Tag: amnesty programme

  • Buhari appoints Dokubo as new Amnesty programme Coordinator

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday approved the appointment of Prof. Charles Quaker Dokubo as the new Coordinator of the Presidential Amnesty Programme for former Niger Delta militants.

    He replaces Brigadier-Gen. Paul Boroh (retd).

    A statement signed by the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, said Prof. Dokubo is currently the Director of Research and Studies at the Nigerian Institute of International Affairs.

    He holds a PhD in Strategic Studies from the University of Bradford, United Kingdom, and hails from Abonema, Akuku-Toru local government area of Rivers State.

    Meanwhile, the President has directed the National Security Adviser, Mohammed Babagana Monguno, to carry out a full investigation into the activities of the Amnesty Programme from 2015 to date, especially allegations of financial impropriety and other acts that are allegedly detrimental to the objectives of the programme.

  • Amnesty programme has achieved 96% success – Boroh

    Amnesty programme has achieved 96% success – Boroh

     

    The Special Adviser to President Muhammadu Buhari and Coordinator of the Presidential Amnesty Programme, Paul Boroh, on Friday claimed that the programme has achieved 96% success.

    Speaking with State House correspondents, he thanked President Buhari for reposing confidence in him.

    According to him, what is happening in the Amnesty Programme is no longer business as usual.

    He said “The programme actually is a security programme that has to do with critical stakeholders who drive the process in the programme. I’m only there to supervise what they are doing so that we can achieve the aim for which the programme was established, to ensure youth restiveness, to allow and ensure for peace and stability of the Niger Delta region, it is a security programme.”

    On his achievements in office, he said “Greatly in the sense that my task is to ensure peace and stability in the Niger Delta region and you are in better position to testify to that.

    Asked when the programme is ending, he said “Very soon, is a process is not a mathematical solution and we are in the process of achieving sustainable reintegration of the ex-agitators in the programme.

    On the percentage achieved so far, he said “We have achieved 96 per cent. We have only few left, from the 30,000, we have a case low balance of about 10,000 left that need to be reintegrated and we are looking at Mr. President’s vision of alternative to our oil in reintegrating our youths, that has to do with agriculture and that is the focus for which the programme is on now. We are focusing on agriculture as a way of life for the youth in the Niger Delta region.

    “We have gone so far at a point that most of the youths have also bought into the idea and initiative of agriculture as a way of life; as a way of creating job opportunities; as a way to ensure food security in the region and again to develop their financial positions because they will sell their farm products.”

    On the report that some of the ex-militants sent for studies oversea were abandoned, he said “I will never allow any of my children schooling outside this country under government to suffer. So as we speak 96 per cent of those on off-shore scholarship have graduated and returned home. I have only a few, in fact not more than 100 of them left in the entire globe where they have been schooling in the US, UK, Asian countries and South Africa. They have graduated and have come home.

    “The ones that refused to graduate and are trying to make life unbearable for themselves, its their own cup of tea, the federal government is not responsible for them anymore.

    Asked how the government is trying to accommodate those that have graduated, he said “This is a very great challenge that we are all facing as a nation state. The federal government ensured that about 350 of them have been employed in the various ministries in the country.

    “We are only waiting for appropriation so that once they report to their various ministries they will start earning their salaries” he said

     

  • Ex-militants warns against removal of Mowarin from Amnesty office

    Ex-militants warns against removal of Mowarin from Amnesty office

    Ex-militants from Edo, Rivers, Bayelsa, Ondo and Delta states, have kicked against alleged plot by unknown persons to remove Head of Onshore Education Unit, office of the Amnesty Programme, Major Hassan Kesiena Mowarin (rtd).

    The ex-militants said there have been improvement in the scheme since Morawin assumed office and his appointment showed that the ruling party meant well for the people of the Niger Delta region.

    Spokesman for the ex-militants, Mr. Atangbala One, who spoke to newsmen in Benin City said some few individuals want Morawin removed because true beneficiaries of the Amnesty Programme are now selected for the scheme.

