Category: Niger Delta

  • Criminals’ new tactics in Delta, by police

    The Delta Police Command has issued security alert over the activities of a criminal syndicate disguising as disabled persons to rob unsuspecting members of the public.

    The Command spokesperson, DSP Celestina Kalu, in a statement in Asaba, said the syndicate, which comprised of a man and a woman, operate by boarding commercial buses and robbing passengers at gunpoint.

    “The Delta State Police Command wishes to alert the general public, particularly transport companies operating in the southern part of the country of the activities of a criminal syndicate.

    “The syndicate comprised of a young man who uses clutches and a young woman. Their modus operandi is to charter commercial buses from any part of the region under the guise of coming to Agbor in Delta State.

    “They pretend to be coming to Agbor to pack their belongings, only to end up robbing their unsuspecting victims/drivers,” Kalu said.

    The police spokesperson said that information at the disposal of the command revealed that the criminal syndicate recently chartered a driver from Ilorin to Agbor and robbed him of his vehicle.

    She urged the public to report to the nearest police station or security agency if they come in contact with the syndicate.

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  • ‘Delta oil-bearing communities unhappy with Okowa over DESOPADEC’

    ‘Delta oil-bearing communities unhappy with Okowa over DESOPADEC’

    Sandys Omadeli-Uvwoh is a member of the EPZ committee which is to oversee peace process in the Deep Sea Project in the disputed land between the Itsekiris and the Ijaws in Delta State. In this interview with reporters in Benin City, Sandys said the fracas over the naming of the project was unnecessary. Osagie Otabor was there  

    You are a member of the EPZ committee. The siting of the project has been a source of problem between the Itsekiris and the Ijaws. Why has it been so?

    It was not properly managed. That shouldn’t have brought any disagreement between the Itsekiris and the Ijaws because there has been a land case for the past 39 years. The case was started in 1976 and the Ugborodo won. When the Ijaws went on appeal, the appeal court reversed the case to the lower court and the Ugborodo went to the Supreme Court. Right from when the first judgment was delivered, there was no crisis over the land. We maintained the peace. Now that the EPZ project is sited there, what would have happened is to determine how to manage the economic gains. It is a question of coming together on how to manage the project. Based on the lower court judgment, Ugborodo people are the landlord while the other people are customary tenants. Whichever way, we are all impacted as far the project is concern. That should not have brought up drums of war. The problem is not the land, it is how each ethnic group will benefit from the economic gains They are already doing the clearing. Itsekiris are doing their part of the clearing while the Ijaws are doing theirs. There is no fight.

    EPZ issue was one of the problems of Jonathan’s administration based on which community it should be named after. What is your stand?

    I didn’t see it as a problem but rather they brought in ethnicity. If Jonathan’s administration was serious, what they should have done is to look at the legality of the whole issue. We went to court in 1976 over this land. If this issue has been on for over 39 years and there was no fight, it shows you that the problem is not the land but the major issue bringing uprising is the financial benefits in terms of employment, contracts and other benefits. The Itsekiris and the Ijaws should reach sharing formula with other impacted communities so that everybody will benefit from it so that peace will be maintained.

    Ayiri recently secure a court injunction which some Ugborodo chieftains saw as a hindrance to peace process…

    I don’t see Ayiri as a troublemaker the way he is being painted. Ayiri’s stand is that Ugborodo people own the land. The matter is in court. Ayiri’s position is that it should not be named Gbaramatu in the first place. He has been against it. He has been publishing articles in favor of Ugborodo. When they were signing the memorandum for understanding, he said he was not part of it and that he would go to court.

    He has every right to go to court. He is an interested party. I supported his court processes. Ayiri is stopping the naming of the Deep Seaport after any community until the Supreme Court decides on who owns the land. He has gotten ruling from the lower court and that should not cause any problem because the ruling was not in favour of any of the parties involved. My Ijaw brothers should wait for the Supreme Court decision and for now let us think of how to make the environment peaceful for the investor and the government will have confidence in all the parties.

    Do you think going to court will solve the problem?

    Ayiri did not sue the Gbaramatu people. He sued the Federal Government and all the agencies surrounding the EPZ to stop them from naming the project after any community to avert chaos. Anybody going to court wants peace and is a law abiding citizen.

      A spokesman for the Ijaws said the naming of the project has been concluded. 

    It has not been concluded. The Ugborodo people have not said they are not the owner of the land while the Ijaws are saying they are the owner.  If Ayiri had said the Ijaws should not be given anything, that is when I think it would bring problem.

    What is the way forward as the Ijaws and Itsekiris have always fought wars? Will this not bring another war?

