President Muhammadu Buhari, Advisor Gender, HD Centre, Hajiya khadijath H. Gambo, Africa Regional Director, Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue, Ms. Meredith Preston McGhie and others during an audience with the centre for Humanitarian Dialogue at the State House in Abuja |
President
Muhammadu Buhari said Monday in Abuja that poverty, injustice and the
lack of job opportunities were mainly responsible for inter-communal and
intra-communal conflicts in Nigeria.
Speaking while receiving a delegation from the Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue,
an organization active in the promotion of peace in Nigeria, President
Buhari said that to achieve enduring peace in the country, greater
effort must be made to eradicate poverty and injustice.
The
President described ethnic and religious conflicts in parts of the
country as outward manifestations of underlying problems of joblessness,
injustice and poverty.
On conflicts
between farmers and herdsmen, President Buhari said that a plan to map
out grazing areas will soon be presented to the Nigerian Governors Forum
as a temporary solution to the frequent conflicts until cattle owners
are persuaded to adopt other means of rearing their cattle.
The
President commended the Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue for the
relative peace that had returned to Plateau State as well as their
on-going activity in Southern Kaduna.
He
agreed with the Centre that dialogue was always preferable to the use
of law and order mechanisms and force in the resolution of conflicts.
The Executive Director of the Centre for Humanitarian Dialogue, David Harland
told President Buhari that following their success in facilitating the
settlement of the inter-ethnic and inter-religious conflicts in Plateau
State, the group had moved to Kaduna State.
He
expressed the hope that the techniques used in bringing peace to
Plateau State can soon be deployed to deal with the Boko Haram
insurgency and other conflicts in Nigeria.
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