    Atangbala alleged that the few cabal in the system placed fake beneficiaries in schools and subsequently force them to remit the sum of N30, 000 to N40, 000 monthly to them

    According to him, “Major Mowarin has been fighting feverishly against the commercialization of admission process for amnesty sponsorship which was supposed to be free for the genuine delegates for the program.

    “But a cabal hijacked it and sell the beneficiary codes of the poor children of the Niger Delta to their cronies.

    “The few cabals who do not mean well for the people of the region have gone as far as paying for on-line media, smear publications and also paying some uninformed persons to stage protest against him all in attempt to remove him and continue with their blood money business.”

  • Amnesty: Epe kidnappers surrender arms in Ondo

    Amnesty: Epe kidnappers surrender arms in Ondo

    Militants terrorising parts of Lagos, Ogun and Ondo states have finally submitted their arms and ammunition on Monday evening to embrace the federal government amnesty programme.

    The militants were behind the kidnap of the six Senior Secondary School Students of Lagos Model College,Igbonla, Epe in Lagos state, Arepo pipeline vandalization and several attacks in the riverine areas of Ondo State.

    The militants were led by their leader, Ogailo Iborry Young a.k.a O.C to the Collection and Documentation of Arms Centre in their hometown, Ajapa Community in Ese-Odo local government area of the state.

    They willingly dropped their arms and ammunition.

    The event, witnessed by the Deputy Governor and Chairman of State Amnesty Committee, Agboola Ajayi, representatives of Delta State Government, Commanding Officer of the Nigerian Navy Forward Operation Base, Igbokoda, Navy Captain Usman Yahaya among others was seen by the residents as a way of restoring peace into the riverine area.

    Some arms submitted include: Browning wz machine gun, Daewoo K3, Colt Automatic Rifles, General Purpose Machine gun, Breda 30, Fiat Revelli Modelling, AK 47 Rifles,  Rocket Launcher, CETME Ameli,  Heckler & Koch MG4, Pump Action and some Automatic Cartridges.

    Also, military uniforms, police bullet proof vests, dynamites grenades, bombs and helmets were submitted.

    In his address, Iborry Young appreciated the state and the federal government for the fresh Amnesty initiative.

    He traced the source of their arms to the Ijaw/Ilaje crisis of 1998/1999 and blamed on joblessness, poverty and neglect by government.

    He said “if we may be asked our reasons for embarking on this struggle, our simple assertion to the public and other concerned authorities is that it is joblessness, suffering, poverty, oppression and neglect by the Government”

    The leader of the repentant armed bandits said they decided to dump their oil bunkering business and hatched another game plan to attract the attention of the government.

    According to him, “as it got to this point, we did not find life very easy. Thus, we relocated to Ogun State where the government college Ugbonla, Epe School boys were kidnapped whose release led to the present arrangement through the courageous efforts of the deputy governors of Ondo and Delta states.

    “We did not kidnap these boys for mere ransom but to negotiate our freedom and full reintegration to civil life”.

    Ajayi said the exercise was impressive as sophisticated ammunitions were surrendered.

    Ajayi assured the readiness of the federal government to fulfil its own promise in providing employment and education programme among others for the repentant militants for them to be self-reliant if they embrace peace.

    He rejoiced with residents of Ajapa community for the peace that finally restored to the community after face-off between them and military.

    While urging them to always embrace peace to reign, the Deputy Governor said they need to embrace peace for Oil Company to commence operation in the area.

    Ajayi allayed fear as no one or government will launch attack on the oil producing areas of the state after the submission of arms and ammunitions by the armed youths.

    Also speaking, Navy Captain Yahaya, said the exercise in Ajapa community was more impressive in relation to the record of the exercise since it has started.

    Five militant groups, the Awaja, Ogoolorunyo led by Job, Ebie, Dragon and Atupa camps had earlier submitted their arms and ammunition to embrace amnesty programme.