    I will not go to war when I know that I am the legitimate owner of the property and also when the matter is in court. I do not think this will bring war. The case in hand is like the biblical case solved by King Solomon over the ownership of a child. If the Ijaw believes that they own the land, they should wait for the Supreme Court to decide.  The suggestion is that there should be a broad interface committee that embraces all stakeholders whether you are landlord or customary tenants. The immediate issue is surface benefit of what is on ground. It can be settled by both parties reaching a compromised. They should use the formula used for bush clearing to determine other benefits until Supreme Court determines the owner of the land. They are doing clearing there and nobody is fighting each other.

    Chairman of the EPZ committee has taken a decision on the issue. Why are you opposing him?

    I am not opposing him but I am entitled to my opinion based on my experience and my age. The issue on ground is not about being educated with many degrees. When Ayiri was writing and putting paid advert, nobody called him to order. Now that he has gone to court, they are making noise over it. In law, you don’t sleep over your rights because he wants peace. He has done the right thing as a civilized Itsekiris man by going to court instead of going to war as a committed patriotic son of Ugborodo. And he is taking after his maternal great grandfather, Olueh, who stood against late Chief Dore Numa over Ugborodo land. Any committed patriotic sons of Ugborodo should be proud of Chief Ayiri. That last meeting we held over this issue, Ayiri was invited and when he stated his own side of the story, he said he would consult his lawyers. The chairman was in court the day the injunction was granted that the place should not be named after any community. When you look at Ayiri’s case, nothing has been done. If the Supreme Court decides to rule in favour of Ugborodo, will the chairman now say sorry, the place has been named after Gbaramatu or the ruling of the Supreme Court has no value because an agreement has been reached? Nobody should bring sentiments. The matter is in court and nobody should beat drums of war. The Itsekiris/Ijaw crisis was not based on ownership of land. The origin of that crisis started with bunkering. It was bunkering that sparked the war before local government issue came up. The whole fighting was based on bunkering.

    An Ijaw chieftain has said that the present DESOPADEC bill presented by Okowa will created crisis among oil producing communities.

    Okrika is a friend and I have regard for him. Even if what Okrika is trying to say is right but he should not be the one because he started the illegality as pioneer chairman of DESOPADEC that Okowa is trying to legalize. He aided them because he was a pioneer chairman of DESOPADEC. I was a member of the host communities who fought for the establishment of DESOPADEC. We made Okrika our leader. Every ethnic nationality contributed to press for the 13 percent. The purpose is to douse tension in the oil communities. What Obasanjo agreed was for each oil producing community to get according to what is produced from their areas. This was to enable the communities protect their areas. That will put the communities to check pipeline vandalisation and bunkering. We felt we must be the ones to be appointed. We asked Okrika to be the chairman and he instead abandoned us and connived with the government to do what Okowa is trying to legalize. For Okirika to be shouting now means he is seeking relevance. He wants the government to negotiate with him. He is not shouting on behalf of the oil producing communities.

      How would the change in the bill bring about crisis?

    What Uduaghan tried to do was in line with the original concept which was for each ethnic nationality to have their person. People felt Uduaghan did not attempt to effect the changes during his eight years in office and wanted to bring it in in the dying days of his administration. Right now, what Okowa is trying to do is to legalize the illegalities they have been practicing. Okrika started the illegality. As far as I am concern, we will go to court. We are not going to fight. If they pass the law and it is not okay with the people, we will fight it in court.

    Are the Itsekiris okay with the bill as proposed?

    Not at all; unless you are not from oil producing areas. If the bill is passed, DESOPADEC will become government agency that takes care of every part of the state and no longer that of the oil producing communities. Okowa can decide to use 60 percent of the money to develop any area he likes. The bill is anti-oil producing communities. They should not pass that bill. All the oil producing communities in the country should come together and take RMFC to court or a commission should be set up for the oil producing communities. They should demand that the 13 percent should be given to the host communities directly and not through the State Governments. House of Assembly members from oil producing communities should not pass that bill. By doing that, the government should ask those oil companies whom they acquired land from in 1970 before the Warri crisis.

     

  • Official: 6,000 applicants jostle for garment factory jobs in Cross River

    The Chief Press Secretary to Cross River Governor, Mr Christian Ita,  said over 6,000 applicants applied for positions in Calabar Garment Factory and the state’s Green Police.

    Ita disclosed this in a statement issued in Calabar on Wednesday.

    According to him, most of the applicants are youths and widows of the state origin.

    He said it was in line with Governor Ben Ayade’s promise to create employment opportunities for the people.

