| Literature DB >> 31998471 |
Marie J Ducrotoy1,2, Ayodele O Majekodunmi1,3, Alexandra P M Shaw1,4, Husein Bagulo3, Wilson J Bertu5, Amahyel M Gusi5, Reuben Ocholi5, Susan C Welburn1.
Abstract
Increasing land use and associated competition for natural resources in the wake of high human and livestock population pressures have been major challenges confronting pastoralists of West Africa. This is especially true in Nigeria where Fulani make up 4% of the national population and prevailing national insecurity issues are impacting on pastoral livelihoods, including violent conflicts over land and ethnic, religious and political disparities. This study examined the dynamics of immigration within the Kachia Grazing Reserve (KGR), an exclusively Fulani pastoralist community in Kaduna State, northwest Nigeria, prompted by concerns from both the farming communities and the authorities about mounting pressure on existing limited resources, particularly in regard to availability of cattle grazing resources. Drawing from a household census conducted in 2011 and employing a range of qualitative methods (focus group discussions and key informant interviews), this study explored the drivers and consequences of immigration and subsequent integration within the KGR community. The study revealed two types of immigration: a steady trickle of pastoralists migrating to the reserve to settle and acquire land, secure from the stresses of competition from cultivators, and the sudden influx of internally displaced persons fleeing violent clashes in their areas of origin. Population pressure within the reserve has risen steadily over the past three decades, such that it is severely overgrazed (as evidenced by reports from the KGR community that the animals run short of pasture even during the wet season due to desertification and the spread of non-edible weeds). The newer immigrants, fleeing conflict, tended to arrive in the reserve with significantly larger herds than those kept by established residents. Pastoralists in the reserve have been forced back into the practice of seasonal transhumance in both wet and dry seasons to support their herds, with all the attendant risks of theft, clashes with cultivators and increased disease transmission.Entities:
Keywords: Conflict; Fulani; Immigration; Nigeria; Pastoralism
Year: 2018 PMID: 31998471 PMCID: PMC6956882 DOI: 10.1186/s13570-017-0105-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pastoralism ISSN: 2041-7136
Figure 1Geographical location of new immigrant (yellow) and established resident (red) households in June 2011
New immigrants and previously established residents in 2011
| No. established residents | No. new immigrants | Total population | % increase | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Households | 503 | 249 | 752a | 49.5 |
| People | 6142 | 2939 | 9081 | 47.9 |
| Cattle | 23,167 | 18,047 | 41,214 | 77.9 |
| Sheep | 5234 | 4921 | 10,155 | 94.0 |
| Goats | 3401 | 1427 | 4828 | 42.0 |
aOverall number of households was 777, but 25 households refused to provide information on year of settlement or number of people and livestock
Figure 2KGR populations in 2011 showing proportion of new immigrants
Figure 3Temporary housing erected by families during the mass immigration event of April to May 2011
Figure 4Temporary classrooms set up by the Nigerian Red Cross to cater for the refugee crisis in the KGR
Figure 5Number of households immigrating to the KGR 1978 to 2011
Figure 6High and low periods of immigration
Proportion of immigrants from conflict areas during peak periods of immigration (IRBC 1993; Osaghae and Suberu 2005; Falola 1998; HRW 2003, 2001; IFRC 2011; Higazi 2013)
| Period | Conflict | Location | Year | % immigrants from conflict area |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1990 to 1993 | Religious violence in Katsina by Shi’ite sect of Yahaya Yakubu | Katsina | 1991 | 78 |
| Ethno-religious violence over abattoir use and revenue control in Bauchi | Bauchi | 1991 | ||
| Intra-Islamic religious violence stirred up by Izala sect in Kano | Kano | 1991 | ||
| Zangon-Kataf riots over market location and revenue control | Southern Kaduna | 1992 | ||
| 1999 to 2003 | Ethno-religious clashes between Hausa-Fulani and southern Kaduna indigenes | Southern Kaduna | 1999 | 64 |
| Protests against the introduction of Sharia | Kaduna | 2000, 2001 | ||
| Protests against ‘Miss World’ contest and related ‘blasphemous’ newspaper article | Kaduna, Abuja, Lagos | 2002 | ||
| Natural resource conflict, political and ethno-religious crisis between Hausa-Fulani ‘settlers’ and Plateau indigenes | Plateau | 2001 | ||
| 2007 to 2011 | Natural resource conflict, political and ethno-religious crisis between Hausa-Fulani ‘settlers’ and Plateau Indigenes | Plateau | 2008, 2010, 2011 | 78 |
| Election crisis of 2011 across Northern Nigeria | Kano, Kaduna, Bauchi, Gombe, Niger and Bornu | 2011 | ||
| At least 10 isolated ethno-religious clashes across six local governments | Southern Kaduna | 2011 |
Figure 7Map showing areas from which households have migrated
Mean human and animal population at level of household
| Mean number per household | Established residents | New immigrants |
|---|---|---|
| Family size | 12.3 | 11.9 |
| Cattle | 46.4 | 72.9 |
| Sheep | 10.5 | 19.9 |
| Goats | 6.8 | 5.8 |