  • Militants accuse politicians of hijacking Amnesty programme in Ondo

    Militants accuse politicians of hijacking Amnesty programme in Ondo

    A militant group in Ondo State, United Sea Wolf Avenger, said politicians in the state had hijacked the Federal Government’s Amnesty programme in the state by allocating the slots to their children, friends and political allies.

    The group made the allegation in a statement in Lagos on Thursday signed by its leader, Gen. Deji Ehinmowo, Secretary, Gen. Akinfemi Raymond, and Adviser, Gen. Ogbaro Ariyo.

    The Ondo State Government, had on Oct. 23, announced that the Federal Government would on Nov. 9 incorporate ex-militants in the riverine area of the state who are willing to submit their arms for the programme.

    The militant group expressed regret that its members of over 400 from five camps in the state were neglected and not incorporated into the programme.

    “We humbly want to alert Nigerians and the Federal Government that politicians in Ondo State are about to compromise the standard and integrity that the Nigerian security personnel has built over the years by hijacking the second phase of the amnesty programme.

    “This is evidence in the outcome of the series of their meetings where Amnesty slots were given to their children, traditional rulers, friends in their political wards and units.

    “The 2009 Amnesty programme was not for political patronage. The then government didn’t consider Amnesty slot to any political, religious and traditional leader.

    “It is our strong belief that the purpose of the Amnesty programme is to mop up arms and achieve the desired peace in the oil rich region of Ondo State to attract investors to exploit the numerous natural resources that bound in the riverine community for the benefit of our people in the state and Nigeria at large.

    “We want to put it on record that fake people had been recruited as militants into the second phase of the Amnesty programme in Ondo State by politicians in the state for political patronage.

    “It is with strong belief that the present government in Ondo State is playing politics with the Amnesty programme without involving us in the process.

    “We are using this opportunity to inform President Muhammadu Buhari, the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, and the security personnel that over 400 militants in our camp are ready to surrender arms in their possession if the government is ready to dialogue with us,’’ the group said.

    The group also condemned the location of the flag off of the programme to Akure, instead of Igbokoda, the headquarters of Ilaje Local Government, which is the mandate area.

    “This negates the practice in the past and how it was done in other states of the Niger Delta region where flag off took place in the mandate areas,’’ it said.

    Read Also:  Amnesty: 400 militants to surrender arms in Ondo

  • More communities benefit from amnesty programme

    The Special Adviser to President Muhammadu Buhari on Niger Delta Affairs, Brig-Gen. Paul Boroh (rtd) has noted that the amnesty programme should be a collective responsibility of every Nigerian.

    According to him, the scheme ought to have been formulated as a policy of the Federal Government since the past 50 years.

    Gen. Boroh, however, praised President Buhari for showing greater commitment to finding workable solutions to various problems in the Niger Delta region.

    Speaking to reporters in Akure, the Ondo State capital shortly after receiving an award of the ‘Niger Delta Peace Ambassador’ bestowed on him by the Nigeria Union of Journalists (NUJ) Ondo State chapter, Boroh said the scheme had impacted on the lives of over five million people, particularly in the region.

    The presidential aide said due to the current peace initiative in the Niger Delta communities, oil production had increased to 2.3 million barrels per day.

    He said efforts were on to provide projects such as provision of treated water for the people’s consumption, stressing that most of the people in the creeks have no toilet facilities, hospitals and other basic needs.

    His words: “We will touch the lives of people in the oil-bearing communities. They need to feel the impact of the Federal Government mostly in all the small communities of the Niger Delta.

    “The amnesty programme came due to conflicts. It is a very expensive scheme; we need peace, stability and development in the Niger Delta as a long and short measure of development”.

    The retired military officer said the amnesty programme focused mainly on human capacity development to allow infrastructural development as against’ mathematical’ solution, stressing that peace efforts cannot be measured.

    Boroh noted that his appointment had afforded him the opportunity to feel the pulse of the people, particularly those in the Niger Delta axis.

