Tag: Bayelsa State

  • ‘Why Bayelsa is no longer safe’

    The deepening insecurity in Bayelsa State especially Yenagoa, the state capital, has generated concerns among residents and other stakeholders including Governor Seriake Dickson.

    The capital city has been under siege by armed cultists, who attack innocent residents, dispossess them of their valuables especially smartphones, kill and maim them at slightest provocation.

    The gunmen were also fond of killing policemen and stealing their rifles in a crime wave that had sent jitters in the spines of residents.

    The unchecked terrorism culminated in barbaric attack on residence of members of the National Youths Service Corps (NYSC) by cultists, who killed two of them and injured others.

    It was gathered the overwhelming insecurity in the state was majorly caused by acute shortage of personnel in the state’s police command.

    A police source, who spoke in confidence, said the number of personnel in the command was embarrassingly small adding that there was nothing the available number of policemen could do to contain the crime wave.

     Read also: Panic in Ogun community as farmer kills two, threatens to kill eight more

    Besides, the source said the police lacked operational vehicles and other required equipment to combat crimes in the state saying, “you can’t fight armed criminals with bare hands”.

    He said the insecurity might escalate ahead of the December governorship election unless the Force Headquarters undertook urgent steps to address the shortcomings.

    “We are in trouble in Bayelsa right now. We can’t perform magic. There are no logistics and we have acute shortage of personnel. With the number we have, we can’t police capital city let alone the entire state.

    “Something needs to be done urgently to address the shortcomings and secure the lives and properties of Bayelsa.

    “The force headquarters should come to our aide to save people from rampaging cultists”, he said.

    It was gathered on Sunday that Dickson was disturbed by the security situation in the state especially the reported killing of the corps members.

    A source from the Government House told the Nation that worried by the development, the governor summoned the Commissioner of Police, Olusholla David and other security commanders for an emergency meeting on Friday.

    “The governor is not sleeping. He is looking for how to solve this current problem. Apart from the emergency meeting, Dickson has dispatched a delegation led by one of his special advisers on security to the force headquarters.

    “Among other things, the delegation will appeal to the police high command to address accuse shortage of policemen in the state. The Bayelsa State security outfit, Doo Akpo, has over 30 patrol van, but the police can only manage 10 of the vehicles because of their number,” he said.

    But female stakeholders under the auspices of Women Arise for Safer Bayelsa (WASB) blamed the insecurity on desperation of opposition political parties to win elections in the state.

    WASB, in a statement by its President, Sotonye Nelson, recalled how Dickson effectively tackled insecurity in his first term in office using Doo Akpo.

    Nelson said: “With the coming of the Dickson Administration, Bayelsans heaved a sigh of relief as Doo Akpo effectively tackled the twin menace of crime and insecurity that was bequeathed unto the administration by former Governor Timipre Sylva and his men.

    “The State Security outfit, which was painstakingly designed to complement the efforts of the police and other security agencies in the fight against crime, did a great job in curtailing the crime challenge at the time.

    “Criminal elements who had held the state by the jugular were left with no other option than to either leave the state of face arrest and consequent prosecution.

    “The politicization of security by top chieftains of the APC in collusion with a Federal Government that cares less about the well-being and security of Bayelsans has frustrated in no small way, the efforts of the state government in maintaining peace and security in the state.”

  • Again, DSS arrests Jones Abiri in Bayelsa

    A Bayelsa-based newspaper publisher, Jones Abiri was whisked  away yesterday by security personnel in plain clothes believed to be men of the Department of State Services (DSS).

    Abiri was arrested at Ayabowei Plaza in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital.

    It was gathered that the men stormed the area with a white Hilux van and black SUV.

    Abiri was reportedly discussing with his colleagues at the secretariat of the Bayelsa Independent Publishers Association, when he was rounded up by the heavily armed men.

    A source, who spoke in confidence said: “The armed men jumped out of the Hilux van threatening to shoot Abiri if he moved, only to be forced into the van.

    “They then zoomed off while the other vehicle closely followed behind. The guns they carried were similar to those of the secret service.”

    Read also: DSS denies working against electoral process in Rivers

    Another source added: “The men jumped out of the vehicles in a Gestapo fashion while he was chatting with his friends, shouting “you are under arrest”.

