Cattle Archives - Citi 97.3 FM - Relevant Radio. Always https://citifmonline.com/tag/cattle/ Ghana News | Ghana Politics | Ghana Soccer | Ghana Showbiz Wed, 10 Jan 2018 15:30:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.0.8 https://citifmonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-CITI-973-FM-32x32.jpg Cattle Archives - Citi 97.3 FM - Relevant Radio. Always https://citifmonline.com/tag/cattle/ 32 32 Herdsmen fleeing Agogo after ‘attack’ on security personnel https://citifmonline.com/2018/01/herdsmen-fleeing-agogo-after-attack-on-security-personnel/ Wed, 10 Jan 2018 15:22:07 +0000 http://citifmonline.com/?p=390311 Some herdsmen in the Asante Akyem North District of the Ashanti Region, are fleeing the area following heightened tensions caused by the shooting of four security personnel. One of the cattle owners who spoke to Citi News, said security personnel were shooting ruthlessly at their cattle and stealing the meat. [contextly_sidebar id=”S5j4fbNOHb57E01nCsL3S8AK1RrwSZpo”]Four security personnel including three military […]

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Some herdsmen in the Asante Akyem North District of the Ashanti Region, are fleeing the area following heightened tensions caused by the shooting of four security personnel.

One of the cattle owners who spoke to Citi News, said security personnel were shooting ruthlessly at their cattle and stealing the meat.

[contextly_sidebar id=”S5j4fbNOHb57E01nCsL3S8AK1RrwSZpo”]Four security personnel including three military officers and a police officer, who had been deployed to the area to evict the herdsmen, were shot by an unknown assailant following renewed government efforts to address the long-standing conflict between the nomadic herdsmen and local farmers.

The cattle owner said the security personnel have consistently targeted their cattle in their operations, adding that the situation is forcing herdsmen out of the area.

“Some security personnel came into Agogo Township around December 23, they took to the bush and started shooting at the cattle, killed them and carried them away. Even today, they still do it. Fulani herdsmen are now fleeing the township. Some are currently hiding. Anytime they go, they shoot the cattle. They have KIA trucks following them and whenever they kill the cattle they carry it away. I think they share it among themselves.”

Meanwhile, a former DCE for Asante Akyem North, Paul Kingsley Avero, has warned that the long-standing feud between crop and cattle farmers in Agogo will not end until a clear road-map is drawn and adhered to.

He said measures adopted by the current administration to ensure sanity may not yield the needed results because similar attempts in the past failed.

“We should be prepared to solve it once and for all…. If the decision is to take them off, there must be a road-map. You give them the information; tell them when you want them to leave, tell them you are prepared to escort them and never to return.”

Mr. Avero decried the decision to shoot and kill the cattle noting that “the animals are innocent.”

By: Jonas Nyabor/citifmonline.com/Ghana

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Cattle Ranching document needed to end Nomadic clashes – Minister https://citifmonline.com/2018/01/cattle-ranching-document-needed-to-end-nomadic-clashes-minister/ Thu, 04 Jan 2018 10:02:22 +0000 http://citifmonline.com/?p=388357 The Eastern Regional Minister, Eric Kwakye Darfour, has asked the government to accelerate work on the proposed National Cattle Ranching document. This document will among others come up with the best ways to end incessant clashes between peasant farmers and herdsmen. [contextly_sidebar id=”nVZwWkAGiQHUbc5UlvHQV8m3oUKxMzic”]Speaking to Citi News, the Minister said if the document is generated and passed […]

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The Eastern Regional Minister, Eric Kwakye Darfour, has asked the government to accelerate work on the proposed National Cattle Ranching document.

This document will among others come up with the best ways to end incessant clashes between peasant farmers and herdsmen.

[contextly_sidebar id=”nVZwWkAGiQHUbc5UlvHQV8m3oUKxMzic”]Speaking to Citi News, the Minister said if the document is generated and passed into law, the sporadic clashes would be curbed.

