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    Nigerian farmers flee after attacks, send food prices higher

    David GreatBy David GreatJune 25, 2024No Comments4 Mins Read
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    The Catholic Diocese of Kontagora has raised new concerns about growing violence by terrorists in Kebbi State, stating that 24 people were slain in a brutal Easter Sunday attack
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    Hassan Ya’u, a 42-year-old maize and sesame seed farmer from Katsina state in Nigeria, was tending to his crops early this month when dozens of armed men on motorbikes approached his plot and began shooting at close range.

    Ya’u and fellow farmer Musa Nasidi escaped, but the attack murdered at least 50 people, many of whom were farmers working in their fields at the time. This was the latest in a series of fatal raids on rural districts. The assault took place in broad daylight and abducted an unknown number of persons.
    Ya’u and Nasidi claimed the gunmen attacked their Kankara farming village because farmers failed to pay a charge imposed by the armed group.
    Such attacks are causing many farmers to abandon their farms, leading to rising food costs and surging inflation as Nigeria suffers its worst cost-of-living crisis in a decade.
    “They set ablaze my produce and took away foodstuff worth about 4 million naira ($2,739.73),” said Ya’u, who has sought refuge in Daura town, nearly 200 km (124 miles) from Kankara.
    “I don’t have access to my farm because bandits have taken control of the area. Everything has been ruined,” added the father of 13 children who faces an uncertain future.
    Farmimg in Nigeria has developed over the years
    Farmers in Nigeria have doubled as vigilantes but are often overwhelmed by gunmen
    Armed gangs demand as much as three million naira per village, depending on the size, to allow farmers to work.
    “The farmers are even forming vigilante groups to make sure they are able to access the farms but it is still very difficult,” said Kabir Ibrahim, president of All Farmers Association of Nigeria.
    • Military to ensure farmers protection against terrorists – DHQ

    Northern Nigeria produces the bulk of the country’s staples like rice, yam and maize, but it is also its most unstable region, as armed kidnapping gangs attack and pillage villages in the northwest while Islamist militants cause havoc in the northeast.
    Nasidi, 36, fled to near Katsina town after the Kankara attack.
    He used to harvest about 400 bags of groundnuts, 80 bags of sesame seed and 200 bags of maize, he said, but now faces a bleak year after part of his 8.5-hectare farm was set ablaze by bandits.
    Tinubu: FG insists N250,000 minimum wage unrealistic
    President Bola Tinubu of Nigeria appears to be clueless as to how to tackle insecurity
    “The situation is beyond our control and I was left with no choice other than to leave Kankara because our lives were in danger,” Nasidi told Reuters.
    A World Food Programme report on the outlook for acute food insecurity globally said Nigeria has joined the world’s “hunger hotspots”, which analysts attribute to insecurity in farming areas and high costs of seed, fertiliser, chemicals and diesel.
    Lagos-based consultancy SBM Intelligence said 1,356 farmers in Nigeria were killed since 2020. This year, 137 deaths had been recorded, it said, adding that farming was becoming a dangerous occupation.
    “The risk is very grave,” said Confidence McHarry, SBM’s lead security analyst, adding that gunmen also attacked farmers “on suspicion of collaborating with the military.”
    Defence spokesperson Major General Edward Buba said that with the rainy season under way, the military was prioritising farmers’ security.
    “The farmers union are keying into the farm protection plan of the armed forces to make the best of the rainy season,” he said, without elaborating.
    But for 22-year-old farmer Abdulaziz Gora in Zamfara state, next to Katsina, there is little hope of returning to his farm. He relocated to state capital Gusau after a violent attack on his village in May, abandoning his soybean and maize crops.
    “Anyone caught there risks being kidnapped or killed,” he said.
    Report by Reuters

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