    “While he was demanding to know his offence, he was forcefully pushed into a waiting vehicle at gunpoint. Currently, his whereabouts are unknown.” In 2016, the DSS arrested Abiri, alleging that he was a militant leader.

    The DSS claimed that Abiri, a publisher of the Weekly Source, was the leader of the Joint Niger Delta Liberation Force, which threatened to release missiles in the Niger Delta region.

    He later regained freedom in 2018 following campaigns by national and international human rights groups.

  • DSS re-arrests Bayelsa publisher, Jones Abiri

    A Bayelsa-based newspaper publisher, Jones Abiri was whisked away on Saturday by security personnel in plain cloth believed to be men of the Department of State Services (DSS).

    Abiri was arrested at Ayabowei Plaza in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital.

    It was gathered gathered that the men stormed the area with a white Hilux van and black SUV.

    Abiri was reportedly discussing with his colleagues at the secretariat of the Bayelsa Independent Publishers Association, when he was rounded up by the heavily armed men.

    A source, who spoke in confidence said: ”The armed men jumped out of the hilux van threatening to shoot Abiri if he moved, only to be forced into the Hilux van.

    Read also: Man jumps to death in Ibadan

    “They then zoomed off while the other vehicle closely followed behind. The guns they carried were similar to those of the secret service.”

     

    Another source added: “The men jumped out of the vehicles in a gestapo fashion while he was chatting with his friends, said shouted ‘you are under arrest’.

    ‘While he was demanding to know his offence, he was forcefully pushed into a waiting vehicle at gunpoint. Currently, his whereabouts are unknown.”

    In 2016, the DSS arrested Abiri, alleging that he was a militant leader.

    The DSS claimed that Abiri, a publisher of the Weekly Source, was the leader of the Joint Niger Delta Liberation Force, which threatened to release missiles in the Niger Delta region.

    He later regained freedom in 2018 following campaigns national and international human rights groups.

  • NIGHT OF HORROR

    GEORGE Onokpoma had no inclination of the horror lurking around his neighborhood on March 20, 2019. As a dedicated member of the National Youths Service Corps (NYSC), the easygoing George, known for his honesty and uprightness, never nursed any foreboding that he could be a target of violence by the same people he came to serve after leaving his comfort zone in Port Harcourt, Rivers State. George, who hails from Delta State, never knew that those he was sacrificing his one year to improve their lives were waiting in the wings to take his life. If he had known that his dreams would be cut short in such a gruesome circumstance in Bayelsa State while serving his fatherland, he would have heeded his elder brother’s advice for redeployment. His elder brother, Honest Akpos, had wanted to seek redeployment for George but he, out of patriotism, turned down the offer, saying: “I will go wherever I am posted”.h But that decision cost him his life. The 29-year-old twin and graduate of the Petroleum Training Institute (PTI) just returned from church where he went for his evening worship. He was sitting at the balcony of his quarters in Swali area of Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, evaluating the scripts of his students when tragedy struck. The quarters, where he lived with other corps members,  belonged to Mr.

    Jerry Yeseme Moses, the owner of a private school, Victory International School, where George and his colleagues discharged their primary responsibilities as teachers. While Moses and his family occupied the first floor of the storey building, George and his colleagues, including other tenants, lived on the ground floor. But like a scene in a horror movie, the building was invaded by suspected cultists at about 10pm. Gunshots were heard by neighbours and in a twinkle of an eye, George was found  on the floor struggling for his life. One of the corps members was also seen gasping for breath in the pool of his own blood, while another victim lay helpless. Their attackers had fled the vicinity. Thirty-year-old Popoola Oluwatobi Olamide, a graduate of Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU) and indigene of Oyo State, died on the spot. Anthony Gbenga Dada, who hails from Kogi State, and George were rushed to the Federal Medical Centre (FMC), Yenagoa. George breathed his last at the hospital, while Dada is still battling to live again. The horror Eyewitnesses narrated the terror unleashed on innocent corps members by gun-wielding cultists. The hoodlums launched their attack under the cover of the night. Moses, who is the landlord of the corps members, said he was inside the house when he heard gunshots. He said: “I am the proprietor of Victory International School, Swali, and the corps members are my employees. On that Wednesday at about 10:30, I was watching television when I heard gunshots. I didn’t know what was happening. Shortly after, the sounds stopped. I rushed out of the house and quickly went downstairs where the corps members lived. “It was then it dawned on me that the attack happened in my building. I saw corps members lying  on the floor. I don’t really know the reason why they were shot. One of them was lying dead, while the other two were still struggling for their lives. “I alerted neighbours to help me put them in the vehicle and I rushed them to the Federal Medical Centre. Unfortunately, two of them died but one was responding to treatment.” Moses said he alerted the paramount ruler of the community immediately he heard the gunshots and appealed to him to call the police. “The policemen were not there when I took them to the hospital. But when I returned, I was told the police came”, he said. Another neighbour of the corps members, Mercy Isaac, said she went upstairs to charge her phone at her landlords’ place when he heard repeated sounds. She said: “I didn’t know that the sounds I heard were gunshots. Some other persons in the landlord’s apartment and I wanted to go out, but the landlord held us and appealed to us to wait. “Few minutes later, we heard similar sounds. When the sounds ceased, we all went downstairs only to see the corps members struggling with their lives. We later heard how it all happened. Those who killed them came and saw one of the corps members at the balcony marking his students’ scripts. “They held him and led him to the door where other corps were and asked him to knock at the door. He knocked but when a voice from the room demanded to know