“The government has tasked about four ministries to produce a national cattle Ranching document that will be sent to parliament to be approved or pushed into a law such that whoever rears cattle in Ghana, would have to abide by that document, but that has not come out yet” he said.

The conflict between herdsmen and peasant farmers in some parts of the country in the past, has led to the loss of lives, property and farm produce.

In recent times, nine persons have died from such clashes at Dwerebeafe, Aboyan and Mpeamu in the Kwahu East District of the Eastern Region.

Eric Kwakye Darfour has asked local authorities in the region to come out with by-laws for the time being that will help minimize clashes between crop farmers and herdsmen.

“In the meantime, I have asked my MMDCEs to also come out with bylaws, bring it to the state attorney, they will look into it, if it doesn’t infringe on our national constitution, they will send it back to the assembly members who will adopt them and they will become a working document that will be used to regulate cattle rearing in various jurisdictions, otherwise we do not have specific laws which will readily come into place to regulate” he said

He said cattle rearing has become a crucial part of Ghana’s agriculture economy hence the need to regulate and sanitize the sector.


By: Farida Yusif/citifmonline.com/Ghana

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Alhaji Grunsah, others fume over cattle killings in Agogo https://citifmonline.com/2017/12/alhaji-grunsah-others-fume-cattle-killings-agogo/ Tue, 26 Dec 2017 17:31:22 +0000 http://citifmonline.com/?p=386728 Cattle owners at Asante Akyem Agogo in the Ashanti Region, have accused the District Security Council (DISEC) in the area of failing to give them prior notice before embarking on an operation to drive away their cattle from the town. The owners claim that the joint security task-force carrying out the operation has deliberately killed […]

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Cattle owners at Asante Akyem Agogo in the Ashanti Region, have accused the District Security Council (DISEC) in the area of failing to give them prior notice before embarking on an operation to drive away their cattle from the town.

The owners claim that the joint security task-force carrying out the operation has deliberately killed over a hundred cattle, and have sold out some to indigenes of the area.

[contextly_sidebar id=”NT5mGPVQeLhf2NFSqjRmxIcdHgDstbeu”]Members of the Cattle Owners and Dealers Association, have described the move as unfair since they have always cooperated with the DISEC to see to the enforcement of a court order to drive away cattle from the Agogo Township.

Indigenes of Agogo and its environs for the past years have accused herdsmen of allowing their cattle to graze and destroy farmlands which are their only source of livelihood.

Some indigenes and herdsmen have died in a number of clashes over the conflict.

Speaking to Citi News, one of the affected cattle owners, Alhaji Karim Grusah, said the court ruling to evict herdsmen with their cattle from the area did not include the killing of the cattle.

He said cattle owners in the area have always paid compensation to farmers whose farmlands have been destroyed by the cattle.

Alhaji Grusah indicated that, members of the Association have also been engaging in a dialogue with the security on how best to effectively enforce the ruling, and also prevent alien herdsmen from bringing their cattle to the area.

“According to my herdsman, the military have killed about 50 of my cattle. He said he saw them lying in the bush. If they kill, they take it away and sell to the people in the area. He told me they come in with a KIA truck, and when they kill the cattle, they put them in and sell to the people,” he said.

He appealed to Government to intervene in the matter since the actions of the task-force will not ensure an effective enforcement of the court order the DISEC is seeking to implement.

Alhaji Grusah accused the District Chief Executive (DCE), and the Member of Parliament for the area of ordering the task-force to deliberately kill their cattle.

He also warned that the Association might stop its members and cattle dealers from selling out their cattle if Government fails to use proper measures in addressing the issue.

