A NATIONAL Grazing Bill which the
leadership of Senate has said is not with it continues to generate heated
debate, and for good reason.
This bill should be questioned because of its
ethno-religious implications. It is important that we know this bill, even if
in a general way, so as to make useful discourse of it. The bill known as A
Bill for An Act for the Establishment of the National Grazing Reserve
(Establishment And Development) Commission for The Preservation And Control of
National Grazing Reserves and Stock Routes And for Other Matters Connected
Therewith, was sponsored by Senator Zainab Kure.
Hajiya Zainab Abdulkadir Kure
is a Senator, whose political career at the Upper legislative house started in
2007 elected for the Niger South constituency of Niger State on the platform of
the People’s Democratic Party (PDP).
She represents Niger South Senatorial
District alongside Senators Dahiru Awaisu Kuta (PDP) Niger East and Senator
Ibrahim Musa (APC) of Niger North respectively. She has a BSc in Political
Science from Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria in 1984, and is the wife of former
Governor of Niger State between 1999 and May 2007.
According to This Day
Newspaper reports, she had sponsored the National Grazing Reserves Establishment
and Development Commission Bill, 2008 and the National Poverty Eradication
Commission Bill, 2008. Born on November 24, 1959, Senator Kure’s dream as a
youth was to become a top Customs or Immigration officer. This was however, not
to be, no thanks to her father-in-law who put an end to that ambition.
Today,she is making waves at the National Assembly in Abuja, with robust
contributions. The National Grazing Bill has Seven Parts.
Part 1, deals with
the establishment of the national Grazing Reserve Commission, and it’s powers,
to be should controlled by a Governing Council whose membership tenure shall be
four years, comprising a Chairman, one representative each from Federal
Ministries of Agriculture Rural Development and Water Resources, Health, Environment
Housing and Urban Development, and National Commission for Nomadic Education.
Part II, of the Bill deals with Functions of the Commission which includes,
designating, acquiring, controlling, managing, maintaining, the National
Grazing Reserves and Stocks Routes; Constructing of dams, roads, bridges,
fences and infrastructure considered necessary; Identification, retracing,
demarcating, monumenting, and surveying of primary, secondary, and tertiary
stock routes; Conserving and preserving in its natural state the National
Grazing Reserves and Stock Routes; Ensuring the preservation and protection of
any objects of geological archaeological historical aesthetic or scientific
interests in the National Grazing Reserves and Stocks Routes; the development
of facilities and amenities within the national Grazing Reserves; Fostering in
the mind the general public, particularly the pastoral and transhumance
population the necessity for the establishment and development of the National
Grazing Reserves and Stocks Routes with the object of developing a greater
appreciation of the value of livestock and environmental conservation; And
doing all such things which the commission may calculate and consider
incidental to the foregoing functions.
Part III deals with appointment of the
Reserve Controller and other Staff of the commission some of which may be
seconded from other government offices; their functions, and structure of the
commission.
Part IV deals with financial provisions for the commission
including that the commission may, subject to the Land Use Act, acquire any
land for the purpose of discharging its functions.
Part V, is the source of
concern, its states in part; “The following lands may subject to this Act be
constituted as National Grazing Reserve and Stock Routes- Any land at the
disposal of the Federal Government; Any land in respect of which it appears to
the commission that Grazing on such land should be practiced, and any land
acquired by the commission through purchase, assignment, gift, or otherwise howsoever;
Any land in respect of which it appears to the commission that primary,
secondary, or tertiary routes be established. The commission may take over the
ownership, control and management of any existing Grazing Reserve and stock
routes from any state government on agreed terms, with the state concerned.
Before any land is constituted as National Grazing Reserve, due notice shall be
given to the state governor where the land is situate, by the commission on
behalf of the President of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the intention of
the commission, the location, size or limits of the land…declaring its
intention for the purposes of government or for the particular use and
benefits, wholly or in part, of any class of persons, or for the benefit of any
community, state, or local government. Emphasis here is mine. The Commission
shall pay compensation on any land acquired by the commission; Any disputes
over claim for compensation shall be referred to the Land Use Allocation
Committee of the State concerned; Commission has power to enter into any
negotiation with holders of Statutory or Customary Rights of Occupancy for the
purpose of assignment or alienation to the Commission”
Part VI deals with the
Regulation of persons or class of persons to use the Grazing Areas,
Restrictions of conduct within the Grazing areas, offences which carry a fine
of N50,000= or imprisonment for five years or both.
Part VII called the
Miscellaneous Provisions restricts any legal action or suit against the
commission. A written notice shall first be given to the commission of the
intention to sue it or any member of the council; “No execution or attachment
of process shall be issued against the commission without the consent of the
Attorney General of the Federation” The Commission is indemnified out of the
assets of the commission against any proceeding whether civil or criminal in
which judgment is given….” The idea of this bill is to take farming land
belonging to communities, all over the country, make it Federal land permanently
held for any class of persons it may fancy or please, and in this case it is
for the economic, social, and religious benefit of the cattle rearers, whom we
know as Fulani Herdsmen. In the views of the proponents of this bill, it may
well be their answer to resolving the communal clash between the Fulani Herds
men, and rural farming communities across this nation, but the bill is laden
with potentially explosive provisions.
No comments:
Post a Comment