    who was knocking, the corps member refused to say his name. The gunmen became angry and concluded he was playing with them. They shot him twice in the head. They broke into the room and shot others”. An eyewitness, Glory John, was simply concerned about the good nature of the corps members in the neighborhood. “They don’t deserve to die”, she said. She described them as peaceful and dutiful. “They never had an issue with anybody before and anytime they were back from school, they were always indoors”, she added. Another source, who spoke in confidence, said the corps members were shot in the head. He said the attackers were obviously out to kill them. According to him, the one that died on the spot was shot twice on the head because they felt that he was joking with them. “When they gained access into the room where others were sleeping, they shot another in the head and the other in the lower abdomen. But when they wanted to go, they wanted to shoot the one that survived on the head. On pulling the trigger, they discovered that they had run out of bullets. That was why Dada survived”, he said. ‘Why did they kill my brother?’ “What did my brother do to deserve this horrible death?”, queried Akpos Honest. The slain George was Honest’ younger brother. George was special to his family

    and very close to his mother, who singlehandedly trained and sponsored all of them through school. Honest, a broadcast journalist based in Port Harcourt, narrated his ordeal. He said: “He was my younger brother, he was not a distant relative nor my cousin. He was a twin; his name was George; his twin sister’s name is Georgina. He was born in 1989 and he graduated over two years ago in Petroleum Training Institute (PTI), Warri. He waited for two years just to get his call-up letter from NYSC. “I was on duty on Thursday at about 3pm when I got a call from his twin sister that someone from NYSC called that his brother was dead. She was crying as she was talking. I had to stop all that I was doing and rushed to Bayelsa. I got to Yenagoa by 5pm and saw my brother’s corpse in the mortuary”. Honest, who wept uncontrollably, said he would explore all legal means to avenge the death of his brother. He said George would not die like his fallen and forgotten colleagues. He vowed to sue all the stakeholders responsible for the safety of his brother. He said: “This is one of those incidents that happen to serving corps members and I intend to follow this to the latter. I intend to sue the Federal Government, NYSC and the Bayelsa State Government. I am only waiting  for the autopsy to be out; I will not let it go like that because my brother was an honest