    “Since the job vacancies for the two projects were advertised a few days ago, over 6,000 applicants have so far submitted their resume to the office of Secretary to the State Government (SSG) and Forestry Commission.”

    He said: “This is in line with Gov. Ayade’s promise during his inaugural speech on May 29th 2015, to rekindle hope by breaking the vicious cycle of employment.”

    The CPS stated that the garment factory and the Green Police were two of several projects designed to create over a thousand jobs for the teeming unemployed population to mark the governor’s first 100 days in office.

    “Ahead of its commissioning in a couple of weeks, the garment factory is expected to absorb hundreds of women, mostly widows while the Green Police will employ about a thousand youths, ‘’ he said.

    He said the Green Police was a non-arm bearing organisation established to protect the state’s vast forest reserve and the environment in general.

    Ita said the governor, while conceiving the two projects, saw them as a more institutionalised way of empowering the people, rather than giving them handouts as empowerment which was basically unsustainable.

  • Knocks, kudos for Dickson’s State of emergency in education

    Knocks, kudos for Dickson’s State of emergency in education

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson comes under the searchlight over his inaugural promise to turn around the state’s education sector, writes  Mike Odiegwu

    In his inaugural speech in 2012, Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson made education a major thrust of his administration. Without mincing words, he declared a state of emergency in the educational sector.

    In fact, before the declaration, there were disturbing concerns in the state’s educational  sector. Infrastructural decay and institutional neglect were the order of the day. Many school buildings were dilapidated and most communities could not boast of primary and secondary school structures. It was common to see pupils and students sitting on decrepit bare floors to receive tutorials from few demotivated teachers.

    Indeed, Bayelsa was rated low in educational performance and standard. Teachers converted their classrooms to commercial centres and engaged in petty trading during school hours to make ends meet. Most children also abandoned schools to engage in hawking while others turned hobos, wallowing the streets like urchins. The general neglect affected the psyche of students who used to come last in national examinations.

    No wonder when Dickson declared the state of emergency, Bayelsans jubilated. Stakeholders in the educational sector leaped up in joy and described it as a welcome development. The governor had a bumper package for education. Infrastructure was to witness a total turnaround. Education was to be free and compulsory at least from primary to secondary schools and teachers were to be employed, trained and retrained.

    Free and adequate supplies of instructional materials to schools; free school uniforms, sandals, bags, books to pupils and provision of desks, tables and computers for a conducive learning atmosphere were all components of the emergency in education declared by the governor.

    But over three years after the pronouncement, how has the educational sector fared in the state? The Niger Delta Report visited critical stakeholders in the primary and secondary sub-sectors of education to gauge their experiences and their expectations in the sector.

    All of them commended the motive behind the governor’s emergency in education. They said the gesture has positively changed the face of education and added value to the sector. They particularly appreciated the ongoing infrastructural turnaround of schools and the prompt payment of teachers’ salaries by the Dickson’s administration.

    But they raised many concerns of challenges bedeviling the emergency. Their experiences revealed that most of the components of the emergency are not working. They are of the opinions that the system is still fraught with many problems because the governor has not created an opportunity to have direct interactions with them.

    In the primary schools, the state of emergency appears to be a partial success. The state Chairman, Association of Primary School Head Teachers of Nigeria (AOPSHON), Mr. PPS Faafa, commended government’s efforts in building, rebuilding and renovation of primary school teachers. Apart from new classrooms, he observed that the government built quarters for head teachers.

    “The government has tried in providing physical infrastructure in some of the primary schools. We believe that the project will be extended to other schools because there are schools that are still dilapidated. They have tried in building houses and quarters for teachers”, he said.

    He, however, said the schools are facing serious challenges with other components of the emergency. He said the schools are still expecting school materials promised them at the take-off of the new regime. He said all the free items promised the pupils such as school uniforms, sandals, books and bags have yet to reach them.

    He said: “If the state of emergency is declared, everything concerning primary school is supposed to be free. In 2012, some textbooks, exercise books and a few school uniforms were supplied.

    “But from then till now, nothing has been supplied to schools and every year, we have new intakes. We don’t know what to do about those coming newly. So, it is not running smoothly with us.

    He further said that the government is yet to supply teaching and instructional materials to primary schools across the state.

    “There is no teaching material. We buy chalk and markers. We improvise these things to teach in the schools. But the supplies from the government is not forthcoming”, he said.

    He added: “We are finding it very difficult and we want the government to come to our aides to make sure these things are provided”. He said the problem is compounded because the government has deactivated the Parent-Teacher Associations (PTAs) which used to come to their aide.

