Category: Niger Delta

  • Pomp as St Patrick’s Old Boys mark 80th anniversary

    Pomp as St Patrick’s Old Boys mark 80th anniversary

    It was homecoming for Old Boys of the St Patrick’s College, Ikot Ansa in Calabar as they converged in the Cross River State capital from far and near to celebrate the 80th anniversary of the school.

    The institution, fondly referred to as SPACO established by Catholic Church in 1934, has over the years produced several notable Nigerians.

    For the former students, called Patricians, across generations who had lost touch with each other, it was an opportunity to establish long lost ties as well as establish new ones, clad in their traditional green blazers as they carried out several activities on the premises of the institution that molded them, years ago.

    National president of the alumni association, Chief Charles Ifeanyi, extolled the institution which he said had made them become what they are today by ensuring the received the best of moral intellectual and physical upbringing.

    The chairman of the anniversary planning committee, Engineer Sylvanus Edet,, who was in the institution from 1969 to 1973 said, “Honestly today I feel like even crying for joy. It is a great day for me to witness the 80th anniversary of this great institution. This institution molded me, gave me all the knowledge staring from the first day I entered here in class one and came out in class five and because of the teaching and the resilience and courage I got from this school, I was able to excel in my university. So I can never ever fail to remember this institution and give all I have to it. It is a great day for me.

    “The school stands for knowledge and wisdom. Patrick was a patron saint in Ireland and he is always behind us and we are achievers. St Patrick boys are always achievers. So we can never regret being here, and we try as much to impart on the young ones. That is why we invited them here today so they can aspire to be like us in future.

    “Our national president left this college sixty years ago but you still see him in blazer as a student. I left about 35 years ago, you still see me happily wearing the blazer. This is enough encouragement for the younger ones. We have a lot of passion for this college.

    Another old student, 85-year old Emmanuel Orji, who also wrote a book on the history of the institution launched as part of the anniversary celebration was also full of praise for his alma mater.

    Orji who schooled there from 1945 to 1949 said, “SPACO started as an international school and when I was here, I entered in 1945. We came from all over the country. In fact we didn’t know where we came from. We saw ourselves and brothers and that is why we caught the spirit of SPACO. The spirit is caught not taught. It comes into you naturally. It is a fantastic place.”

    A retired civil servant and prolific writer, he continued, “The school made me what I am today. I cannot be pushed around. I am a highly principled man and that is why I am respected. I wrote the book because I am a historian by nature. I taught and love history. I started reading Nigerian newspapers in 1936 as a small boy and all the things that have happened in this country, I follow them. I like to contribute to development in my own little way to remind people what happened in the past, because in this country we have a tendency to forget the past. We don’t even think about the future. We don’t think about the future because we don’t cast our minds backwards to know what happened in the past. Unless you know your past, you can never appreciate your present and plan well for the future.”

    Another Old Boy and Director of the MTN Foundation, Mr Dennis Okoro, said, “Today is a dream come true. The kind of training this school gave us made us has helped us. And that is why we worked very hard to celebrate an 80th anniversary despite all odds.

    “SPC stands for a good Catholic institution that not only develops you intellectually, but also morally and physically. Look at the number of football fields we have. We had lawn tennis and hockey pitch. We had all sorts of games. So it was a total rounded development, which you don’t have today. Some schools don’t even have grounds not to talk of playing fields. I advise the young ones take their period here as a training field to avoid eating their future. They should suffer today and defer gratification and after six years it will yield fruit.”

  • Awaiting good news

    I got  an exciting  news from Calabar, the Cross River State capital some days back. It was delivered in the form of a story by our man in the tourism city. The news: the summit hills projects are taking shape and by April next year, all will be ready for use.

    I am sure you are wondering what these projects are. I will get to that shortly. Just permit me to go to the beginning of the matter. Tinapa was the beginning.

    Tinapa, a leisure and shopping hub, was meant to be a good news. Donald Duke, the handsome ex-governor of Cross River State, was the bearer of the news. Excitement was in the air. The global media, especially the CNN, felt the vibe. It was like Nigeria’s own Dubai was in the making, even though on a small scale.

    All the trappings were there: an artificial lake; water parks; a shopping mall; a beautiful four-star hotel; and above all, an atmosphere of peace and tranquility. The promise was just too much to ignore.

    I understand that the prices of landed property in the Tinapa axis also felt the vibe. It shot up in expectation of the good times. For a state that literally parties all of December through its Calabar carnival, little fear was expressed in terms of traffic to the resort and leisure centre.

    But the wait soon lasted than expected. Not that the project was not completed on time. It was just that the hype seemed to have overlooked a critical element of such a venture. Planned as a Free Trade zone (FTZ), the project was completed without this all-important status backed by law. It was not a law that the Cross River State House of Assembly could pass. That would have been easier to get. The Federal Government is the only authority that can gazette an entity as FTZ. After so much time, this hurdle was crossed. But not in Duke’s time. His friend and successor, Liyel Imoke, who was minister and at a point a senator while he was governor, accomplished this task. By the time this was done, a lot of people who bought into the dream had already given up.

    More hassles were on the way. For a long time,  the businessmen operating there were having issues with the customs which, for some unexplained reasons, did not threat them as operating in a FTZ. This meant they had to pay duties, thus rubbishing the duty-free goods that were supposed to be sold in the stores. I understand that there were also the issue of big vessels not being able to come into the Calabar port over the issue of dredging, which forced the businessmen to bring their goods through Onne Port in Rivers State.

    It did not take time before other funny issues came up. For instance local government areas in the state said they invested in the project and decisions on it should involve them. This was at a time when the project’s indebtedness to banks had grossed many billions. The debt buyer, the Assets Management Company of Nigeria (AMCON), has since come in. It is in the process of appointing a manager for this place.

    While that is being awaited, the shops are empty. A colleague, who was there some months back, said the place is like a ghost town. People he spoke with made him realize that the Federal Government can also help by ensuring that the status of the place as a FTZ should be respected by customs. They also told him that the Federal Government must fix its roads in Calabar to help Tinapa. They did not forget to talk about the need to complete the dredging of the Calabar port.

    But thanks to the Lakeside Hotel and Mo Abudu’s EbonyLife TV, which is using the Studio Nollywood, Tinapa would just have been money rotting before our very eyes.

    And that brings me to the summit hills projects. The projects are expected to also breathe life into Tinapa. There is a link between the Calabar International Convention Centre (CICC), an integral part of the Summit Hills projects, through a monorail.  This way, the distance between Tinapa and Calabar’s heart will be shortened.

    Imoke’s idea for the summit hills projects was to build a new town around Tinapa. The town has superb road network. Even when the projects had not been totally finished when I last visited, the promises they held could easily be seen. It has an international specialist hospital, a partnership between the government and a foreign entity. This is meant to engender medical tourism. I was told it would have everything Nigerians rush to India and other places for. There are also residential homes on the hills. The golf course promises to be the best in the country.

    With such a life built around Tinapa, the giant may just wake up. It has been in a deep slumber. I am eagerly waiting for the doors to the CICC and other projects on the summit hills to be thrown open in April. Imoke, let’s keep it a date. It sure will be a good way to end a two-term administration, which only a few will knock for failure.

     

    Edo, Edo, Edo!

     

    The lawmakers are yet to find peace. Now, we hear of explosion rocking a property of a former Secretary to the State Government (SSG), Pastor Osagie Ize-Iyamu. Since the explosion, brickbats have been flying. Ize-Iyamu pointed finger of guilt at the Adams Oshiomhole-led government. The government said it was all a ploy by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to cause wahala in the state. You may wonder why Ize-Iyamu  would accuse the government. May be a few background will do.

    Until some months back, Ize-Iyamu was a member of the All Progressives Congress (APC), which is the ruling party in the state. He fell out with the governor and defected to the PDP. Since then, each of them has seen nothing good in the other.

    The explosion coming at a time when Nigerians are yet to get over the invasion of the legislators’ quarters by thugs, which led to the destruction of property, does no good to the state’s image.

