was gratifying that the mutual suspicion between the herders and
members of their host community had been laid to rest.
“Our
people were being suspected as the perpetrators of the series of kidnap and
attack in the area. We in turn were suspecting members of the host community as
being responsible.
“So we
decided to come together to find out what is actually happening in that area so
that we can agree on how to police the community and live together in peace,”
he said.
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