    “They said we shouldn’t have anything to do with PTAs. If not so, sometimes the PTA helps to provide these things for us. But now we don’t have support,” he said.

    According to him, the schools are also lacking enough teachers.

    “For example in a school, we have over 600 pupils with only 17 teachers to attend to them which means a class of A, B and C will have only one teacher and they are all clustered in one classroom. We need teachers. Many teachers have been retired and since they are retired, the government should come in and bring more teachers”, he said.

    Faafa said teachers are also lacking incentives. He observed that the government has yet to pay the 18 per cent minimum  wage to primary school teachers and to promote teachers with increased salaries. He said the N15,000 monthly impress given to each head of primary school is too meagre to run the schools.

    “When it is time for examination, no kobo is provided but we are asked not to collect a dime to enable us provide materials for children. Most of the new schools they are building don’t have fictional water systems”, he said.

    He said: “The governor with his state of emergency means well for the state. We believe that these challenges exist because he is not aware of them. We know him to be a listening governor. He is not vindictive and as a man with passion for education and lover of Bayelsans, he will surely ensure that what we need to make the system work is provided to us”.

    In the secondary school sub-sector, the President, All Confederation of Principals of Secondary Schools (ANCOPSS), Mr. Abbey Ayaegbemi, highlighted some strong points scored by the government in its drive to implement its emergency.

    He said the government has done well in the areas of physical infrastructure, payment of WAEC and NECO fees of students and payment of school fees of teachers. He said most of the challenges bugging the system arose from the high number of schools across the state.

    For example, he said though the government has recorded a feat in building and renovation of schools, many secondary schools are still begging for their turn. “The structures cannot be generally complete. The government has tried in building and renovating but the schools are many. Some are still yearning for their turns”, he said.

    He said secondary schools are also having problems with instructional materials adding, “Government has been promising and we are still expecting”. He said the materials were in short supply in last session. According to him school uniforms were supposed to be supplied to students but were discontinued perhaps for logistic constraints.

    He said: “The emergency covers a lot of areas. There are areas the government is performing and other areas requiring improvement. We are appealing that the renovation work should be extended to other schools. The government should also try more in teachers’ welfare.

    “Teachers hold the key and if they are not happy, it will affect the working mood. We thank the government for its efforts but areas like the payment of emoluments are always dragging the teachers backward making them look as if they are not true civil servants.

    “For the school system to operate maximally, we also require enough teachers. The last employment of teachers was done in 2006. Since then, there hasn’t been employment and within this period, some teachers have been dying, some have been retiring, some have joined active politics while others have converted to other professions creating a space. So, we need new teachers especially as the government has brought in new curriculum introducing new subject areas.”

    While appealing to the government to regularly supply instructional materials on time, Ayagbaami said ANCOPS is grateful to the governor for being behind the current re-articulation policy in the system. “The policy has helped to make the schools better. Hitherto, we had junior and senior schools with two principals. In a school we had two levels of control and this created confusion.

    “Students were not properly distributed. But the schools are now better and we thank the government for being behind the policy. But the process is not complete yet. We appeal that he should back up the proper completion of the reticulation policy”, he said.

    In his general assessment, the Principal State Secretary, Nigerian Union of Teachers (NUT), Mr. Okechukwu Okoroafor, appreciated the governor’s passion for qualitative education. He said the governor perceived some level of decadence in the sector which promoted him to declare the stage of emergency.

    “The educational system was almost in a state of comma before the present governor came into office”, he said noting that Dickson has displayed a high-level of purposeful ness and willingness to improve the sector and put it right.

    He said in the spirits of the emergency, the governor has been promptly paying teachers’ salaries.

    He added: “The NUT as a trade union, is not mincing words, nor slacking in bringing to his notice the things that are to be done”.

    Okoroafor said some hiccups still exist in the system. He said: “There ought to be parity between the state’s governing board and the State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB) employees. The existing disparity tends to discourage the teachers in the junior secondary school sector”, he said.

    Commending the governor on the development of infrastructures, he said, “No one can take that away from Governor Seriake Dickson; from the primary school up to the tertiary institutions. Still, there are some of the schools awaiting their share of the development”.

    He further called for adequate and regular supplies of recurrent instructional material such as chalk, markers, diaries, registers and others at the beginning of every term. But he said the term “free education” must be properly defined to know who should provide the school uniforms, fund the examination materials, practical subjects.

    He explained that the government should pay attention to sports activities and warned against undue interference of school programmes by community leaders. “Teachers should be left to do their job as doctors are granted free hands with the patients”, he said.