    He described the honour of Peace Ambassador bestowed on him by Ondo NUJ as a great challenge to prove his worth, even as he urged the media to partner with the scheme to sustain peace in the Niger Delta in particular and Nigeria in general.

  • FG tasks Niger Delta ex-agitators on economy

    FG tasks Niger Delta ex-agitators on economy

    The Federal Government on Sunday charged 200 Niger Delta ex-agitators, who graduated from the Innoson-Kiara Academy, Nnewi in Anambra, to use their skills positively to grow the economy.

    Brig.-Gen. Paul Boroh (Rtd), the Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta and Coordinator of the Presidential Amnesty Programme, gave the charge at the Batch ‘B’ graduation ceremony.

    A statement by the Academy Head, Media and Communication Department, Mr Piriye Kiyaramo, said the ex-agitators underwent a nine months intensive automobile course in automobile manufacturing, engineering and maintenance.

    Boroh commended the graduating ex-agitators for making President Muhammadu Buhari and the Federal Government proud in their performance during the training.

    The special adviser said the entrepreneurship drive of the Presidential Amnesty Programme was geared toward creating an enabling environment for beneficiaries to develop their full potential in different vocational skills.

    “This is with a view to making you lead productive and creative lives in line with the ongoing reintegration process of 30,000 ex-agitators in the Niger Delta region.

    “The focus of the Presidential Amnesty Programme is to create the enabling environment for youths in the region, particularly the ex-agitators to have sustainable sources of livelihood as they reintegrate with their communities,” he said.

    The Chief Executive Officer of the academy, Mr Endi Ezengwa, said the trainees were exposed to practical automobile engineering works during their practical training at the factory.

    Ezengwa said out of the 199 candidates that sat for the National Technical Certificate (NTC) from the National Business and Technical Examinations Board, 195 bagged distinctions while four others made credits.

    He said that Innoson Car Manufacturing Company was willing to absorb the graduands, with a salary of N60, 000 which would be reviewed upwards at the end of a probation period of one year.

    However, Ezengwa urged the state governments in the Niger Delta region to create an enabling environment for the graduands to put into practice the skills they have acquired from the academy.

    “We encourage the respective state governors to actively engage us to establish mini-automobile factories in the Niger Delta area,” he added.

    He commended Boroh for his vision and sincerity in driving the youth empowerment scheme through various vocational trainings, describing him as a “focused man, who has his people at heart”.

    Ezengwa said the course covered automobile manufacturing, auto maintenance, auto mechanical, auto electrical, auto painting, welding, among other aspects of the automobile engineering production chain.

    He noted that the Amnesty Office under Boroh had introduced innovative approach to fill the manpower gaps in critical skills among youths in the Niger Delta.

    Earlier, the Project Coordinator and representative of the Vendor, Mr Momoh Aminu, explained that the rationale for the training was to ensure that beneficiaries were equipped with marketable skills.

    “The idea had been for everyone that participates in the training to have mastery of a particular area and then everybody now works compositely toward the end product.

    “So far, the trainees have been exceptional because within a short period they have been able to display capacity in assimilating the theory and practical aspects of the training and this is really good for Nigeria.

    “At the end of the day, we will be talking about people, who are armed with critical technical skills which the country needs, not just for the development of the Niger Delta area, but for Nigeria in general,” he stressed.

    Speaking on behalf of the ex- agitators, President of the trainees, Mr Raphael Ajalaja, expressed satisfaction with the leadership of Boroh, especially the manner he handled the programme.

    Ajalaja also expressed gratitude to the Federal Government for giving them such opportunity to be trained at the centre.

    Another graduate, Miss Gloria Edward, said the automobile training had developed their capacity to several business opportunities.

    Edward urged the Amnesty Coordinator to empower them at the end of the programme to enable them establish their automobile businesses.

    High point of the ceremony was the presentation of three vehicles; a bus, 4×4 wheel truck and a 32-seater bus assembled from the scratch to the finish by the ex-agitators.