    If there are doubts about who are behind this violence in Edo, it is crystal clear that politics has a lot to do with it. But is it really worth it? Why maim, destroy and spill blood in the name of serving the people? Is politics not about serving the people? If it is, then why cause havoc? I just can’t get it.

     

    Akwa Abasi Ibom State

     

    Pardon me if I confused you with the title of this piece. It is about Akwa Ibom State. I just like spelling it out that way to show its true meaning “God’s own state”. The elders are still angry with Governor Godswill Akpabio. Elders here include ex-Governor Victor Attah and former Minister Don Etiebet. Their grouse: Akpabio cannot force a candidate on the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). The governor has told the youths not to allow themselves to be misled by the elders.

    Aside this drama, there is also the one about some people in Abak 5 trying to stop His Excellency from becoming a senator in 2015. This is coming at a time the governor is garnering endorsement for his ambition.

    So, Akpabio is fighting two battles: to install a successor and to be a senator next year. On the face value, he looks set to defeat his opponents, including men who some months back were his boys.

    The state is sure one place we can’t close our eyes on. Interesting times lie ahead. Watch out.

     

  • ‘Our grievances with Bayelsa federal lawmakers’

    The day of reckoning has come. It is now the turn of the downtrodden, the rich and the mighty who make up the constituencies and wards in Bayelsa State to decide the fate of their elected representatives.

    The constituents have rolled out their scales to weigh the performances and achievements of persons they gave their mandates some years ago to fight for their collective interests at the National Assembly.

    But the scaling results seem unsatisfactory to the power owners, the constituents whom sovereignty belongs.

    Elders and leaders of the three senatorial districts that make up the state had at different separate enlarged meetings taken collective decisions that appeared to have foreclosed the possibility of the federal lawmakers to return to their seats in 2015.

    Unless the decision which zoned the seats out of the reach of incumbent lawmakers are reversed, the legislators are not even fit to stand for primary elections on the platform of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in 2015. They can, however, seek to retain their positions in another political party possibly the All Progressive Congress (APC).

    Already, some heavyweights who are believed to have the blessings of major power brokers in the state are rising to challenge the lawmakers. The first to indicate a senatorial interest is the Secretary, South-South Peoples Assembly (SSPA), Dr. Ayakeme Whiskey.

    Whisky, who is one of the board members of the Federal Capital Development Authority (FCDA), is seeking to occupy the seat of the Bayelsa West Senatorial District at the Senate. The senatorial district is made up of Ekeremor and Sagbama local government areas.

    He is up against Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, who hails from Ekeremor. While Lokpobiri represents the district in the upper legislative house; Dr. Stella Dorgu, who is from Sagbama, represents Sagbama/Ekeremor in the House of Representatives.  Lokpobiri is serving his second term in the Senate while Dorgu, who replaced Governor Seriake Dickson, when the former became governor, is doing her first term.

    Recently, the stakeholders in the district had zoned the senatorial seat to Sagbama and the House of Representatives position to Ekeremor. The zoning which was kicked against by the supporters of Lokpobiri has become a big threat to the third term ambition of the senator.

    The supporters of Lokpobiri had argued that the decision of the PDP elders was against performance and legislative experience. According to them the state deserved to have ranking senators and Lokpobiri should be reelected in 2015 to fill the void.

    Favoured by the zoning, Whisky, who spoke to the Niger Delta Report, thinks otherwise. Whisky who was also a former commissioner in the state said beyond zoning, the incumbent lawmakers have failed to give their constituencies effective representation.

    He said:  “As far as I am concerned, our democratic experiment is still at infancy. It has not matured to a stage where somebody will say we want ranking senator. Ranking should be a product of service to the people you represent.

    “Ranking should not become an issue only when you feel that by going to the Senate two, three times, you will have the opportunity of being given highly valued House position. It should take more than that.

    “If the people you represent see evidence of effective representation, they feel being carried along at every point in time, they share in a sense of belonging to the National Assembly, it should be voluntary position on their part to say our son has done well, let him go.

    “To that extent, I fully subscribe to the decision of the senatorial party leadership that Sagbama Local Government, which started representation at Senate for eight years and relinquished that to Ekeremor, and Ekeremor having made eight years, the office of the Senate should now be zoned to Sagbama.

    “I fully subscribe to it. Those who want to go three, four times should be a product of people’s consensus agreement and not because they want it.”

    Whisky, who hails from Bolu-Orua, a community that shares boundary with the hometown of Governor Dickson’s Toru-Orua in Sagbama further identified the flaws of the incumbent federal lawmakers from the state.

    He said: “I am not coming out because it is zoned to Sagbama. Even if party leadership had not come up with the decision to zone the Senate to Sagbama, I would have still indicated interest. I am one of those that believe that the people to whom sovereignty belongs have not been effectively carried along.

    “Representation is beyond getting up to speak in the hallowed chambers. The democracy we practice is called representative democracy. How many times have the people of Bayelsa been involved by their representatives in defining laws, in being educated on the various bills?

    “In advance democracies, I stand to be corrected, representatives are every now and then being in touch with their people. If any substantive law is in the offing to be enacted, they go back to their people.

    “Now the other argument people will propose is that there is always public hearing. How many of us from Sagbama-Ekeremor have the means to go to Abuja to attend public hearing on proposed bills? I think part of the responsibility of those who aspire to represent us is to come back home to consult their people.

    “For instance, the entire Niger Delta area and Bayelsa in particular, our main resource here is oil. Now a bill as sensitive as Petroleum Industry Bill was being introduced, how many people of my senatorial district and how many people of other senatorial districts were briefed by our senators and House of Rep members on the fundamentals of the PIB?

    “They will say there was public hearing, but how many people have the capacity to go to Abuja for public hearing? These are the fundamentals. It is not just an issue to say that the senatorial leadership of the party had zoned the Senate to Sagbama. I as a person feel that there are fundamental flaws in representation and I would ordinarily have come up to challenge the status quo.

    “Even while I was a commissioner here, we brought up a policy called bottom-up approach in budgeting. A good representative should be able to come back home in a pre-budgeting season, gather stakeholders of their constituencies and discuss issues that could be included in the budget.

    “After discussing the issues and demands, you should be able to prioritise the demands and see how many of the demands you can fix in the various budgets. It is not just merely constituency projects.

    “We know that constituency project is the euphemism to lining the pockets of legislators. Representatives are only interested in constituency projects and they become the contractors of the projects and line their pockets.”

    On why he wanted to abandon a South-South regional leadership for the Senate, he said: “South-South Peoples Assembly is a pressure group. You can at best place the issues affecting your people before relevant authorities and agencies.

    “You cannot define the solution. As the Secretary of the assembly for the past eight years, I have become very conversant with the issues that border, militate and concern the people of South-South.

    “Secretary of Southsouth can only afford me the rights and privileges of making a noise and how that noise will be translated to reality can only become possible if I am in the Senate”.

  • Niger Delta youths seek agric devt, power shift to new generation

    For two days last week, thousands of youths from across the nine Niger Delta states converged on the PTI Conference Centre, Effurun, Delta State for the ‘IYC World Summit’, organised by the Ijaw Youth Council, led by Comrade Udengs Eradiri.

    The spokesperson of the IYC Worldwide, Mr Eric Omare, said the summit that has “Partnering for Prosperity and Sustainable Development” as theme, was convened to tackle some of the challenges facing, not just the Ijaw, but all ethnic nationalities.

    He said the initiative of the IYC was informed by the group’s desire to play a leading role in bringing together other ethnic bodies to fight a common cause for the development of the region.

    He said: “In the post-amnesty era, one of the biggest challenges now facing the Niger-Delta Region just like other parts of the Country is lack of engagement for both skilled and unskilled youths despite the acquisition of various skills through the Presidential Amnesty programme and other medium of training.

    “This summit seeks to set a new agenda by redirecting the focus of the youths of the Niger Delta on agriculture, job creation, promoting small and medium scale enterprises (SME), empowering, educating and enlightening the young minds to take advantage of the opportunities available in the agro and allied sector to create better livelihood for themselves and the society,” he added.