    Okoroafor, however, added that the governor will quickly resolve some of the hiccups in the educational sector if he can listen to them directly. “People try to be polite, and thereby disrupt flow of information. If we are allowed to meet with the governor, there will be a take-home. Something must be done; the school system needs to be salvaged; the re-articulation of schools must be revisited”, he said.

    When the Niger Delta Report visited the state Chairman, NUT, Mr. Bokolo Tonworio Tobin, he also appraised the emergency, commended the governor but raises some problems mitigating against the system.

    He listed some of the challenges as non-promotion of teachers, unavailability of resources and amenities in the schools; harassment of teachers, neglect of teachers and paucity of funds.

    He further said that the number of teachers was not enough and called on the government to empty more teachers and carry them along in policy formulation.

    “Teachers should be protected against parents’ unwarranted interference in administrative measures”, he said.

    Though Niger Delta Report could not get the direct responses of the Commissioner for Education, Mr. Dein Benedourmene, it was learnt that the educational stakeholders had a close-door meeting with the commissioner on Monday in his office where the challenges bugging Dickson’s emergency were discussed.

    One of the teachers, who attended the meeting but spoke in confidence, said: “Like we earlier said, there are some high points of the demands of teachers. We reasoned together with the commissioner. He assured us that instructional materials will be supplied to all the schools within this holiday period, so that on resumption, they can now be put into effective use.

    The source said: “Even, he underscored the importance of the schools being properly funded for the purposes of conducting exams; the JSS3 exams, promotion classes’ exams, and the unified exams.

    “It was a very fruitful discussion, and we are hopeful that, come September, the schools will function very well. He regretted that the ongoing payment of N18,000 minimum wage arrears which have not gotten to teachers.

    “But he said that he will consult with the governor to make sure that they review the method of payment, to make sure that teachers are paid as at when due. He re-emphasized governor’s interest in the educational sector saying it was why he declared the state of emergency in education.

    “He also commented that they will improve upon what they have done on infrastructure. The area we harped on was provision of instructional materials, diaries, registers, books, chalk, papers, stationeries and others.

    “These are areas where we felt we were in dire need. And, he assured us that they would not just be provided, but they will be provided before schools re-open, sothat when schools resume, they will function effectively. By our own assessment of our interaction with him, it was a very fruitful one, and we have high hopes that everything will be okay for both the pupils, students and teachers as well.

    “The commissioner said it is still the policy of the government to operate free and compulsory primary and secondary education. In that case, parents and students ought not to pay anything; the government will fund everything.

    “The true position is that, according to him, government is still willing to provide free uniforms, but it does not mean that parents should not buy uniforms for their children. A child could have uniforms in multiples.

    “On the shortage of teachers, the commissioner said there is a rationalisation going on after which the vacancy will be determined, and then, recruitment can take place. He said emphatically that, it is only based on statistics that recruitment could be done, if not, it would be a haphazard recruitment. We are satisfied with our discussion with them.”

  • Akwa Ibom seeks USAID’s help to fight HIV/AIDS

    Akwa Ibom seeks USAID’s help to fight HIV/AIDS

    Akwa Ibom State Governor Udom Emmanuel has appealed to the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) to expand its HIV/AIDS intervention programme to all local government areas in the state.

    The governor made the appeal on Tuesday in Uyo when the agency paid him an advocacy visit in line with its 2015 programme outline for the state.

    Emmanuel, who was represented by his deputy, Mr Moses Ekpo, assured USAID of the government’s support in the fight against deadly disease.

    “The readiness of my administration to welcome efforts that will complement the goals and cardinal agenda of my leadership is not in doubt.

    “We use this medium to appeal for necessary assistance from international donor agencies in combating menace of the dreaded disease.

    “We will work with USAID through the ministry of Women Affairs and Social Welfare to ensure that the organisation achieves its objectives in the state,” he said.

    The governor noted that the USAID had robust programmes that could bring succour to vulnerable children and women in the state.

    He said that the state looked forward to having sufficient succour from the organisation.

    Earlier, the USAID representative, Mrs Susan Coleman, said that they came to acquaint the governor with its programmes on HIV/AIDS and Tuberculosis.

    “We are also here to introduce the newest project of Orphans and Vulnerable Children in the state as well as indicate effort to mitigate the impact of the virus,” she added.

     

     

  • Rivers Deputy governor Banigo to doctors: be compassionate

    Rivers Deputy Governor Ipalibo Banigo has urged medical practitioners to be more compassionate in discharging their duties.

    Banigo spoke on Wednesday when members of the Christian Medical and Dental Association (CMDA) association called on her in Port Harcourt.

