The speaker hailed Matawalle over the successes recorded under the Peace and Reconciliation Initiative targeted at ending banditry in the state.
File Photo
The Zamfara State Governor, Bello Matawalle has said that the state would implement the Ruga settlements initiative, to resettle herders, and boost economic activities.
According to NAN, the governor told the Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr. Femi Gbajabiamila, who visited the state that the state government would go ahead with the programme despite its suspension by the Federal Government.
“I wish to inform the Honourable Speaker that the controversial issue of Ruga, which is being hotly debated across the vast spectrum of the federation, has been unanimously accepted in our state.
“Since time immemorial, the communities of farmers and herders in the state have been living side by side, reinforcing each other, even though there were cases of skirmishes from time to time, they did not take the ugly dimension they have taken in our contemporary times.
“We are confident that Ruga Programme which will transform the nomads to sedentary life will significantly address the farmer/herder crisis in the state,” he said.
Matawalle added that arrangements had been put in place to set up the Ruga settlement on a 100 hecter land in each of the three senatorial districts of the state.
According to him, the government would provide schools, hospitals and veterinary clinics as well as earth dams in the new settlements.
He appealed to the leadership of the National Assembly to facilitate the release of N10 billion Federal Government Special Intervention Fund approved for the state to resettle people displaced by banditry.
The governor also called on the federal government to establish a North-West Development Programme to address the ravages of banditry and other challenges in the zone.
The News Agency of Nigeria reports that Gbajabiamila had chaired a peace accord between bandits’ groups and local vigilantes in Gusau.
He promised to do his best on the issues raised by the governor.
The speaker hailed Matawalle over the successes recorded under the Peace and Reconciliation Initiative targeted at ending banditry in the state.
He noted that the voluntary release of 109 kidnap victims in the last 10 days was highly commendable and an indication that all sides were willing to give peace a chance.