    In spite of a no-show by President Goodluck Jonathan and his wife, Dame Patience, who were expected to declare the summit open, as well as the absence of Chief Edwin Clark, Ijaw national leader and leader of the South/south, and some governors of the region, the summit gradually gathered steam and lived up to its billing. Only the host, Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan and his Bayelsa state counterparts sent representatives.

    Uduaghan, who was represented by Mr Frank Omare, Commissioner for Environment, tasked attendees to adopt peaceful means in conflict resolution, revealing that the government had through its 3-Point agenda, bettered the lives of its people.

    Speaking with newsmen at the summit, IYC President, Udengs Eradiri emphasized the need for Niger Delta youths to unite and shun the antics of those who seek to divide them for political gain. He particularly lamented the ten

    He said: “Today we have an EPZ (Export Processing Zone) that is coming to Delta State. There has been so much argument between the Ijaw and Itsekiri that are neighbours. They have a project that will add so much value to this region and the land that has been lying fallow for donkey years without producing any kobo on the table is the cause of strife.”

    He advised the bickering Ijaw and Itsekiri groups to bury their hatchets, remarking that if the projects kicks off there would be jobs for everybody in the region. “Yet, politicians have started deceiving our young people by fighting themselves.”

    He said the summit would set machinery in motion to unite the various interests so that they project could kick off. He advised that a sharing formula should be agreed by both sides to build trust and unity, stressing that the project could hold the key to the region and Nigeria’s industrialization.

    “There is an auto policy and if this project kicks off most of the auto companies like Toyota, Mercedes and MBW will come and set up plants here in Delta state because it is close to the ocean. If they are producing with a cheaper price they can export from Nigeria to other parts of the world. This will create jobs and by that process open our environment. Businesses will spring up, there would be hotels etc. People must see the idea of bringing an EPZ to this environment and forget all our difference,” he added.

    Eradiri also canvassed for a generational change, stressing that young people must rethink their relationship with ‘elders’ whose times have passed.

    He said: “They must step aside and allow us decide our future. All the conflicts are about sustaining political interest of other people.”

    To this end, he urged the president revealed his plans for the youths of the region as it affects their future.  “Much as he has done some things in the Niger Delta, we are not satisfied; we have no jobs, our roads are not completed and things are not happening as they should in the Niger Delta.

    “In as much as we are happy about what the amnesty is doing, there are just about 30,000 captured. We have over 10 million young people in the Niger Delta. Look at the ratio of 10m Niger Delta youths and 30,000 amnesty beneficiaries. The amnesty is just one area, what are they going to do for education, economy, and job creation? Those are the things we expected the president to come here today and highlight,” he said.

    Nevertheless, the IYC president appealed to the opposition All Progressive Congress and other political parties to follow the example of the Peoples Democratic Party and adopt President Goodluck Jonathan for the 2015 election. He said such move would help build unity, peace and avert crisis resulting from protracted electioneering campaign.

    In his goodwill message, the Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta, Hon Kingsley Kuku, thumbed-up the amnesty programme, describing it as a huge success. “This programme has succeeded in ushering unprecedented peace in the Niger Delta as well as astronomical increase in oil production and revenue for our country.

    “With the Amnesty Programme now in its reintegration phase, the challenge that stares us in the face is how to positively and profoundly engaged the thousands of youths that have been trained.”

    Kuku expressed the expectation that the summit would provide opportunity for stakeholders to proffer practical steps towards engaging majority of the youths, especially those who have acquired vocational skills.”

    The summit attracted youth leaders from the Ikwerre, Itsekiri, Urhobo, Ogoni, Isoko and Yorubas, among others.  The highpoint was the release of a communiqye on Friday, October 10, by IYC spokesperson, Mr Eric Omare, a lawyer.

    The document expressed concern about the growing unemployment in the region. It noted that the development was more worrisome considering that substantial number of the unemployed youths had acquired various skills.

    Therefore, he disclosed that “It was resolved that there should be massive development  of the agriculture and allied industries sector in the Niger Delta to provide jobs for the teeming unemployed youths and make them self-reliant.  Henceforth, government efforts towards the economic empowerment of the youths of the Niger Delta should be geared towards making them self-reliant,” the document added.

    The communique lamented that although the President Good luck Jonathan administration has recorded remarkable strides in agricultural sector, the benefits are not felt in the Niger Delta because such monies were spent in the northern parts of the country.It urged the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and the National Assembly to take conscious steps to address the perceived imbalance in the nation’s agricultural policy.

    Similarly, the youths expressed concern over the perceived nonchalant attitude of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and the Independent Corrupt Practice Commission towards discharge of their duties.

     

  • The Ijaw quest for Rivers’ number one seat

    Ijaw youths, under the aegis of the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), gathered in Effurun, Delta state, last week for the maiden IYC World Summit. They brainstormed on critical national and local matters affecting the Ijaw stock, especially the younger generation. Themed ‘Partnering for Prosperity and Sustainable Development’, the summit was designed to focus the Ijaw youth’s mind on self-development so as to be able to take advantage of all the opportunities that Nigeria and the world might have to offer for self-actualisation and fulfilment.

    Much was said to the direction of the theme and the supposed heart of the programme, but other things, voiced and silenced, were also believed to be of serious consideration in putting the programme together; some are even believed to take pre-eminence space in the heart of the organisers than even the promo-ed theme. For instance, Nigeria’s politics, the 2015 elections, to be specific, is believed to be of more importance to the organisers and their sponsors than youth development.

    Much might not have been said in the opening remarks of the IYC President, Udengs Eradiri, about ‘the other reasons’ for putting the summit together, he did not forget to sound out the importance of the ongoing political struggles that the Ijaw nation is involved in. The fight to see to the re-election of President Goodluck Jonathan, a struggle that most Ijaw people, of various standings and persuasions, are involved in, was definitely expected to feature, even if it would come under a veil. As a matter of fact, the call was wrapped in a plea to all, especially the opposition parties.

    Another striking project of the Ijaw nation was the charge to all to ensure an Ijaw man succeeds the Rivers State Governor Rotimi Amaechi in 2015. According to Eradiri, the project is not one that should be treated with everyday commonality; it is one that must be achieved. Though it was mentioned in a passing remark of sort, its import was not lost on those in the hall, especially journalists conversant with the political happenings in the state.

    “An Ijaw man must be governor in Rivers State, but we must help ourselves. Even now those who can’t even afford the form have started jostling to be governor. It is the youths that vote and we must be relevant at all times,’’ Eradiri said.

    Many who probably did not take the ‘Ijaw must take Rivers’ struggle so seriously might have had a change of mind when it featured in a programme, supposedly of international stature. The concerns, however, are the not-very-encouraging factors bugging this project. One of such is, like Eradiri said, the deluge of aspirants coming up from the different Ijaw enclaves of the state, their capacities notwithstanding. The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) seems to have shut its door against the Ijaw quest, with the party saying no to zoning. The PDP is in the stranglehold of the Minister of State for Education, Chief Nyesom Wike, a kinsman of Governor Amaechi, who has no biological connection to Ijaw.

    Rivers is under the control of the opposition All Progressives’ Congress (APC), the leader of the PDP, Jonathan, is Ijaw and some Ijaw politicians in Rivers had tried to use this factor to subvert realities, most times claiming that Governor Amaechi has been trying to set Ijaw people in the state against their brother, the president, even when the state is losing its livelihood to Bayelsa under Mr President’s watch.

    Will the Ijaw quest become a reality in the face of the Ikwerre (or is it Wike challenge) and Ogoni challenge? The last word here is: utmost decency should guide which area gets the coveted seat. Violence should not be used in the quest of any of the area to achieve their end. After all, it is all about service and harming the people in the process of getting power is sure a disservice.

  • Since Thursday of last week

    Moseyn Ekiw knows of his many an enemy. He is quite sure Governor Timiro Ihceama of Waters State, whom he served as Controller of Staff, is the number one. But since Thursday of last week, he has become increasingly worried about the enemies inside. As the Sole Administrator of the Umbrella Peoples Party (UPP) in Waters State and a Junior Minister of the Federal Republic of Niagra, things should have been easier for him. His quest to fly the party’s governorship flag should have been a walk-over. But the enemies within are bent on frustrating him. Yet, they were all nowhere to be found when he was wresting the party’s structure from his ex-boss.