    She called on the association to revive the ethics of their practice as medical doctors and Christians as Christ demonstrated in his encounter with the sick while on earth.

    “It’s is important we practice with love as believers in this profession to save lives,” she said.

    Banigo advised the group to bring healthcare closer to the rural dwellers through their medical outreach programmes.

    She commended the doctors for keeping the vision of the founding fathers of the association and urged them not to relent in their service to God and humanity.

    Banigo noted that the State Government was determined to provide quality and affordable healthcare service to the people.

    “The State Government will soon embark on the training and retraining of medical personnel to update their knowledge on current practices in the profession,” she said.

    Dr Friday Aaron, the State Chairman of CMDA, said that they had been on special medical mission to attend to medical, physical and spiritual needs of patients.

    Dr Chima Onoka, Chief Executive Officer of CMDA in Nigeria, said the association was currently providing succour to 1,500 Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) through its manpower.

    Onoka called for financial assistance from the state government to touch more lives in the rural areas of the state.

  • Akwa Ibom governor’s wife donates relief materials to VVF patients

    The wife of Akwa Ibom State Governor, Mrs. Martha Udom Emmanuel, has visited the Pope John Paul 11 Family Life Centre, also known as the VVF Hospital, Mbribit Itam; she donated relief materials, such as mattresses, pillows as well as food items ranging from bags of rice, beans, garri and toiletries to patients in the hospital.

    The governor’s wife, who was represented by her Special Assistant on Women Affairs , Rev. Mrs. Mercy Cephas, thanked the members of staff of the hospital for their commitment to service, noting that though God was the source of help for man, with human beings as the channel.

    She promised that government would do everything possible to ameliorate the plight of patients. While interacting with patients in the wards, she also put smiles on their faces by giving each patient in the hospital cash for their upkeep

    The matron of the home, Rev. Sister, Sylvia Ndubuaku, thanked the governor’s wife for the visit, stating that it was a confirmation of her love and compassion for the vulnerable in the society. She added that the government has supported the hospital in many ways, such as the provision of nurses and other members of staff.

    She highlighted some of the needs of the hospital to include rehabilitation of inmates, firm hospital beds, surgical instrument as well as television set for the patients, while soliciting for governments’ support in this regard.

    Also speaking, a patient in the hospital, Mrs. Mercy Exodus, thanked the governor’s wife for her humane disposition towards the needy and vulnerable in the state, praying that God would sustain and guide her and the governor in the discharge of their duties. She also thanked Mrs Emmanuel for giving them with gifts.

     

  • Bayelsa celebrates Ijaw musicians, honours 17

    The late King Robert Ebizimor still sings and dances a year after his death. His images pop up on television and his voice regularly hits the radio. The airwaves still reverberates with his sounds and lyrics laced with Ijaw tradition. Ebizimor has remained a household name even after death.

    Indeed, Ebizimor immortalized himself with his talent before kissing the world and the Ijaw nation goodbye. He was the most popular musical icon who promoted Ijaw culture and took it out of the shores of the Niger Delta region.

    He died in a ghastly motor accident along the East-West Road on the 31 of July, 2014. But in 2015 the Governor of Bayelsa State, Mr. Seriake Dickson, through the Commissioner for Culture and Ijaw National Affairs, Dr. Felix Tuodolo, resurrected him. The governor became the first to celebrate the first anniversary of the late Ijaw musician’s demise.

    At the Gabriel Okara Cultural Centre in Yenagoa, Ijaw musicians, government officials and upcoming Ijaw artistes gathered to honour the legend of Ijaw music. The governor honoured the living and departed Ijaw musicians. Dickson presented special awards to some of them in the state, in recognition of their various contributions to the preservation and promotion of Ijaw culture and tradition.

    Dickson expressed government’s commitment to establish a studio at the Bayelsa State Musical School, after its inauguration. He said the studios when built will be used to record all songs, including that of late Rex Lawson. He said that proceeds from the sale of the albums will be made available to their families.

    The governor described King Ebizimo as “the most gifted and prolific musician in Ijaw land”. He expressed regret that “he was not celebrated enough, while he was alive adding that the Ijaw nation will greatly miss him.”

    He said: “We were sad that we lost him but we also thank God for his life. This is one man the Ijaw nation will miss for a very long time but we are happy because he gave us a lot to celebrate.”

    “King Robert Ebizimo gave us so much music and a lot to celebrate. Between last year and now, if he had been alive, he would have produced more albums so in that sense, we miss him.

    “When the Bayelsa State School of Music is fully equipped and commissioned, my intention is to have all his songs; from the first to the last one before his death recorded.