    NAN reports that over 200 youths from the region had earlier benefitted from the programme

  • Akeredolu urges FG to expand amnesty programme

    Akeredolu urges FG to expand amnesty programme

    The Ondo State Governor, Oluwarotimi Akeredolu, on Saturday urged the Federal Government to expand the amnesty programme to accommodate more youths in the Niger Delta region.

    Akeredolu made the call when the Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta Affairs, Maj.-Gen. Paul Boroh (retd) visited him in Akure.

    The governor said the federal government could take a cue from Ondo State, which created a University of Science and Technology in Okitipupa, where people could learn how to build boats and take engineering courses.

    “It is unnecessary to send them out of the country.

    “A university can be set up here; the one that can teach them to build flying boats and other things that will make them to be useful to themselves and the area.

    “So many things can be learnt from the university. Let us integrate more of them into the amnesty programme; let us engage them to reduce youth restiveness in the region,” he said.

    Earlier, Boroh said he was happy with the relative peace in the ijaw area of the state.

    Boroh said he was in the state for the summit of the National Council on Niger Delta and to assess other issues.

    NAN

  • Institute condemns attacks on Amnesty Programme chief Boroh

    Institute condemns attacks on Amnesty Programme chief Boroh

    The Bayelsa State International Institute of Tourism and Hospitality (IITH) yesterday slammed critics of the Presidential Amnesty Programme (PAP).

    It said attacks on the programme’s Coordinator, Brig.-Gen. Paul Boroh (retd.), were unwarranted and misplaced.

    The institute, which is one of the partners in PAP,  flayed the Niger Deltans for Accountability and Good Governance (NDAGG) for its allegations that Gen. Boroh was not following due process in contract awards.

    Speaking in Yenagoa, the Rector, IITF, Mr. Timi Johnson, said instead of vilification, Gen. Boroh should be commended for observing due process in award of contracts and engagement of service vendors.

    Johnson said: ”We want to say that the allegation by NDAGG that Boroh is awarding contracts or engagement of service without following due process is immoral, unfounded, unwarranted and misplaced.

    ”One major innovation adopted by the Amnesty Office is the important decision by Gen. Paul Boroh to personally lead a delegation of top officials from Abuja to carry out rigorous verification of claims by prospective partners and vendors.

    ”Boroh follows this through to their existing facilities as claimed in their proposals including that presented by the institute before approval is given for the Memorandum of Understanding and commencement of training and empowerment project.

    ”This process was the experience of this Institute before the approval of the first batch of 1,000 beneficiaries to be trained in 2017.

    ”It is on record that those (beneficiaries) trained by the Institute and who graduated two weeks ago, were on June 20, 2017, empowered with starter packs in Catering and Fashion Designing worth several millions of naira, courtesy of Boroh’s reforms in line with the mandate of the PAP for full integration of delegates (ex-militants) that successfully completed their training.”

    Johnson said the plot by the fifth columnists to protest against Boroh was like ”mere traducers that fed fat in the past through award of phoney contracts and diversion of funds” which Boroh’s leadership stopped.

    He said  the amnesty boss successfully checked crass opportunism, rot, indiscipline and inexorable mess that characterised the programme.

    “We therefore call on President Muhammadu Buhari to ignore the antics of mischief makers and enemies of the Niger Delta who are again colluding to fan the embers of violence and demean the good intentions of Boroh and his team.

    “The performance of Boroh is an eloquent testimony of a true son of the Niger Delta who is currently waging war to break the jinx and sustain the existing peace, development and progress of the region.”

  • Road to sustainable Amnesty Programme in Niger Delta

    Road to sustainable Amnesty Programme in Niger Delta

    The recent motion by the Senate calling on the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemp Adeosun, to release the sum of N15 billion being the backlog of allowances and payments for the training and education of former Niger Delta militants under the Amnesty Programme, which was provided for in the 2016 budget, is a welcome development. The House of Representatives had, a day earlier, passed a similar motion.