    He scratches his head, looks at the mirror in front of him and from the mirror he sees a copy of a newspaper with the event of Thursday of last week as its lead.

    “Rain of blows at UPP parley,” the headline screams. He picks it up and reads the two quotes on the front page.

    “I came here to defend a petition before the reconciliation committee and Ekiw’s thugs prevented me from doing so and Ekiw personally punched me,” reads the first quote by a former commissioner in Waters State.

    “How could I have done that? The meeting went peacefully. Everything was peaceful. Everybody who had something to say was allowed to say it. A man of my status could not have done that,” reads the second quote which the newspaper took from a telephone interview its correspondent had with Ekiw.

    He shudders after reading his response and thinks aloud: “How many people will believe me?”

    By intuition, he grabs his Galaxy tab and opens the website of another newspaper to see the comments of the people to the event of Thursday of last week.

    The first comment makes him sad.

    “Why is UPP always prodding up thugs as their arrowheads? Their arrowhead in a state ordered his thugs to tear a judge’s suit; now see what this one has done.”

    He hisses after reading this and goes ahead to see what others have to say. Of the 90 reactions to the report, only ten are favourable. He suspects the ten must be party faithful trying to remedy the situation.

    He feels bad, but quickly tells himself: “It is too late to back out. I will be killing myself politically if I back out at this stage. We must fight it to the finish.”

    At that instant, the events leading to the event of Thursday of last week come back to him vividly. He was in his office when the man he installed as the party chair in Waters State, Haubo, came to meet him. He told him of how 22 aggrieved party men were planning to storm the House of Legacy to defend their petitions against his quest to become governor.

    “What do we do?” he remembers asking Haubo.

    “We’ve to stop them,” he can still hear Haubo telling him.

    “How?” was his question.

    “We will use our boys and the police. With your position as minister, just get the police to look the other way when our boys are dealing with them. Our boys will be armed with cudgels, knifes, stones and all sorts. They don’t need guns to deal with these people. They should just beat and bloody them enough to scare them away from accessing the panel headed by Prof.”

    He remembers buying the idea and releasing money to Haubo to camp the boys in a hotel not far from House of Legacy.

    His phone rings and breaks into his thought. The caller ID shows it is his daughter. He picks the call.

    “Hello sweetheart?”

    “Hi dad?”

    “I’m fine dear,” he says.

    “Where are you? I am outside knocking the door since.”

    “Sorry dear,” he says and hurries out of the room to go and open the main entrance door for her.

    Soon, they are together in the living room. It takes a little time before she notices he is not his usual self.

    “What is the problem again, dad?”

    “Nothing,” he pretends.

    She keeps quite for a while and soon fishes out a document from her bag and gives him to read. It is a print out of online comments on the event of Thursday last week. They are silent for a few minutes.

    “Are we going to emerge stronger from all these?” she asks later.

    He keeps mum concentrating instead eyes on the First Dame’s picture on the wall. It is one of those her pictures taken by an ace female photographer which gave her beauty she can never have.

    She decides to be frank with him.

    “By the time this governor finishes his tenure, the upland people would have done 16 years. The pendulum favours the People on Water. Sincerely, I don’t think the Goodluck Charm with the First Dame’s husband is enough to make you governor.”

    She pauses and continues after some minutes: “I think it is high time you faced reality. I will be shocked if the people support any party with a candidate outside of the People on the Water. The Riverside people in Waters State have every reason to expect to have one of their own leading the state, based on history, fairness and balance. The People on Water are the largest ethnic group in the state with about 10 Local Government Areas and substantial populations in 2 others of 23 Local Government Areas. The other two have less than 5 each. The People on Water are 39.7 per cent of the population of the state. In 1999, Ilido emerged on popular Riverside support. Again in 2007 and 2011, the Riverside people gave the incumbent their mandate.”

    When his daughter gets to this stage, he remembers he once told a group of editors in Lagos that he could never govern the Water State in 2015 because he is from the same ethnic stock with the governor. He had told the editors he would be creating problems for himself if he started thinking about succeeding his kinsman. Now, the problems are here and just taking new shapes every other day.

    His daughter continues: “Dad,” she says and moves closer to him,” as a young girl, I certainly will like to be the First Daughter of Waters State.”

    He remembers her mum used a similar line the last time the other aspirants ganged up against him.

    “But, if you ask me to choose between my dad becoming hypertensive trying to be governor and my dad remaining sane without being addressed as His Excellency, certainly I will pick you retaining your sanity.”

    She adds: “Politics surprises me at times, especially the type we play here.”

    At this stage, he has no doubt the girl is paraphrasing her mother.

    He wonders how she knew of their past discussion. Perhaps she told her, he thinks.

    “One moment, you see people being good friends ready to sacrifice for one another and then the next moment, they are the worst enemies around. It baffles me, it really does. I can’t even share quality time together with the governor’s children again and we used to be good family friends. Everything is just upside now.”

    She stands up, announcing: “I will be in my room. Whatever you do, just put your family into consideration. Since the event of Thursday of last week, I have not been happy and reading such nasty comments about you makes me really sad. I know you are a good father, you have been really good to us and mum has told me you are a good husband. The only thing I think is left is for you to be a good politician. And for me, a good politician is one who reads the trend. When the trend favours you, flow with it. When it does not, re-assess yourself and plan for another time. The event of Thursday of last week must not repeat itself again. If it does, I will be too ashamed to call you my father and I am sure mum too will feel terrible being identified as your wife.”

    Now, he feels sad about the event of Thursday of last week.

  • Exposing illegal bunkering, oil theft in the Niger Delta

    Exposing illegal bunkering, oil theft in the Niger Delta

    A report on oil theft called “Private Gain, Public Disaster: Social Context of Illegal Oil Bunkering and Artisanal Refining in the Niger Delta,”  details how the economic sabotage could be reduced to the barest minimum, since completely wiping them out would be an impossible task, writes BISI OLANIYI in Port Harcourt

    Crude oil was first discovered in commercial quantity in 1956 at Oloibiri in Ogbia Local Government Area of Bayelsa State, with Nigeria now losing huge revenue through crude oil theft/illegal bunkering, illegal refining and pipeline vandalism, leading to the pollution and degradation of the environment.

    The activities of oil thieves and illegal bunkerers, made the Federal Government of Nigeria to put in place the Joint Military Task Force (JTF), now codenamed Operation Pulo (Oil) Shield, with its operatives combing the creeks of the Niger Delta, but the criminals, backed by powerful persons, are still beating the security personnel, who at times collude with the oil thieves.

    A University of Port Harcourt’s (UNIPORT) Professor of Economic History, Ben Naanen, and Patrick Tolani, who is the Chief Executive of Oxford, United Kingdom-based Redeemers Relief Agency International, in their new book: “Private Gain, Public Disaster: Social Context of Illegal Oil Bunkering and Artisanal Refining in the Niger Delta,” which is the report of three years of research on oil theft in Nigeria, which they conducted, exposed illegal bunkering and refining, especially in the region rich in crude oil and gas and how they could be reduced to the barest minimum, since completely wiping them out would be an impossible task.

    The presentation of the research report, which took place at the Ebitimi Banigo Auditorium of UNIPORT, was chaired by the Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of the Governing Council of the university, Gesi Asamaowei, an engineer.

    The Bayelsa State’s Commissioner for Environment, Iniruo Wills; a member of the House of Representatives from Rivers State, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, who represents Andoni-Opobo/Nkoro constituency was represented by Benebo Alabraba; the Southsouth Zonal Operations Controller of the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), Mrs. Onyebuchi Sibeudu,  and many eminent personalities were also in attendance.

    Asamaowei, in his remarks, urged the Federal Government and the security agencies to frontally tackle illegal bunkering and refining of crude oil in the Niger Delta.

    The UNIPORT’s Pro-Chancellor also stressed that more attention should be focused on agriculture, rather that wholly depending on crude oil, which is non-renewable, describing the 122-page book as well-researched.