    “And, I will also direct the gentleman, who will administer the school to get the songs played by late Rex Lawson and others and the studio will wax their songs and sell them from time to time and the proceeds essentially would be given to their families because from generation to generation, we want to preserve their music as part of our heritage.”

    Without mining words, the governor designated the 31st of every July as Ijaw Cultural and Musical Day to further project the identity and positive values of the people.

    Persons who received awards are  Chief Agbeotu Teinbo, General Alaska, Bestman Doupere, Orutugu Fubara, Skido Ozidi, Simple Boys of Okutukutu and White Eagles of Sabagreia.

    In his welcome address, Tuodolo described Dickson as a lover of culture and said a “society that fails to honour its heroes and achievers is not worth being proud of”. He praised the governor for honouring persons who made the state proud.

    He said: “Those that have made Bayelsa State and the ijaw nation proud should be honoured so that we that younger ones should pick courage from them and also excel in our different endovours.

    “I stand to authoritatively state that no government in Bayelsa State has honoured its heroes like the present restoration government. We have brought the celebration of Isaac Boro to international standard where people come all the way from America to grace the occasion here in Bayelsa.

    “We have named the Cultural Centre after a great poet from Bayelsa State, Dr. Gabriel Okara, we have sponsored the memorial of our great hero, Late Melford Okilo we have built a structure and name it after  streets after  Late General Azazi. We have name Streets after  elders like Lambert Eradiri, Isaac Boro all in honour of our people”.

  • The leopard in Savanna bush (1)

    The leopard in Savanna bush (1)

    The serenity of the environment is beyond query. There are trees everywhere. Birds can be heard chirping away. It is rural splendour at its best.

    The big building, which houses the Writers’ Haven, is quaint. Its red brick walls glitter under the sunny day. Many, who have been there, mostly writers who need to escape the madness of the city to have quiet moments with the muse, have described it as ‘paradise in the forest’.

    A writer-in-residence, Solomon Uhakheme, has made this paradise his home in the last two weeks. He is there to commune with the gods of writing. He has vowed not to leave until he is through with the manuscript of his debut novel which he has been working on for the past three years.

    At the moment, Solomon buries his head in a collection of short stories. The story he is reading is about a once great empire known as Igodomigodo. It was a pre-colonial empire whose capital was known as Ode. It was perhaps the oldest and most highly developed state in the coastal hinterland of what is now known as West Africa. The British Empire’s invasion, which came to a head in 1897, ensured things fell apart.

    In those days, its rulers were addressed as Osigo, whose rough translation means ‘sky king’. The kings wielded so much influence that they were seen as not human. In a single day, the Osigo can make a million men ready for war. He was first among equals.

    The description of the Osigo’s square fascinated Solomon.

    “It is as large as a town and is surrounded by a special wall similar to the one which encircles the town. It is divided into many magnificent palaces, homes and apartments. It comprises beautiful and long square galleries resting on wooden pillars,” the writer observed.

    Solomon was close to tears when he got to the aspect where the ‘sky king’ was rendered impotent by the colonial masters. Though the kingdom continued in a way, that era was gone for good.

    On concluding this aspect, Solomon loses interest in the story and abandons it. Somehow he becomes disturbed. He leaves the living room for the balcony and gazes into the horizon. His thoughts are blank. Nothing is really taking shape. He wonders how something so great can become easily eroded.

    His phone soon rings. He checks the caller identity. It is Ikponwosa, his friend calling from Ibinu. They have not seen or spoken for some time now. His first instinct is to answer it at once. But he queries his readiness to engage in meaningful conversation at the moment.

    The phone rings out and Ikponwosa calls back. Still he ignores it, but Ikponwosa calls back the third time.

    “Something must be bothering him,” Solomon concludes and picks the call.

    “Hello Solo,” Ikponwosa says.

    “Long time,” Solomon replies.

    “I have been trying your number in the last one week and could not get through to you…”

    Solomon cuts in to explain that he has been away in the Writers’ Haven and that he only has network when he is in his room, but the network disappears when he is in the Muse Chamber, where he works on his manuscript.

    “We are leaving in fear in Ibinu now,” he says.

    “Why?” asks Solomon.

    “It is feared that the Oba has gone into the penthouse…”

    Solomon laughs at the metaphor. He understands the culture of the Ibinu people. Even in the 21st century, no one dare say the King of Kings is dead. He never dies. He either enters the ceiling or goes into the penthouse.

    “There are fears that the rituals will soon begin and like you know, goats are not used for this sort of sacrifice.”

