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HomeNewsOpen Grazing: Southern Govs’ Ban On Open Grazing Final -Wike ...Bill Already...

Open Grazing: Southern Govs’ Ban On Open Grazing Final -Wike
…Bill Already In Place To Enforce Ban -Abia Govt

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Southern Governors

 

Rivers Governor Nyesom Wike has said the decision of the Southern Governors to ban open grazing is final.

Wike spoke at the grand reception, in his honour, by Ogoni nationality in Bori, headquarters of Khana Local Government Area.

The Rivers helmsman told critics of the governors that no section of the country is inferior to others.

“We have taken a position and no going back. Enough is enough, we are not second class citizens of this country, we also own this country,” he stated.

The governor lamented the slow pace of the Ogoni environmental remediation.

He charged the Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project (HYPREP) to relocate its operational office from Port Harcourt to Bori, Ogoni headquarters.

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Meanwhile, Governor Okezie Ikpeazu of Abia on Saturday reiterated the state’s commitment to enforce the ban on open grazing of cattle in Abia.

Ikpeazu said this during a zoom meeting with newsmen of Abia extraction under the aegis of Abia Media Forum.

The governor said a bill was already in place to enforce the ban and to check the activities of criminal elements disguising as nomads.

Nigerian governors from the Southern part of the country recently resolved to ban open grazing of cattle in their states.

This was part of the 12 resolutions reached by the governors at their Tuesday meeting in Asaba, Delta state capital.

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The governors had said open grazing of cattle had often caused conflicts between host communities and migrant herders, leading to several deaths and murder in many states.

They also accused some of the herders of committing other criminal acts, including armed robbery, kidnapping and rape.

Ikpeazu said “We are now at the point of making sure that we enforce and implement it and even in doing that I must also share what I see as a challenge to the enforcement of that law. The law is in place and we are taking steps to enforce it.

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“It has become imperative that we enforce that law strictly because we just noticed that we have big time trouble in our hands. We have those that we refer to as criminal herdsmen; they are different from the ordinary herdsmen that we have been living with all these years.

“We now have in our mist bandits that have infiltrated from the rest of West Africa and other parts of Africa and their assignment is to come here rape, kill and kidnap people for money. It is now very imperative that we enforce that law”.

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