    Naanen, who is also a Trustee of the Port Harcourt, Rivers State-based Niger Delta Environment and Relief Foundation (NIDEREF), while speaking on the occasion, disclosed that the project started in 2011 and was almost abandoned, in view of the cost implication, while the research resumed in 2013.

    He noted that the research focused on Rivers, Bayelsa and Delta States, notorious for illegal bunkering and refining of crude oil, with Akwa Ibom State not considered, in spite of currently having the highest production of crude oil, but offshore, while the illegal activities take place onshore.

    Naanen, the pioneer General Secretary of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) and the former Chairman of the MOSOP Provisional Council, also stated that the research was risky, in view of the involvement of militants and cultists in the theft of crude oil and illegally refining it or sold to international buyers.

    The UNIPORT don (Naanen) said: “Nigeria loses more crude oil than any other country in the world – more than seven per cent of daily production. The Federal Government of Nigeria and the oil companies suffer huge financial losses, an estimated $6 billion per annum. Oil theft especially victimises the poor.

    “To reduce illegal bunkering and illegal refining, the socio-economic origin of oil theft must be addressed through a decisive attack on poverty, particularly through job creation, targeted at the youths, who are involved in oil theft.

    “The pipelines should be protected through community-based surveillance. A special judicial mechanism should be established to expedite prosecution of oil theft cases.”

    Naanen, an indigene of Bodo-Ogoni in Gokana Local Government Area of Rivers State, also lamented that Nigeria’s economy is dangerously dependent on crude oil, while stating that the consequences of oil theft are grave and widespread.

    Nigeria has total length of crude oil pipelines of 4,350 kilometres, which must be protected against oil theft and vandalism.

    The first Port Harcourt refinery, with capacity of 60,000 barrels per day (bpd), was inaugurated in 1965, while the second refinery in Port Harcourt has the capacity of 150,000 bpd.

    The Warri refinery in Delta state, inaugurated in 1978, has capacity of 125,000 bpd, while the refinery in Kaduna, which was put in place in 1980, has capacity of 110,000 bpd and it is linked to Niger Delta oil fields by 600 kilometres of pipelines, but designed to process imported heavy crude oil.

    Only 20 per cent of the total crude oil allocated to the four refineries for domestic consumption is utilised, making Nigeria to depend on imported petroleum products and artisanal refining to fill the gap.

    In 2012, according to the report, crude oil contributed 96.8 per cent of Nigeria’s total export earnings, 60.5 per cent of gross government receipts and 37 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), yet the country loses to crude oil theft, more than $6 billion worth of its crude oil production or 6.25 per cent of its total export value.

    Crude oil, the strategic backbone of the Nigerian economy, is what large scale oil thieves target at disconnecting, with the nation bleeding painfully and tragically from the pipelines, with the country appearing helpless and unable to curtail the danger.There does not seem to be adequate appreciation of the danger, not even among the top oil bureaucrats at the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), among other stakeholders.

    Crude oil theft has international dimension, while artisanal refining locally also calls for concern.

    The theft of crude oil or illegal bunkering in national parlance and its corollary – artisanal refining – are fundamentally social problems.

    An artisanal refining unit is a simplified petroleum distillation unit, which is conceptualised like a crude school science project. It can also be likened to the production of the local dry gin, commonly called “Ogogoro.”

    The aim of artisanal refining is to boil barrels of stolen crude oil with naked fire in a metal constructed sealed tank. The crude evaporates and passes through two parallel pipes, connected to the tank through a wooden constructed cooling water bath. The refined product then drips out slowly into a container at the other end, with different products emerging at different intervals.

    Delta State has the highest number of artisanal refining sites, according to the researchers, and they can be easily seen in creeks, forests and villages.

    It was also revealed that it takes about three days to get up to five drums of refined petroleum products. After the refining processes, the products are filled into rubber and metal drums for transloading and storage, from where they are transported to their final destinations.

    Since most of the artisanal refining sites are located near the creeks, the refined products are usually transported through the waterways to the neighbouring towns and villages, while transportation of large volume of crude oil to mother ships offshore is done by the use of barges.

    The barges and Cotonou boats are usually anchored within the creeks, where they are filled with the required volume of crude oil, before they are transported and transferred into the mother ship, which can be in the coastal waters of Ghana or Benin Republic.

    It is unlikely to visit jetties within any of the communities involved in illegal bunkering, without seeing piles of drums and rubber containers used for transporting the petroleum products.

    Most of the locally-produced petroleum products (through artisanal refining) are transported to the cities, where they are probably mixed with the regular products and sold in conventional filling stations. The dominant product is diesel.

    Since the tolerance of diesel engines in high, it is usually not easy to detect locally-refined diesel from the regular product.

    In Port Harcourt, the researchers observed that the main point of entry for the locally-refined products is the Akpajo Sandfill Jetty, stressing that most of the refined products coming from Bodo-Ogoni in Gokana LGA and the neighbouring communities are brought to the Akpajo Sandfill jetty, where buyers from the Port Harcourt city and other parts of Nigeria assemble to buy and resell to members of the public.

    A major driving force of the thriving illegal bunkering business in Nigeria is market demand. There is a huge local and international market for the crude oil stolen from Nigeria.

    While the stolen crude oil is sold in countries within the West African sub-region and Europe, the locally-refined petroleum products are mostly sold in the local villages and towns, but now getting to Onitsha in Anambra State and Lagos.

    The researchers disclosed that the weekly boat that sails from Ekeremor in Bayelsa State to Onitsha, usually carries illegally-refined petroleum products, while a drum of locally-refined diesel goes for N7,000 in the creeks and as much as N12,000 to N15,000 in the cities.

    The involvement of women in the whole process of illegal bunkering and artisanal refining is more or less secondary, because they are generally not involved in obtaining crude oil or in the refining process.

    Women, however, play pivotal roles in the transportation and marketing of the refined products, as well as cooking and provision of sexual services for the predominantly male operators.

    Children, mostly orphans and aged between 10 and 13, also work in the illegal bunkering sites and run errands at the camps, while absentee owners of illegal refining sites always appoint managers to run the operations.

    The JTF estimated in 2010 that there were 1,500 illegal refining operations in the region, with Bodo Creeks in Gokana LGA harbouring over 1,000 youths, who were directly involved in illegal refining, which might have been higher now.

    The JTF claimed that in 2012, it destroyed 4,349 illegal refining units.  Illegal bunkering business represents a substantial informal economy, whose value has never been captured, since it is regarded as illegal.

    The study reveals that there are three main sets of actors involved in illegal bunkering: those who compromise the pipelines by breaking and installing taps on them to procure crude oil for sale; those who buy the crude oil for export and the local operators who process stolen crude oil into low quality fuels for the domestic market, with the three sets of actors referred to as oil thieves or illegal bunkerers.

    Rivers, Bayelsa and Delta States account for 80 per cent of Nigeria’s onshore oil production and a predominant proportion of crude oil theft.

    The researchers held consultations with the people and leaders of Niger Delta communities, while over 200 persons directly connected to the illegal siphoning of crude oil and artisanal were interviewed, while top officials of the leading International Oil Companies (IOCs), NNPC, the regulatory agencies, the JTF, police, navy and other security agencies in the Niger Delta and Abuja were also spoken with.

    Naanen and Tolani also interviewed oil dealers in Europe, especially in Rotterdam, Aberdeen and London, as well as the people involved in the transportation and marketing of illegally-refined petroleum products in the Niger Delta and end users of the products, while direct observations of the refining processes were also made at many sites.

    Urine samples were taken by the researchers from the youths directly involved in refining and copies of questionnaire were also given to them to assess their health status, while fish samples were collected from two heavily-impacted sites in Rivers and Bayelsa states and one less impacted site, to test the level of contamination of sea food and the potential effects on human consumers.

    The samples were analysed at accredited laboratories in Nigeria and the results interpreted by an independent expert.

    The researchers said: “Illegal bunkering and artisanal refining are rooted in the grim economic and social circumstances of the Niger Delta. Poverty is endemic and unemployment is high. Nigeria loses $6 billion to oil theft annually. 28,000 people receive incomes directly or directly from illegal bunkering.

