Opinion
Insurgents In Nomads’Clothing
Nomadism is a
lifestyle adapted to infertile regions where mobility is the most efficient strategy for exploring and exploiting scarce resources. Some people choose to be nomadic for obvious reasons, others are born nomads. Examples of the latter, are the pastoral tribe, who roam about for either greener pasture or anything at all.
Although, there also exist the nomadic hunters and gatherers who go after seasonally available wild plants and games and the peripatetic nomads; the various itinerant populations who move about in densely populated area living not on natural resources, but by offering services (craft or trade) to the resident population.
The very popular of them all remains the pastoralists, who raise herds, driving them, or moving with them from locations to locations in patterns that normally avoid depleting pastures beyond their ability to re-grow.
The popularity of the pastoralists stems from the fact that while other nomads may follow annual or seasonal pattern of movements and settlements, theirs seems to defile such arrangements.
The reason is obvious. Even in areas of abundant pasture or good grazing land, pastures must not be depleted beyond their ability to recover, thus making it inevitable for the pastoralists to always be on the move.
The Fulanis constitute an household name whenever nomadic pastoralism is mentioned in the West African sub-sahara region. A significant proportion of their number, (an estimated 13 million) are nomadic, making them the largest nomadic group in the world. They are found mainly in West Africa, Northern part of Central Africa, Sudan and Egypt.
In Nigeria, the Fulanis are found among the Hausas in Northern Nigeria.
Although, the physical disposition of a typical nomad is such that portrays harmlessness, due largely to the nature of their activities that do not only render them fatigued at every look, but also present them as a people without a base. The nomadic way of life has become increasingly rare as many governments dislike nomads mainly because of the difficulty to control their movement and probably to obtain taxes from them. They rather resort to converting pastures into croplands and forcing the nomads into permanent settlements! Yes, permanent settlement.
But even where these nomads are confined to permanent settlements, the activities of the Boko Haram insurgents in Nigeria have in no little way destabilised such effort at having them remain at designated areas. Places like Bornu, Benue, Plateau, Nassarawa, which were hitherto the strongholds of the Fulani herdsmen have of late been rendered unconducive for cattle rearing, not excluding Adamawa, the highest cattle market in West Africa where cattle rustling is now mostly feared than elsewhere. Like John Pepper Clark’s representation of a gruesome situation in his poem “the Fulani cattle”, these cattles are not only faced with the trouble of man’s inhumanity to animals, they are also left to contend with nature’s unfairness to creatures as they are either slain by the swords of the insurgents, or by the torture of outright dryness and lack of pastures due largely to the activities of the terrorists in the country.
The Fulani herdsman is left with no option than to look for safety first and then pasture. The search for safety and pasture by the already embattled herdsmen, has not only increased the pains of both the men and their herds, the stiff resistance posed by resident populations whose farm crops and land the wanderers stand to destroy while trying to satisfy their hunger for pasture and thirst for water, seems to evoke greater agony that now paints in them a picture of sadism which joy is only expressed in hostility to both their immediate environment and dwellers within the neigbourhood.
The typical Fulani herdsman has suddenly lost friendship with his farmer neigbour who sees the cattles as agents of destruction.
Little wonder Ugwu Emmanuel, writing for This Day, pointed out that cattle menace may soon be a reason for bloody encounter between Fulani herdsmen and farmers.
Unfortunately, Ugwu’s prediction plays out on daily basis as no day passes without one news of Fulani herdsmen’s attack or the other.
Could it be that terrorists have infiltrated communities under the cloak of cattle rearing? Or what does this rising spate of criminality potend?
I think nothing short of grazing reserves and cattle routes for herdsmen would suffice, else the menace of these nomads would be worse than that of the identified insurgents.
Sylvia ThankGod-Amadi
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