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It Is Injustice To Accuse Me Of Looking Other Way While Herdsmen Strike, Buhari Protests

President Muhammadu Buhari

President Muhammadu Buhari has protested against media insinuations that he has not been active in addressing the farmers/herdsmen clashes that result into several deaths ‘because I look like them.’

The President who spoke when he visited Jos, the Plateau State capital today, Tuesday, said: ‘whatever is being given to the media, we have to be very responsible about it.

“People are even blaming me for not talking to them because maybe (they say) I look like one of them. There is some injustice in these aspersions.”

The President still wondered that herders are carrying AK47, saying that in Benue, for instance, “subsistence farmer knows that the Nigerian cattle herder that he knows doesn’t carry nothing more than a stick, occasionally sometimes something to cut grass to feed his cattle.‘But the present herder, I am told, carries AK47.”

At an interactive session with stakeholders in the state, the President asked traditional and community leaders to complement government efforts by persuading their constituencies to tolerate one another for peace and unity.

‘‘I will continue to pressurize members of the law enforcement agencies directly under me by the Constitution as the Commander-in Chief. About eight days ago, we had five hours security meeting of the service chiefs and the Inspector-General of Police.

‘‘What happened here in Jos is very bad. The question of leadership, from your household to whatever you are, is justice. The bottom line is justice.

‘‘That is why wherever I go, I will always appeal to the leadership of the communities, the law enforcement agencies, to always have control of their constituencies.”

The President condemned the latest clashes in the state, which left scores dead, even as he condoled with the affected families, the Government and people of the State, and wished those injured a speedy recovery.

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He used the occasion of the interactive session attended by traditional rulers, community and religious leaders, representatives of youth, women and trade union groups, security chiefs and some top government officials to appeal to Nigerians to avoid inflammatory utterances that endanger peace or promote conflicts.

Earlier, Governor Lalong had blamed parties in the conflict in the State for reneging on their agreement to maintain peace, leading to the recent upsurge in violence, after nearly three years of calm and normalcy in the State.

‘‘We are concerned as a State that the sophisticated weapons used in these attacks, from the evidences on the ground and the narrations of victims, are not those conventional to our environment for self-defence but reflective of a terrorist invasion.

‘‘It, therefore, demands a justified response like that which was undertaken to address the Boko Haram insurgency.”

The governor requested that given the number of villages completely ravaged in the violence, the Federal Government should establish an Emergency Special Intervention Fund to help reconstruct the destroyed communities.

President Buhari also carefully listened to the presentations and recommendations made by Alhaji Nura Abdullahi, State Chairman, Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria (MACBAN) and Mrs. Florence Jambol, a representative of the Berom community in Plateau State, on engendering peace in the communities.