* Expect price of cow to hit N2m each, says Miyetti Allah
The Lagos State House of Assembly, on Thursday, passed the State’s Value Added Tax (VAT) Collection Bill and the Anti-Open Cattle Grazing Bill.
The House passed the two bills after a unanimous vote by all the 40 lawmakers during the plenary session where they were read for the third time.
The bill is entitled “A Bill for a Law to Prohibit Open Cattle Grazing in Lagos State, The Trespass of Cattle on Land and for other connected Purposes.”
“A Bill for a Law to impose and charge Value Added Tax (VAT) on Certain Goods and Services, Provided for the Administration of the Tax and Other Related Matters.”
Obasa, thereafter, directed the Acting Clerk of the House, Mr Olalekan Onafeko, to transmit a clean copy to Gov. Babajide Sanwo-Olu for his assent.
Obasa commended members of the Assembly for their passion to ensure that the state continues to develop.
“I thank you all for this historic exercise,” he said.
The Assembly, on Wednesday, held separate public hearings on the bills with stakeholders expressing support for the bills.
Meanwhile, the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association (MACBAN) had earlier warned that the price of a cow could go as high as N2 million if the Lagos State government enacts its anti-open grazing law.
The association’s zonal secretary for South-West, Maikudi Usman, made the claim on Wednesday during a one-day public hearing organised by the Lagos State House of Assembly on the anti-open grazing bill.
Usman said ranching, as being proposed by the government, is capital intensive, regretting that his members cannot afford it.
“If cattle are bred in one place, the price could go up to about two million naira each. We agreed with some local chiefs in other states that anyone who wants to rear cows in a location should register and should indicate when he is leaving,” he disclosed.
The Miyetti Allah leader added that the best way to breed cattle was to move them from one place to another, saying that they were moved to different places during the rainy and dry season.
“Our breeders are not used to breeding cattle in one place. They move from here to another place.
“When we say we will keep cattle in one place, the owner of the cattle will not have funds to feed the animals in one place.”
Making further excuses, Usman pleaded with the government for more time to enlighten herdsmen on breeding cattle in one place rather than encroaching on farmlands.
“We are pleading with the Lagos State government to give us more time to go tell our people and train them how they will be breeding cattle in one place and not encroach on farmers’ land,” he said.
Usman further urged the state government to subsidise the cost of raising the animals in one location.
He detached his group from criminal herdsmen that have been destroying people’s farm among other criminal activities such as armed robbery and kidnapping.
“A Fulani man moves from one place to another to ply his trade, but we have some bad eggs that are fomenting trouble.
The government should allow us to tell our people that they don’t want our cows to destroy people’s farmlands,” he pleaded.
“We have met with stakeholders in Ekiti, Ondo and even Oyo States and we reached agreements with them.”
In his own remarks the president of the Lagos State Sheep Farmers Association, Mustapha Ibrahim, said the bill was not meant to attack anybody, but that it is all-embracing.
Ibrahim noted that land resources are important to the State, adding that the relationship between cattle herders and farmers should be symbiotic.