    “The illegal bunkering economy has an annual value of $9 billion. Those who export 80 per cent of the stolen crude oil are not poor people. They are connected to the political and military establishments, as well as the oil bureaucracy.

    “Concerted international action to check the Nigerian crude oil theft is not feasible, because the stolen crude oil represents a minor fraction of international crude oil traffic and does not present any credible threat to the world’s economy and international security.”

    The researchers said: “The notion that individuals and the people of local communities can engage in self help, by tampering with strategic national assets, such as the oil facilities, simply because they are located on their land, is fundamentally flawed.

    “There are also those who tend to believe that coming from the Niger Delta is all it takes to live a comfortable life, because the region produces crude oil. What the youths need is the opportunity to develop their potential and grow, not pampering. The state and the oil companies have to make a creative use of the resources of the region to create the opportunity.”

    While giving further insight into the menace of crude oil theft, Naanen and Tolani pointed out that some people have probably not thought about, in respect of the relationship between illegal bunkering and poverty is that persons who steal the larger volume of the crude oil for export, are not poor people.

    They said: “They are driven primarily by the imperative of capital accumulation. These are operators who can muster the financial capital necessary for a high risk illegal international business, as well as the political capital to protect the business. These are not ordinary men.

    “They are connected to the apex of Nigerian political, military and business establishment. They are known to the people who should know them, as they are not ghosts. Yet, there has been a systematic official refusal to reveal the identities of these supposedly mysterious oil barons and make them face the law.

    “This refusal speaks loud about the official identities of most of these illegal bunkering kingpins. Nigeria loses about 145,000 barrels of crude oil per day to oil theft-related incidents, which is more than the production of many individual oil exporting nations.”

    The researchers also noted that politically, the capture of oil revenues had become the driving force for political contestations in Nigeria, with illegal bunkering aiding the process, while Nigeria is passing under the control of persons with varying measures of legal and illegal interest in the oil and gas industry, a political trend they described as “petrocracy.”

    In combating illegal bunkering, they stressed that the Federal Government and the IOCs had tried many measures, ranging from criminalisation, advocacy and pipeline surveillance to the deployment of JTF personnel, which they said had not yielded the tangible results, in view of lack of implementation.

    On the high level political and military structures, three categories of operators were identified in the illegal bunkering and artisanal refining business: the tapping or bunkering point owners, who drill holes in the pipes and siphon crude oil for sale; the big players who buy the stolen crude oil from the bunkering point owners and export it and the artisanal refiners who purchase the stolen crude oil or occasionally steal it directly and process it into low quality fuels for the local market in the Niger Delta region and beyond.

    Artisanal refining is now undergoing structural changes, featuring concentration and centralisation, making possible oil theft on an industrial scale. The huge storage steel tanks being constructed  and other requirements, including security insurance in case of arrest, require considerable starter capital of about N1 million.

    A major implication of this change is that many of the small operators of the past now work for the powerful “big boys” and financiers, who can muster the capital requirement and necessary law enforcement contacts for the protection of the business.

    Workers and other people with legitimate livelihoods are investing in the illegal businesses of artisanal refining and bunkering, in order to provide for themselves an additional and more rewarding income stream.

    The industry is also undergoing technical innovations, while expanding its commodity chain. Well paid specialists now drill the holes and install valves on them for siphoning crude oil from pipelines.

    In Bodo-Ogoni, the researchers gathered that the fee for drilling a tapping point is between N250,000 and N300,000, part of which goes to the operatives of the JTF, with the changes giving the illegal bunkering and refining business the grounding for sustainability.

    It was also confirmed that the nationals who are mostly involved in moving stolen Nigerian crude oil are mainly non-English speaking, while it is common to sight Lebanese, Cameroonians, Pilipino, Romanians, Thais and Ghanaians, with the recipient refineries of crude oil stolen from Nigeria being in the United States of America, Brazil and the Gulf of Guinea.

    Among the many initiatives recommended by the researchers to mitigate illegal bunkering and refining, three specific areas that require immediate action were emphasised, including addressing the socio-economic foundation of illegal bunkering, through the attack on poverty and job creation targeted at the youths, who must be made to come out of the creeks.

    Also imperative is pipeline protection, through community-based surveillance programme, which will replace the present private contractor surveillance system, since the ineffectiveness of private contractors, according to the researchers, is glaring, with some of them implicated in the theft of crude oil.

    They noted that with community-based surveillance, the people of the various Niger Delta communities would take over the protection of the pipelines, while in exchange for the role, they would receive development support from the IOCs, through the Global Memoranda of Understanding (GMoU).

    The third approach is to ensure speedy prosecution of oil theft cases, by setting up a special judicial mechanism, exemplified by special courts.

    Naanen and Tolani said: “Nigeria has no excuse importing refined petroleum products. The country should control the petroleum products’ market in the ECOWAS (Economic Community of West African States) sub-region, as a way of diversifying the economy, creating quality jobs and earning foreign exchange.

    “There should be policy reform to promote cottage/modular refineries that will contribute to addressing the local supply disequilibrium, build local capacity in the downstream sector and empower the local communities through job creation. Emphasis must also be placed on good governance.

    “The ten per cent community equity, recommended in the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), will create a sense of belonging in the Niger Delta. However, the management of the fund will be problematic. Effective and agreeable management mechanism should be designed. Otherwise, the fund will fuel crisis in the communities.”

    The Federal Government of Nigeria must show strong political will to tackle the menace of illegal bunkering and artisanal refining, in order to move the nation forward.

  • Pain, sorrow as commissioner buries wife

    Pain, sorrow as commissioner buries wife

    It was a very painful and emotional ceremony for Chief Cyprian Chukwu as he bid final farewell to his lovely and faithful late wife, late Mrs Kate Wigo, as her remains were lowered into the grave.

    The late Mrs Chukwua, was a legal practitioner like her husband. She died in London after a brief illness and was buried last weekend at Rumuwike community in Obio/Akpor Local government of Rivers State.

    Guests at the burial described her as a strong politician, a woman leader and said she was the first woman caretaker committee Chairperson of Obio/Akpor Local government. During her short period in office, they said she achieved more than her male counterparts who occupied officer for longer time.

    The calibre of personalities that attended her funeral was a testament of her commitment and dedication to whatever she did during her life time. The caretaker committee Chairman of Obio/Akpor LGA, Dr. Lawrence Chukwu led eminent politicians including, Hon. Dakuku Peterside of the House of Representative, the Rivers Government State Chief of Staff, Hon.Tony Okacha among others to the funeral. Her professional colleagues, members of the state Bar were also in attendance.

    Her younger sister Mrs. Susan Owhor, told Niger Delta Report that Mrs Chukwu was born on 11th April, 1973 to Late Elder Godswill Ogutum Ovunda and Mrs. Dorothy Peace Ovunda of Otogbo family in Rumuigbo Clan, Apara Kingdom in Obio/Akpor Local government area of Rivers State of Nigeria.

    She said the entire family would miss her love and companion. “We love her so much she was always there for us. She grew up with our parents at Rumuigbo, She was so close to our mother who instilled in her the discipline required of mothers. Through this discipline, she acquired valuable knowledge and experiences that shaped her life and helped her to cope with the challenges that life brings. Amongst all, she learnt tolerance, patience, endurance and easy communication with people. She was loved by all.”

    In his remark, Sir Ogundu Charles Chukwu, her brother-in-law, described the late legal practitioner as a real wife of the family would be difficult to forget. “She was a very lovely woman who contributed her own quota while alive.

    “You can see the kind of people that came to her burial that shows you the kind of woman she was. We are going to miss her forever but her memory will continue to live with us. She lived a peaceful life in the community and she was a community woman leader being the chairperson of Rumuwike Community Women Council until her demise and a member of Rumuepirikom Clan Women Council. She was an epitome of what a leader should be in her community. She was an easy-going person who was easily approachable by everyone.