    Nigerian”. Describing his brother as a patriotic Nigerian, he said: “I told my brother that I will make arrangements for him to serve in Rivers State because I stay in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, but he refused because he did not like someone going through the back door to do something for him. “While in camp, I begged him to allow me redeploy him but he refused. He was a strong Christian. My mum called him the pastor of the house  and we were brought up by my mother alone. We are seven and Iam the eldest. “My mum called and begged him that his brother wanted to redeploy him to Rivers State but he still refused. He said he wanted to do it the way it ought to be done because he was a strong Christian and didn’t like passing through the back door. “When he was posted to his primary assignment, l wanted  George to serve in Daewoo because he studied Mechanical Engineering and graduated as one of the best students. I believed that since he insisted on serving in Bayelsa, at least Daewoo would have offered him security  and accommodation, but he still refused and told me that he would stay where  he was posted. “So, imagine what it feels like that I had every opportunity to remove my brother from Bayelsa and even to work in Daewoo but because he believed in the system, he did the right thing but paid with his life”. He said as at the time he spoke to our correspondent, the management of the NYSC had not deemed  it necessary to send a delegation to his distraught mother, adding that even the proprietor of Victory International School where George worked had not bothered to visit his grieving mother. On what he was told happened to his brother, he said: “They said a group of hoodlums went to  the compound where he stayed, took another corps member from another part of the building and asked him to knock at my brother’s door. He knocked and when he was not knocking well, they shot at him and that’s the corps member presently in FMC, Yenagoa receiving treatment. “And when they broke into my brother’s room, they took their phones. The next thing was, they shot my brother right in his stomach. I understand my brother died in the hospital at FMC, Yenagoa, while his roommate died instantly. “The government has a regulation that you must honour the youth service corps but  they don’t have a policy that protects the lives of corps members who have spent years passing through the Nigeria academic system, which is the toughest in the world”. Honest lamented that he could lose his mother because of the incident. “You don’t want to see my mum. My mum has not slept since Thursday(last week). She has been grieving and my mother is hypertensive. I am scared because I don’t want to lose my brother and my mother at  the same time”. He decried the insecurity in Niger Delta, particularly in Bayelsa. He wondered how

    the government and security agencies allowed young men to be roaming the streets with weapons. Honest narrated: “I was told two Fridays ago that three policemen were killed. I was also informed by the police that at Kaiama, they killed some of their police officers. So, if they can kill police officers, how much more ordinary civilians in the state. “I drive through the East West Road every day; you can see how volatile security is in this state. I would say no security. I slept in Bayelsa in an hotel and a friend who accompanied me wanted  to buy something  but he was told he should hurry up, because that the place was not safe. Honest described his younger brother as very exceptional. “They say a mother has a favorite among all the children but you see, George who was killed was exceptional. George went to church on that day and was marking the students’ scripts in his room when he was killed”,he said. He added: “But I need to ask why. I need to understand the reason for the killing,

    but I was only told that they are cultists and these things happen. I don’t know what they smoked but I understand my brother did not participate in the elections; so I would have said he offended someone in the course of working for INEC. But he didn’t. “So, I need to understand why. My brother  will not even insult someone he was older than; that is how humble George was. They have not seen anything. All they do is console the victims. This won’t go down like every other issue and that’s the promise except I don’t know my right. “My mother cannot spend years training George and lose him this way. George went to a private school, went to petroleum training institute; he had everything to be a better person. He spent over two years waiting for his call-up letter and you can just kill him and then you say you are sorry!” ‘He died a virgin’ Victoria  Ivwhrighe is yet to come to terms with the calamity that had befallen her. She is not believing the report that the son she loved so much and spent fortunes to train in school is no more. “They should bring back my son”, she kept shouting. Her voice was loud but sorrowfully laced with outcries. “This is a joke. George cannot die. Stop telling me that my son is dead”, she said. But from Wednesday last week, everyday that passed by brought Ivwhrighe to the reality that her son was no more. His telephone no longer rings. She could only hear his voice from the past. “I am not okay”, the melancholic woman said. She then remembered one striking feature of her son his moral rectitude. She recollected that her son was a virigin until his death. He would have no taste of a woman except in wedlock. As tears dripped down her wrinkled face, she said in pidgin English: “The last time I saw my son was December. George was a Christian. At his age, he had not known a woman yet. He said when he finished his service, he planned go to another school before settling down. “I was not privileged to go to school. So, I spent all my life working to train them in school. This thing they are telling me is making me feel pains all over my body”, she said. On how she heard of her son’s death, she explained: “I was in the market when my daughter asked me to give her my friend’s number. I felt she wanted to get something from my friend, so I sent her the number and also gave my daughter’s number to my friend. “Georgina said some NYSC officials met her and told her George sent them to her. In their presence, my daughter called his brother but the number did not go through. They said Georgina should take them to the house but she refused because she did not know them. They had to emphasize on that for some time before eventually she agreed. “When they got there, one of them went to the next compound and told my neighbour what happened. My neighbour then told Georgina. My daughter narrated the incident to my friend. When I came back, I went straight to the kitchen to prepare food to eat; as I was eating, different people were coming into my apartment. “Immediately they mentioned Geroge,  I told them I didn’t want to hear it, that I

