Reacting to Miyetti Allah’s call to President Muhammad Buhari and National Assembly to decried open grazing ban by southern governors, Chairman of South South Governors Forum and governor of Delta State, Dr Ifeanyi Okowa, said the group had only displayed its ignorance of the law.
Okowa, who spoke through his Chief Press Secretary, Mr Olisa Ifeajika, said: “That shows their level of education and knowledge of the law. National Assembly will tell governors to stop making laws to govern their states. Where is that one in the constitution?
“Governors are making laws to govern their states, a group is saying it wants to go to the National Assembly to asked governors to stop making laws to govern their states? It demonstrates their level of knowledge and understanding of laws of this country. ’’
”Well, let’s see how far they will go with it. I don’t see any governor who will be ready to join issues with them. Governors are heads of their states; so if they are making laws for the good governance of their states, the National Assembly should stop them?
“May be they will create their own National Assembly. Anyway, anything happens in this country these days. The governors have the right to make laws for the good governance of their states. They are protected and empowered within the ambit of the Constitution of this land.
“So, they that want to contest it, let us see how far they will go. My governor is not ready to join issues with them at all in anyway. I don’t see the National Assembly asking governors not to make laws to govern their states.
“The governors are not trying to make laws to change any federal law; they are to make laws for the good governance of their states and they are entitled to that within the law. I don’t know how they see the National Assembly! To even contemplate it alone, is abnormal.”
Recall that Fulani cattle breeders in the country on Monday appealed to President Muhammadu Buhari and the National Assembly to do everything possible to frustrate anti-open grazing laws being passed by some states across the country, describing the laws as satanic against their age-long tradition.
The cattle breeders, operating under the aegis of Miyetti Allah Kauta Hore, also expressed concerns over the actions of the states, particularly Southern states, insisting that they were counterproductive to their known economic business.
In a statement by its National Publicity Secretary, Saleh Alhassan, at a briefing in Abuja, decried the ranching method of rearing cattle as captured in the anti-open grazing laws.
“Ranching as envisaged by many requires massive capital investment and difficult to sustain, not economical and is not for small livestock holder centered,” he said.
Consequently, he called on the National Assembly to come to the rescue of the pastoralists by resuscitating and passing the Grazing Reserves Commission Bill and other livestock management bills initiated by the previous National Assembly.