    “The growth of her community was a personal challenge to her and she undertook and championed it in such a way that she was admired, believed and also trusted by her fellow women in her immediate family, the Rumuwike community and the entire Rumuepirikom clan. Based on her leadership qualities and style her fellow women and to a large extent the men of the community, believed and trusted her leadership and charismatic qualities. As a result of her demise, her fellow women are feeling her exit; amongst them are the Rumuwike Community Women Council and the entire members of Rumuepirikom Clan of Women Council.”

    Her grieving husband, who is a Commissioner in the Rivers State Local government Commission, said he almost gave up when the wife died in London. He described his late wife as “amy wife and my friend, she didn’t give me worries in life and I didn’t give her too. I told the congregation that she was my helper and everything I needed in life. She died in London Hospital on the 18th day of August 2014 it was as if I was also dead but by the grace of God I found myself in Nigeria. ”

    He said that the dreaded Ebola virus and the huge cost of transporting her remain almost derailed his plan to bring the remains of his beloved wife back to Nigeria for burial. But with the help of his family and younger brother, he said h was able to get the permit to bring her home.

    Speaking on her achievements, he noted that his brilliant wife could have achieved more than what she intend to achieve in life if death had allowed her to live more years. “I did all I could humanly possible to remove her from the wicked hands of death, but our Father Lord had decided that she would leave me at this time.”

    “I will continue where both of us stopped and promise to make more remarkable progress and achievements as if she was still by my side. It will only require me to double my efforts so that our set goals will be achieved.

    Chief Chukwu said his late wife started her political career in 1999 as a member of Alliance for Democracy (AD) “In 1999 and later in the year 2000 she joined the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) and held the position of Ex- officio member of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) Obio/Akpor chapter and she was a member of Ikwerre Women Forum (IWF) which is a social political organisation in Ikwerre Ethnic Nationality. The Executive governor of Rivers state, His Excellency Rt. Hon Chibuike Rotimi Amaechi, found her worthy and credible and appointed her the chairperson, Obio/Akpor local government Council Caretaker Committee (CTC) in the year 2011.

    “Within her short stay in office as the chairperson of Obio/Akpor Local government council caretaker committee (CTC), she resurfaced Ihunwo Wike Street and constructed a drainage system to ease water on the street. She did not stop at that; she donated a 500KVA transformer to the Rumuwike community immediately after her stay in office. Uptil now her programme initiatives have continued to enrich the villages, communities, and the entire Obio/Akpor local government area of Rivers State.”

    The late lawyer attended State School II Holy Trinity Rumuapara from 1980 to 1985 and obtained her First school leaving certificate (FSLC). She attended Community Secondary School Isiokpo from 1985 to 1987. Thereafter, she went to Archdeacon Crowder Memorial Girls’ School (ACMGS) Elelenwo, where she sat for her West African Examination Council (WAEC) and passed with credits. She obtained a certificate in French from University of Port Harcourt in 1992 and obtained a BSc degree in sociology in 1998 before obtaining bachelor of law (LL. B Hons) from Rivers State University of Science and Technology (RSUST), Port Harcourt, in 2006 -and graduated was called to the bar in 2008.

  • Delta ‘bad boys’ are back

    Delta ‘bad boys’ are back

    The shooting to death by armed robbers of Ms Frances Oneya, daughter of Brig-Gen. Dominic Oneya, last Friday in Effurun, Delta State was not the first by criminals in the state or the first on that ill-fated day. Yet, the circumstance of the incident left residents of the area reeling with shock and fear of what this year’s ‘Ember months hold in stock. It also tells them that the ‘bad boys’ are back to harvest from where they did not sow.

    That morning, Ms Oneya, as she was wont to do, shared a Christian meditational verse with her friends on social media. For her last day’s reading, she chose the book of Ephesians: 31-32: “Let all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamor and slander be put away from you along with malice.

    “Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you.”

    It was to be her last. Her killers showed no mercy to the tenderhearted lady. She was shot with so much hatred the bloodied and shattered remains of the Honda Accord car, which she drove, bore the venom of her killers.

    The mother of four was returning home from the bank at about 10:30am that Friday when the gang struck on Ovie Palace Road, Effurun, headquarters of Uvwie Local Government Area council. They came in a tricycle (keke).

    Robbers in the area and its neighboring Warri, like their counterparts in other parts of the country, have been robbing unmolested in cities since the beginning of the ‘Ember Period’ last month. As the clock races towards December, the spate of robbery, kidnappings and other violent crimes has gone up, in spite of efforts by the state government and the state police command.

    Sources close to the Oneya family said: “On that very morning, she left the house to sell some cloths and brocades to her customers, including those in the new generation bank, located on PTI Road. The cloths were packed inside a big bag.

    When she was leaving the house, her father, General Frances Oneya, gave her a cheque of about N200,000 to cash for him.”

    Gen. Oneya, a former military administrator of Kano State, was getting ready to attend the funeral of his late friend and comrade, Brig-Gen Patrick Aziza in Adagbarassa, an Urhobo town in Okpe Local Government Area, which is barely 20 minutes’ drive from the Effurun GRA.

    NDR investigations revealed that the robbers, who were probably lurking around the bank premises thought that the big (Ghana-must-go) bag she pulled into the car contained a huge amount of money, instead of the cloths she was carrying.

    An eyewitness said the criminals trailed her to a bad section of the road and opened fire on her. In her desperate bid to escape she ran into a ditch and hit a fence as the robbers rained bullet on her. She died on the spot

    Meanwhile, a source close to the family said Gen. Oneya was informed about the shooting at about 11am. He was with his wife and other dignitaries, which including Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan and retired military chiefs, at Adagbarassa, when the sad news came.

    “He was merely informed that robbers shot his daughter, but he didn’t know that she was dead,” a source added.

    The General reportedly remained calm and partook in all the activities at the ceremony until after he paid his last respect to his late colleague and friend, who was laid to rest at about 2:30pm.

    “Immediately after the interment, he apologised to the governor that he had to break protocol and leave before him (Governor) because his daughter was shot by robbers. The governor was amazed that he was able to stay back over three hours and went through the proceedings.

    “Governor Uduaghan asked Dr Chris Oghenechovwen, Commissioner for Water Resources, to accompany Gen Oneya to his house and to do everything possible to save the woman because they did not know that she was dead.”

    It was gathered that when Oneya left, his wife who stayed back at the ceremony started calling their daughter. “She wanted to tell Frances to cook for her father, because he had not eaten all day.  When Frances’ calls went on answered, she decided to rush home herself to make the food.”

    When Mrs Oneya got home, she met a crowd of people milling around the house built on a road named after her husband. She immediately knew all was not well.

    Among the visitors in the house was Reverend Father Toby, the Parish Priest of St Jude Catholic Church, which shares a common fence with the Oneyas’ compound. At that point, the woman became nervous because the priest had never visited before.

    “She was worried. Then when she got inside, she saw people around her husband. But because her mother was sick, she initially that it was her mother that had died. When her husband told her, ‘we lost one of our daughters’, it became clear to her and without asking she said: ‘It is Frances, isn’t it?”

    Expectedly the incident has thrown the family into mourning with her elder brother, Tony lamenting the loss of a dear sister.

    He said she was “the one that called me up when food was ready, the Landlord that gave me a room when I came back home to Nigeria. The sibling that ensured that colour matched the walls of my new home. The Liaison Officer, the Wedding Planner and the sibling who never knew how much I loved her.”

    Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan on Sunday afternoon led top government functionaries to the Oneya’s family to commiserate with them on another painful death of a promising young Deltan in the state.

    As the painful reality of the death of the wonderful woman sets in for her family and friends, anger is growing over the worsening security situation in Delta and other states of the federation.

    Mr Oghenejabor Ikimi, Executive Director Centre for the Vulnerable and Underprivileged, said:  “The incident and others too numerous to mention simply underscores the quantum insecurity nationwide and the urgent need for the Police to brace up to tackle the spate of lawlessness in our society.”

    Ikimi, a lawyer, urged the Delta Police Commissioner, Mr. Alkali Usman Baba to ensure that the hoodlums are apprehended and brought to book so as to serve as a deterrent to others, “we also call on the CP to also ensure that adequate security is provided throughout the state particularly in this ember months.”

