 – Northern Senators 
warned governors and village heads in South-East to desist from making 
statements that can create tense atmosphere in the country
– The senators warned people that there would be no country called 
Nigeria, if Fulani herdsmen were asked to leave their communities and 
states
– They commended the federal government for the steps had taken to 
contain the problems of herdsmen/farmers clashes..
– Northern Senators 
warned governors and village heads in South-East to desist from making 
statements that can create tense atmosphere in the country
– The senators warned people that there would be no country called 
Nigeria, if Fulani herdsmen were asked to leave their communities and 
states
– They commended the federal government for the steps had taken to 
contain the problems of herdsmen/farmers clashes..
Senators from the North, under the aegis of Northern Senators, warned 
governors and village heads in South-East to desist from making 
statements that can overheat an already polarized country.
Reacting to threats emanating from certain regions of the country 
demanding immediate relocation of herdsmen, senators warned that there 
would be no country called Nigeria, if Fulani herdsmen were asked to 
leave their communities and states.
Vanguard reports that the chairman of the Northern Senators’ Forum, 
Senator Abdullahi Adamu from Nasarawa West read, a communique on behalf 
of the group after the meeting in Abuja.
“We appreciate the steps the federal government had taken so far to 
contain the problems of herdsmen/farmers clashes and call on community 
leaders to be careful when making statements on these ugly incidences.
READ ALSO: Fulani herdsmen attacks: Edo traditional rulers want military
 operatives deployed
“There would be no country called Nigeria, if other parts of the country
 asked Fulani herdsmen to leave their communities and states. We, 
therefore, warn everybody, including governors to desist from making 
inflammatory remarks.”
Adamu stressed the senators were issuing their warning for all Nigerians
 irrespective of their social status.
“It is for all Nigerians. A governor is a community leader. The only 
difference is that he has a label called governor.
“If you don’t mind, attacks by Fulani Herdsmen in recent times started 
with the West when elder statesman, Chief Olu Falae, had some very nasty
 experience. It was attributed at the time to Fulani herdsmen. At the 
end, those people were apprehended and they were not Fulanis.
“This thing has been going on in virtually all parts of the country 
today. If we now say that everybody should rise and say herdsmen should 
leave, we will not have a country,” he said.
Meanwhile, the Catholic Bishops Conference of Nigeria called on 
President Muhammadu Buhari to investigate the recent attacks by herdsmen
 and declare the perpetrators of the attacks, insurgents. They also 
advised the federal government to build cattle ranches in states where 
cattle rearing is prevalent.
According to bishops, “this will reduce or eliminate clashes stemming 
from trespassing.”






 
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