OMG!! Northerners Block Food Trucks From Entering Lagos

OMG!! Northerners Block Food Trucks From Entering Lagos



The south of Nigeria mostly depends on the north for its food, but the farmers-herders crisis is driving a wedge through that business relationship.

Alhaji Bello, a peripatetic salesman who hawks beef around Surulere, Lagos, has been forced out of business for well over a week now.



“Meat is so expensive now,” he tells Pulse, his blackened hands quickly shoved into his blood stained trousers. “In fact, we don’t even see the meat to buy anymore.”




In the last couple of weeks, suspected hoodlums and brigands in the northern region have been impounding food trucks making their way down Nigeria’s south in what has been labelled a reprisal move, as ethnic tension stemming from a recurring farmers-herders crisis engulfs Africa’s most population.




Some northern elements have vowed to punish and economically sabotage the south by starving the region of food items, after open grazing of cattle was outlawed by powerful state governors in the southwest and after violence erupted in Oyo and Ondo states; as indigent settlers and Hausas clashed over open grazing and destroyed farmlands.

Trucks laden with cows and perishable items like onions, pepper and tomatoes are now getting impounded along the Ilorin-Jebba expressway and around the Kwara, Benue borders, with the drivers handed marching orders to head back north.

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