Following the influx of herders and cows into the state, Benue State Governor, Samuel Ortom has pledged to personally go to the villages where the herdsmen flooded to arrest breakers of anti-open grazing law.
Speaking at the official launch of Antiretroviral Therapy Surge Response and Undetectable Equals Untransmittable held in government house, Makurdi yesterday, Ortom said that the state had been enjoying relative peace since the enactment of the anti-open grazing law.
According to him, over 400 herdsmen have been charged to court and convicted for floating the anti-open grazing law.
He said: “Over 400 people have been charged to court and convicted, they are not only Fulani herdsmen, we have Tiv, Idoma and Igede but the Fulanis are more.
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“Now that I’m back, I will personally go to those areas (where Fulani herdsmen have invaded with there cows) to enforce the law.
Speaking on the strange illness that ravaged part of the state recently, the governor said that the report he had was that the cause of death of five persons and the sick ones was as a result of chemical used by the villagers to fish in the water which they also used for domestic use.
He said that contrary to social media reports that the strange illness was coronavirus or Lassa fever, the governor explained that there is no coronavirus in Benue.
On the fight against HIV, the governor promised that his administration was a commitment to creating an enabling environment for all partners to tame the epidemic.
He further charged traditional rulers, religious leaders, and civil society organizations to join hands to fight the disease by creating awareness and remove stigmatization and discrimination.
Earlier, the US, Mission in Nigeria, Charge d’ Affairs, Kathleen Fitzgibbon said that the mission is committed to HIV free society just as she said that the US had spent a huge amount of money in the fight of the disease in the country.