    Solomon cannot but think at this moment. Is it really true that the Oba must be accompanied on the last sojourn by men whose time has not come? Must blood be shed for the sojourn to be worth the while? He has no answer to these questions. But, those are the beliefs out there.

    “Many non-indigenes who teach in our school have run out of town. Thank God the schools are on holidays. I actually called you thinking I could escape to your house too, even though I should not really be afraid since I am an indigene…”

    Solomon cuts in: “Are these fears really justifiable?”

    “It is better to be pre-emptive that wait for evil to come first. Ours is a society shielded in so many myths and secrecy. For instance, our King of Kings is regarded as God’s representatives on earth. He is even the leader of a church which is located at the spot where our people had direct contact with God long before the coming of the European explorers and missionaries.

    “A folklore I read somewhere said a powerful spiritual leader offered to take the peoples’ plea to God as a result of drought and pestilence in the land. He gave up his life during one of the prayer sessions. He was expected to return and bring succour to the people. While waiting for him, the people continued their prayers but rather than his return, they got a huge fireball that descended from the sky. At the point where the ball of fire dropped, a huge black stone was found and a place of worship was built there. It was destroyed when the invaders came in 1897. But, it was rebuilt by the father of King of Kings, who is now believed to have gone to the penthouse.

    “Service at the church is conducted in our language. Baptism of new converts is done with the white chalk. The sayings of the ancient belief written by the wise men are used to teach the people.”

    Solomon bursts out laughing as Ikponwosa concludes his folklore about the mightiness of the King of Kings.

    “Is there an official confirmation of the king joining his ancestors?”

    “No,” answers Ikponwosa, “It is never done that way. Certain things must be done before such an announcement is made. The only thing we have been told is that he will not engage in any public engagement for the time being. Such public engagements include courtesy visits, hearing of complaints from individuals, families and communities, and in particular, complaints over inheritance and land disputes, are therefore suspended until further notice. So, they are denying that the Oba was in dialogue with his ancestors.

    ”It has been more than four months now since we are told that. The Oba has neither been seen nor heard in public and we dare not speculate about the Oba. We the people of Ibinu have held religiously to our tradition. Our king’s passing is made public only when we want to. Modernity has tried to affect it, but still you can’t compare it to what happens in other places. We all just have to wait for the chiefs to tell us when they are ready. For now, we can only talk in silence. Our Oba is like no other. There lies our dilemma and the fear pervading our land over what may be done or not if indeed our Oba has truly gone to the penthouse.”

    There is a brief silence between the two of them. Solomon soon breaks it.

    “I will just advise that you should be careful.”

    “Thanks,” Ikponwosa says, “I’ll keep in touch.”

    Solomon returns to the bedroom, jumps on the bed and sleep soon comes visiting. Within minutes, he is woken up by a nightmare.

    All he can remember is a voice screaming: “The leopard is ill in the savannah bush. The leopard is ill in the savannah bush. The leopard is ill in the savannah bush.”

    There is sweat all over him and he keeps wondering: “What is the meaning of the leopard is ill in the savannah bush?”

    He knows his time is up in the Writers’ Haven? He will be back to complete his novel. For now, he needs to seek answer to this question: What is the meaning of the leopard is ill in the savannah bush?

    And to Lagos, he returns.

     

    • To be continued next week

     

  • NGO to partner Cross River agency to tackle environmental hazards

    The Nigerian Environmental Society, Cross River Chapter, has expressed its readiness to collaborate with Cross River Basin Development Authority (CRBDA) to tackle environmental hazards in the state.

    Dr Udeme Udofia, the president of the state chapter, made the pledge in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Wednesday in Abuja.

    Udofia said the organisation took the decision in its drive to effectively manage environmental related challenges, as part of its objective for sustainable development in the state.

    ‘’We pledge to work with the state basin authority as part of our objectives to foster partnership in areas of environmental management, pollution control and capacity building,’’ he said.

    The president also stressed the need for Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) before embarking on any project in the state.

    According to him, such assessment would g a long way to helps in sustaining the environment and the authority’s projects.

    ‘’EIA is just an information gathering exercise carried out by the developer and other bodies.

    ‘’This enables a local planning authority to understand the environmental effects of a project before deciding whether or not it should go ahead.

    ‘’Such consideration will serve as protection and conservation of the environment for sustainable development,’’ Udofia said.

    He said environmental management was everybody’s business; saying that every society or organisation should be proactive in environmental related issues before embark on any project.

    Udofia advocated enlightenment campaign to sensitise the public on environmental sustainability.

    Meanwhile, the president urged Nigerians to contribute their quota in enhancing the environment by clearing drains and planting trees to control erosion.