By: Hafiz Tijani/Citifmonline.com/Ghana

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The Mundari: The tribe dying for their cows https://citifmonline.com/2016/10/the-mundari-the-tribe-dying-for-their-cows/ Sun, 30 Oct 2016 15:19:22 +0000 http://citifmonline.com/?p=263358 South Sudan is the world’s youngest country, and it has witnessed immense change since gaining independence in 2011. The promise of peace has given way to civil war, and tribal rifts continue to run deep, permeating political affairs. Over two million people have been displaced according to the UN, and tens of thousands killed. Amid […]

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South Sudan is the world’s youngest country, and it has witnessed immense change since gaining independence in 2011. The promise of peace has given way to civil war, and tribal rifts continue to run deep, permeating political affairs. Over two million people have been displaced according to the UN, and tens of thousands killed.

Amid the tumult is the Mundari, a people who would rather get on with doing what they do best: looking after their cattle.

Meat the family

It would be hard to find a more dedicated group of herdsmen than the tribe who live on the banks of the Nile, north of the capital Juba. Their entire lifestyle is geared around caring for their prized livestock, the Ankole-Watusi, a horned breed known as “the cattle of kings.”
These cows grow up to eight feet tall, and are worth as much as $500 each. It’s no wonder the Mundari view these animals as their most valuable assets (or that they guard them with with machine guns).
Photographer Tariq Zaidi spent a fortnight earlier this year documenting their lives and the devotion they show towards these animals. Zaidi has captured tribes and indigenous people from over 30 African nations, though he was nonetheless taken aback by the relationship between man and beast.
“It’s hard to overstate the importance of cattle to the Mundari people,” says Zaidi, “these animals are everything to them.”
The photographer describes how “almost every man I met wanted me to take a picture of them with their favorite cow.” Their wives and children, on the other hand, were given short shrift.
Perhaps this is in part due to the function and symbolism of the Ankole-Watusi. Each bovine is so highly prized that it is rarely killed for its meat. Instead, it is a walking larder, a pharmacy, a dowry, even a friend. It is clear that cow is a resource maintaining not just a people, but a way of life.
The Mundari, tall and muscular, may “look like bodybuilders,” says Zaidi, “but their diet is pretty much milk and yogurt. That’s it.” Other bodily fluids have more unlikely uses. Mundari men will squat under streams of cow urine, both an antiseptic, Zaidi suggests, and as an aesthetic choice — the ammonia in the urine color the Mundari’s hair orange.
Meanwhile dung is piled high into heaps for burning, the fine peach-colored ash used as another form of antiseptic and sunscreen by the herdsmen, shielding them from the 115-degree heat.
The cows, adds Zaidi, are among the world’s most pampered. He says he witnessed Mundari massaging their animals twice a day. The ash from dung fires, as fine as talcum powder, is rubbed into the cattle’s skin and used as bedding, while ornamental tassels swat flies from the eyes of the herd’s most prestigious beasts.

Outflanking war

The Mundari sleep among their cattle, “literally two feet away from their favorites” says Zaidi, and guard them at the point of a gun. It’s not unreasonable for the tribe to go to these lengths.
“Rustlers are a huge issue for them,” the photographer explains. “Their cattle are a form of currency and status symbol, and form a key part of a family’s pension or dowry. Since the end of the civil war, thousands of men have returned to South Sudan looking for wives, which has pushed up the ‘bride price’, making these animals even more precious and increasing lethal cattle raids.”
Such raids have been deadly for the Mundari, but the effects of war are manifold. Landmines make finding fresh pasture a dangerous lottery. When he visited, Zaidi says the tribe were using a small island in the Nile as a safe haven. The conflict, he adds, has the paradoxical effect of preserving their way of life.
“The ongoing war in South Sudan has cut off the Mundari tribe from the rest of the world,” he says. “They don’t venture into the town, they stay in the bush, and it’s why their unique way of life endures.”
Zaidi says the Mundari have no taste for war and “their guns are not to kill anyone but to protect their herd.” All the Mundari want to do is take care of their livestock, he argues, “and they will protect them at all costs.”
Source: CNN

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