    The timely release of the outstanding funds without further delay would save the country an international embarrassment that may arise from protests by beneficiaries of the programme, especially those receiving training in various institutions in different parts of the world.

    While presenting the motion on the floor of the House, Minority Leader, Leo Ogor, had drawn attention to plans by some of the beneficiaries in the United Kingdom to stage demonstrations at the Nigerian High Commission in that country to protest the delay in releasing the funds to enable them to meet their financial obligations to the institutions where they are undergoing training.

    Reports from South Africa, United States, Philippines, Malaysia, and other countries where former militants are also undergoing trainings indicate a similar level of restiveness, with some facing the threat of expulsion from their institutions. Certainly, the country can do without any untoward development that could have negative impact on its image.

    It is gratifying to note that the Senate does not only want the money released as soon as possible, it has also set in motion a machinery to unravel the cause of the delay, with a view to guarding against a reoccurrence in the future.

    Without prejudice to the findings of the Senate committee, the cause of the delay in meeting government’s obligations to the amnesty beneficiaries may not be located too far away from the government’s commitment to ensuring accountability and transparency in the disbursement of funds under the programme.

    A similar delay occurred in the first few months of the current administration, and only a timely intervention by the government averted an ugly situation.

    Without doubt, the return of permanent peace to the troubled Niger Delta hinges partly on solutions to the unemployment problem that has fuelled militancy in the region for more than a decade.

    That was what the Amnesty Programme of the late president, Umar Musa Yar’Adua, unarguably the most ambitious programme by any administration before it to address the problem of unemployment in the region, set out to achieve.

    Timi Alaibe, the then presidential adviser and chief executive officer of the programme, is said to have achieved the feat of not only disarming and rehabilitating the militants, about 26, 000 in number, but also succeeded in reintegrating them into the society through a hitch-free implementation of the programme. Reports claim that under Alaibe, there was a measure of transparency and accountability in execution of the programme.

    That’s why we did not hear stories of delay in paying the militants – those that are placed on monthly allowance of N65, 000 – and those in various institutions around the world for different trainings. And, by extension, no stories of demonstrations by militants over unpaid allowances.

    The reason for the relative ease with which Alaibe and his team executed the programme may not be unconnected with the fact that it was the responsibility of one agency, the one he headed. This promoted transparency, accountability and easy management in the manner funds were disbursed.

    It is therefore possible that problems set in when other non-concerned agencies began to dabble into execution of amnesty programmes for the militants. For instance, the mandate of the Nigerian Maritime and Safety Administration (NIMASA) does not include execution of amnesty programmes for militants.

    But we saw during the tenure of the immediate past administration of the agency how it reportedly got involved in sponsoring repentant militants on training programmes in different parts of the world, apart from other amnesty programmes.

    It may not be farfetched to suggest that during the immediate past dispensation, the two agencies – Amnesty Programme Office and NIMASA – may have been working at cross purposes.

    While it is necessary to separate the wheat from the chaff through painstaking investigation into the management of resources meant for sustenance of the amnesty programme during the previous dispensation, care must be taken to ensure it does not in itself constitute a clog in the wheel of progress in current efforts to find long and lasting solutions to the problem of unemployment in the Niger Delta region – an important component of the whole package.

    If need be, the federal government may find it necessary to look into the handling of the amnesty programme by Alaibe. It may be safe to assume that he did not execute the programme in abstract terms. He must have designed a template for its execution. This is more so because he authored the Niger Delta Development Master Plan, of which the amnesty programme is a part. There must be something on paper others can learn from.

    It must not be forgotten that the amnesty programme is just an aspect of what should be a holistic approach to resolving the issues of the Niger Delta. The highly commendable dialogue approach of the federal government in solving the problem of the region once and for all is evident in the relative peace that has reigned in the region in the past few months. This is just the first step. Subsequent steps should involve a more streamlined and sustainable approach to executing the amnesty programme to ensure it achieves the objectives for which it was designed, in a hitch-free manner.

    Tijani, a social commentator, wrote in from Kaduna