ABUJA, Nigeria—At an intersection seven miles from Nigeria’s presidential villa, frustrated drivers honk as a herd of cattle feeds on the grass of the median strip and slowly marches across the road, their hooves clattering against the asphalt. For the teenage herder guiding them, Ismail Abubakar, it is just another day, and for most drivers stuck in the traffic, it’s a familiar scene in Nigeria’s capital of Abuja.

Abubakar and his cattle’s presence in the city center is not out of choice but of necessity. His family are originally from Katsina State in northern Nigeria, where a changing climate turned grazing lands into barren desert. He moved to Idu many years ago when it was a rural, bushy, and less developed part of Abuja—but it now hosts housing estates, a vast railway complex, and various industries.

“Our settlement at Idu was destroyed and the bush we used for grazing our cattle cut down to pave the way for new houses,” Abubakar said in English. The change forced his family to settle on a hill in the city’s periphery and roam the main streets for pasture.

Fulani herders like Abubakar are traditionally nomadic and dominate West Africa’s cattle industry. They normally rely on wild countryside as free pasture to graze their cattle, but the pressures of modernization, the need for land for housing, crop farming, and human-caused climate change are challenging their way of life. To keep cattle off Abuja’s major roads and out of gardens, some suggest that herders need to start acquiring private land and operating like other businesses. To do that, though, they would need money and government incentives.

“It’s disheartening,” said Baba Ngelzarma, president of the Miyetti Allah Cattle Breeders Association of Nigeria, a Fulani pastoralists’ advocacy group. “Nigeria is presented as an unorganized people. The herders take the cattle wherever they can find green grasses and water at least for the cows to survive, not minding whether it is the city or somebody’s land.”

He added that part of the problem is the government’s failure to harness the potential of the livestock industry by offering incentives such as subsidies and infrastructure like water sources and veterinary services at designated grazing reserves.

For its part, the government has said it will address the issue, previously promising fenced-off reserves for cattle herders. In July, President Bola Tinubu announced a new livestock development ministry, which Ngelzarma said would help revive abandoned grazing reserves. No minister has been appointed yet.

Fewer places to go

Nigeria is home to more than 20 million cows, mostly owned by Fulani herders, but even though it has the fourth-largest cattle population in Africa and its dairy market is valued at $1.5 billion, almost 90% of local demand is met through imports, according to the U.S. International Trade Administration. It’s a sign of the industry’s inefficiency, Ngelzarma said: Cows stressed from constant moving and poor diets can’t produce milk.

For Abuja, the city’s environment bears the consequence, and so do businesses when traffic grinds to a halt because cows are crossing busy roads. In other parts of Nigeria, herders are often involved in violence with farmers over access to land, especially in central and southern Nigeria where the two industries overlap with religious and ethnic divisions.

Four designated grazing reserves in rural areas surround Abuja, but they lack the needed infrastructure and have been encroached on by other farmers and illegal settlers, according to both Ngelzarma and Festus Adebayo, executive secretary of the Housing Development Advocacy Network.

With those reserves not functioning, herders set up settlements anywhere and stay for as long as they can before legitimate owners claim space or the government builds on it.

Mohammed Abbas, 67, has repeatedly had to move locations over the years. Most of his current settlement in the city’s Life Camp neighborhood has been taken over by a newly constructed petrol station, and he is aware that the remaining land will soon be claimed by another owner.

As a smallholder pastoralist, he said he could not afford to buy land in Abuja for a permanent settlement and ranching. To afford one, “I [would] have to sell all my cows and that means nothing will be left to put on the land,” he said in Hausa.

Other pastoralists would rather resist.

“We are not going anywhere again,” said Hassan Mohammed, whose family now occupies a strip on the edge of a new estate near the Idu train station. Once a vast bush, the area has been swallowed by infrastructure and housing projects. Mohammed now also drives a lorry on the side because of the shrinking resources needed to keep cattle.

Despite repeated orders from the owners to vacate, Mohammed said his family would stay put, using the dwindling strip as their home base while taking their cattle elsewhere each day for pasture. The landowners have repeatedly urged the government to resettle Mohammed’s family, but the government has yet to take action.

“Many don’t have anywhere to call home, so they just find somewhere to sleep at night with the cattle,” said Mohammed in Hausa. “But for us, we are not leaving [unless] there is a new place within Abuja.”

Making room for development and cows

Folawiyo Daniel, an Abuja-based real estate developer who has endured difficulties with pastoralists that affect his project development, said the issue is a failure of urban planning.

“Real estate development is not the problem,” he said; the government should revive grazing reserves in the city for pastoralists.

Adebayo agreed, saying “It is time” for Abuja’s minister Nyesom Wike to take action and prove that “the problem of open grazing in the city of Abuja is solvable.”

Herders have to be moved to a place designated for their work or restricted to defined private property, he said.

The official responsible for animal husbandry in the agriculture ministry said they could not comment on a major policy issue without authorization, while the spokesperson for the ministry in charge of Abuja declined a request for an interview.

In March, after the Belgian ambassador to Nigeria raised concerns to Wike about cattle roaming Abuja’s streets, he replied that efforts were in progress to stop the indiscriminate grazing, although he did not disclose specific details.

Herders say they are not opposed to a restricted form of herding or operating like a normal business that buys their own feedstock instead of using free pasture and water wherever they find them.

The problem, according to Ngelzarma, is that the government has neglected the sector and does not provide incentives as it does for other businesses, such as irrigation systems for crop farmers and airports for private airline operators paid for by the government.

“The government should revive the gazetted grazing reserves fitted with the infrastructure for water and fodder production, training, and veterinary services and generate jobs and revenues,” Ngelzarma said. “Then, you can say Stop roaming about for free pasture.’”

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The Associated Press climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

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