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Herdsmen crisis: Makinde’s aide faults Sunday Igboho’s strategy, says Oyo state not in competition with anyone
 
By:
Fri, 12 Feb 2021   ||   Nigeria,
 

Taiwo Adisa, the chief Press Secretary to Oyo State Governor, Engr. Seyi Makinde, has said the strategy used by popular Yoruba rights activist, Sunday Adeyemo, also known as Sunday Igboho to solve the security challenges facing the South West states cannot work, especially his issuance of eviction notices.

Mr Taiwo Adisa disclosed this on Thursday while speaking on the topic: ‘Fulani Herdsmen’s Violent Rampage In Ibarapa: What Is The True Situation?’ at a virtual town hall with the International Alliance for Justice and Peace, a Diaspora-based civil society organisation with interest in Nigeria.

 The governor’s aide revealed that the state was not in any form of competition with Igboho and has nothing against him, but his strategy was not something the state could explore because of the possible repercussions.

“The state is not in any competition with Sunday Igboho. The problem is about strategy. The strategy that he came up with cannot work in this environment because if you go shouting to people of other ethnic stocks to leave your community, the danger there is that your own people who are also in their different communities, the other people will unleash terror on them.

 “Why do you want to expose your people who are innocent, who are not doing anything to tarnish their own image or their families’ and who are living peacefully in those communities?

“Look at what happened in Ondo for instance, the governor issued a directive and the Federal Government of Nigeria came out to start defending the people who entered the forest illegally. It is wrong.

“So, it is tact that is necessary to rid our communities of criminals,” he stated.

He added that Oyo State Government would continue to deploy the resources and intelligence of non-state actors and state actors alike to rid the state of criminal elements.

“As to the use of non-state actors, in our own clime here, there is no state that can survive without non-state actors’ involvement in security. It is not possible because the police will not be enough no matter how small your community is, the federal police cannot be enough. So, you’ve got to link up with Vigilante Services of Nigeria, even some communities link up with OPC (Oodua Peoples Congress), some communities link up with traditional hunters and so on.

“In Oyo State for instance, this is not the first time we are witnessing some form of crisis but the first time it happened, nobody really heard about it other than an alarm that was raised by the Aare Ona Kakanfo of Yorubaland, Aare Gani Adams, that some people are infiltrating Oyo forests and they are trying to attack the state.

“What the government did was to rely on non-state actors because there are hunters who go into those forests and filter whatever that is happening in those forests and they come back to tell their leaders that they have seen so and so movement around so and so forests. And the government put together a team of state actors and non-state actors just late last year and flushed out the forests. So, it is a continuous activity that we must continue to use non-state actors and we are using them,” he said.

 

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