    In her reaction, the Police Public Relations Office in Delta Command, DSP Celestina Kalu, vowed that the days of the hoodlums were numbered. She said several crimes in the area, including a siege to the Effurun-Ughelli axis of the East/West highway was traced to the gang.

    “Now that they have taken life we will hunt them and bring them to justice. The police is not resting we have brought other gangs to justice, this group will not go unpunished,” she vowed in a telephone chat with our reporter.

    While the police spokesperson’s tough talk is assuring, residents of the area are wary of another bloody ember period as the spectre of the Ember months of 2011 loomed large.

    While the city was still mourning the death of the cheerful Ms Oneya, hoodlums again struck on the Effurun end of the busy Old Airport by the local branch of a new generation bank in the area on Saturday afternoon. Three youths armed with cut-to-size single and double barrel rifles attacked shop owners in the area and carted away huge sums of money, bulk mobile recharge cards and other valuables.

    The activities of gangs of criminals operating on Jakpa Road in Effurun have forced residents to impose dusk-to-curfew on themselves. Unfortunately, the activities of the hooligans are not restricted by time or place.

    “It is like the wild west; we are constantly on the lookout. When you see people running, you too just have to join them and run; later you can ask to know what the matter was,” a business centre owner in the area told our reporter.

    Israel Ophori, a photojournalist escaped death by the whiskers two weeks ago when he was attacked by knife-wielding criminals at Jakpa Junction. He was serially stabbed and dispossessed of cash and other valuable.

    At about mid-September the popular Airport Road and adjoining Sokoh Estate road were shut down when a band of robbers trailed a victim who had gone to withdraw huge sum of money from a new generation bank around the vicinity.

    The victim was chased into a mechanic workshop under a shower of hot bullets. He was forced to abandon the Sports Utility Vehicle (SUV) along with a bag-load of cash running into several millions of naira. After retrieving the money, the robbers continued to fire into the air until they left the scene.

    On October 9, a man went to a new generation bank located at the Total Filling Station area of Okumagba Avenue in Warri. He left the bank with N2.1million on his way to the Blue Waters area of Ekpan; he was robbed at gunpoint and the money carted away at the NNPC Housing Complex Road.

    A  statement by the state command of the Police said the victim, identified as Ephraim Iyamukre, trailed the 4-man gang through the Airport Road to Ogunu Road, where in their desperate bid to getaway, they were involved in a multiple crash.

    The crash attracted policemen from the nearby Quick Response (QRS). Consequently, the armed robbers jumped out of their vehicle and ran to different directions. Three successfully escaped after a gunfight with the police team led by ASP Okey Nweke, but the fourth was not so lucky. He was shot dead and the money, arms and ammunition were retrieved. Three persons who suffered various wounds were taken to the General Hospital, Warri.

    Earlier on that day, hundreds of passengers were left stranded on the busy Effurun-Ughelli axis of the East-West highway, following hour-long siege by a 10-man. The hoodlums indiscriminately shot and molested passengers, before they left the scene. At about the same time, a middle-aged man was shot and wounded along Sokoh Estate road.

    DSP Kalu, who confirmed the incident on Ughelli Road, hinted that the preliminary investigation showed that the same gang was behind the coldblooded murder of Ms Oneya. She said they usually moved around in large number.

    On Saturday, October 11, dozens of motorists and commuters going to Ekpan and other parts of Uvwie were rounded up by armed men around the NNPC Housing Complex Road. The victims were dispossessed of huge sums of money and other valuables.

    The robbery spree on the road continued on Sunday when scores of worshippers returning home from church were waylaid around the bridge on the road.

    A government official, who pleaded not to be named, said the administration would leave no stone unturned to ensure the security of lives and property.

    The Uduaghan administration has invested so much in security, acquiring operational vehicles and security gadgets  for the police.

  • In Ogbia, one good term deserves another

    One good turn, they say, deserves another. But for the representatives of the 18 communities that make up the Ogbia Constituency ll in Ogbia Local Government Area, Bayelsa State, one good term deserves another.

    Men and women, young and old from the constituncy trooped to Yenagoa, the state capital on Tuesday. They found their ways to the capital city through different means of transportation. Persons living in the rural communities came on chartered buses while those living in Yenagoa and close to the venue of the event walked some distance.

    In their best traditional attires they came. Their physiognomical countenances radiated with joy as they exchanged pleasantries. Youths, elders, women groups and traditional rulers of about 18 communities that make up the constituency were present. To them, Chief Obedient Emoto has served them well in the Bayelsa State House of Assembly and he deserves a second term.

    To reinforce their decision, the elated constituents rolled out their drums and danced to their ancestral rhythm. Niger Delta Report was told that the event was put together by the lovers of the lawmaker to passionately appeal to him to return to the hallowed chamber in 2015. Emoto who was described by various people as a grassroot politician was in attendance with his beautiful wife.

    So, he listened to speeches from the Obhan Anyama Council of Community Development Committee (OACDC), Pro-Jonathan Vanguard (PJV), Ogbia Gradutae Forum (OGF), Ogbia Constituency ll Advancement Forum (OCAF) and Obanema’s representative.

    Their solidarity speeches were laced with commendations and appreciation of Emoto’s personality and performance. Some described him as a selfless and honest lawmaker; others referred to him as a man of outstanding integrity; still others said the lawmaker who hails from Ologi community in Ogbia, has outstanding leadership qualities.

    The hall, however, erupted with intermittent applauses when a community leader, Mr. Majesty Inegbagha, seized the floor for over an hour to enumerate the achievements of Emoto in less than three years in office.

    He highlighted the importance of legislation and said: “The office of the state House of Assembly cannot be occupied by riff-raff, nonentities, criminals, impostors and ego-centric persons whose motives of entering politics are borne out of selfish desire to amass wealth at the detriment of the people.

    “Days have gone when people use guns, thugs and all forms of criminal tendencies to hijack the mandate of the people so as to under-develop them. Today, people have realised that politics is meant for persons who place public interest above their personal gains.

    “The people of Ogbia Constituency ll have woken from their slumber and have resolved to sustain the mandate of their elected leaders who have shown exemplary and unparalleled leadership qualities for the overall interest of all devoid of sentiment, discrimination and domestic tendencies.

    “The people have concluded that legislators like Chief Obedient Emoto who attach importance to public interest above his personal gains are very rare in the contemporary Nigerian politics. He observes the moral laws of politics which is based on honesty, goodness, righteousness and consideration for others”.

    He recalled that immediately he was sworn-in in June 2011, Emoto began to present the basic problems of his constituency to the state and the federal government for attention. He wrote letters and memos to the various ministries, agencies and parastatal.

    Some of the needs and problems he was said to have identified were dilapidated school buildings in the area, electrification and wiring of communities, provision of potable water, shore protection of Anyama, Ayakoro, Ologi and Otuegwe and sand filling of Otuedu community waterfront, provision of landing jetties, construction of road to link Ogbia Constituency ll to the state capital and construction of befitting general hospital in the constituency.

    Through Emoto’s efforts, Inegbagha said the government has given attention to some of the myriads of problems in the constituency. According to him, the inputs of the lawmaker were visible in the 45 bills so far passed into law by the assembly.

    “Indisputably, he is one of the most regular and punctual lawmaker in the state House of Assembly”, he said.

    He added that Emoto’s constituency projects were adjudged by the Directorate of Project Monitoring and Evaluation the best in the state. “The lawmaker has completed the boarding school constituency project at the Government Secondary School, Anyama, the constituency electrification project at Ologi, headmaster’s quarters at Otuedu while many primary school projects are ongoing”, he said.

    He noted that the lawmaker has been at the vanguard of paying school and WAEC fees of students from the constituency adding that his medical, infrastructural and social programmes were unbeatable.

    After thoroughly assessing the performances of the legislator. The constituents moved a motion to adopt him as their preferred choice for 2015. In unison, they gave him a clean bill of health.

    In his acceptance, Emoto promised more effective representation vowing to attract more development to the area.