The Adamawa State Police Commissioner,
Mohammed Ghazzali has been criticised over his comment and handling of
the Fulani herdsmen attacks on Kodomun, following the discovery of eight
more corpses.
Youths from Kodomun who brought out the
corpses of the slain members of the community from the bush said, the
recovery of the additional bodies had raised the death toll from the
attacks which started on Friday to 30.
The incident, came on the day the
Adamawa State Governor, Mohammed Jibrilla, visited the paramount ruler
of the area, the Hama Bata, HRH Alhamdu Teneke, and held a security
meeting with him at his palace with other service chiefs in the state in
attendance.
Ghazzali, who visited the area on Monday shortly after the attacks by herdsmen, had reportedly claimed no life was lost.
Ghazzali’s denial of any casualty
resulting from the attacks, while addressing journalists, after the
security meeting, elicited anger from those present at the palace.
Ghazzali explained that his refusal to
deploy policemen to Kodomun, which had come under attacks, from Fulani
herdsmen, earlier on Friday and Saturday, before that of Monday was done
so as not to make him look like “taking sides”
He said, “My men were on the ground. We
would not risk our men to be there just to give security to one side so
that the other side will not think we have taken side with one side.
“There are two different people involved
in these clashes: the herdsmen and the farmers. And we have to be very
careful in handling such type of communal clashes.”
It was, however, the police commissioner’s insistence that no life was lost in the Monday attacks which sparked the uproar.
The angry youths who threatened to
unleash mayhem in the aftermath of his comment were dissuaded from their
action by the elders in the palace.
The monarch, who said his people had
been killed in the attacks, challenged the security chiefs to visit
Kodomun, to find out for themselves if indeed there were “no deaths”.
He said, “A lot of people have been
killed. Today they would go and see for themselves the corpses of those
slain in the attacks some of which they would find in the town and those
yet to be brought in lying in the bush.”
But Martins Babale, who represented the
state governor, distanced the state government from the utterance of the
police commissioner, saying” This is his own opinion. His professional
opinion.”
Babale said he would visit the razed
community after the military might have combed the area and recovered
the corpses of those killed in the attacks.
Death toll hits 30 as herdsmen attacks Adamawa
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