    wanted my son. The  government was the one that posted him to Yenagoa. They should go and bring him. Since then, I have not been myself. I am hypertensive and I have been the one taking care of them. When I gave birth to the twins was when their father ran away. I struggled with them all by myself. “But now, they are announcing my son on television. I don’t understand. They should give me my son. I want government to give me my son. I need my son. My son was 29-year-old and they are twins. I went through a lot for them. I don’t know how to take this issue because my heart is heavy”. ‘My twin brother promised to come home first week of April’ Georgina, the twin sister to the deceased Georgina, could barely talk. She was drenched in grief and drowned in tears. Crying uncontrollably, she said: “I don’t know what to say. He was my twin brother. He was a friend and a father to me. He was like my better half”. Georgina said she spoke to George on January 3. She said in their discussion, George promised to visit home the first week of April. “I refuse to accept that my brother is no more and Iam patiently waiting for him to come back as he promised. “George lived a triangular life, if he was not in church, then he would be in the school where he taught  and if he was not there then he would be at home. George  was a straight forward; he always liked to have things done the right way. “At first when he knew it was Bayelsa, my elder brother asked him to redeploy but he refused and said he would go to wherever government would  send him. People who didn’tt know him called him the singing prophet because he loved to sing a lot and cannot stay without music. “If he was in his room and heard someone singing, he will rush out and make that person his friend. He would wave to people around whenever he was singing; he used to spend time with children. There is even a child that always come around and now he cannot come around again. “You can ask anybody about George, they may not know his name but if you say the one that sang and walked about, they will tell you they know him. He just loved music; he was a chorister in the church. “The truth is, I am still waiting for him. They should give me my brother. He is not dead though it is taking long but I will wait because he told me he will come first week of April. So, I will still wait; I don’t care what they are saying. “My brother cannot go just like that. He wanted to serve this country  and said there was nothing anybody would say to him to change his mind. He believed whatever happened was for a reason and would accept it like that and he said since he was posted to Bayelsa,then God wanted him there. “Let me not say much. I’m only waiting. There is still time; first week of April,he will come. I’m still waiting; there is no need for consolation because my brother is coming”, she sobbed. The outrage and worsening insecurity in Yenagoa The killing of the corps members high-lighted the worsening insecurity in Bayelsa, especially Yenagoa, the capital city. Guns are everywhere in Yenagoa and life is gradually becoming cheap in the capital city.  Armed cultists have declared war in Yenagoa, robbing, killing and maiming residents at the slightest provocation. The residents lampooned the police and security agencies for failing in their responsibility to secure lives and properties of the people. They wondered how a small town like Yenagoa with the headquarters of the 16th Brigade of the Nigerian Army, Central Naval Command of the Nigerian Navy, Mobility Command of the Airforce, Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), the Joint Task Force, Operation Delta Safe (ODS), the police, the DSS and other security outfits could be overrun by cultists. Armed cultists seem to have formed a parallel government administering terror unchallenged. They even attack armed security operatives, kill them and dispossess them of their guns. Even in popular markets, like the Swali Market, cultists operate and kill people in broad daylight at will. Their activities have killed nightlife in Yenagoa. A resident, who identified himself as David, said said he could not control his tears when he saw the lifeless bodies of the corps members and wondered why the insecurity had been allowed to degenerate in the state. He said: “What is Yenagoa turning into? The level of insecurity is very alarming; imagine two youth ‘corpers’ serving in Bayelsa State  shot and killed this night at Swali community by suspected armed robbers! “When I saw the lifeless bodies of these young men at the Federal Medical Centre,Yenagoa, I was totally troubled in my spirit. What will become of their parents who have spent hard- earned resources to send them to school only to lose them while serving their fatherland, the land that doesn’t have faith in the ability of the youths”? Another resident, Fawe, lamented that Yenagoa had become notorious for unpleasant and criminal incidents and blamed political actors for the development. He said: “Those who call the shots live in well guarded environments and go about in bullet proof cars purchased with taxpayers’ money.  Yenagoa is not bigger than Ada George Road in Port Harcourt. It’s the worst thing to lose a child. Now, what will be of the parents of the deceased?” The Commissioner for Youth Development, Mr. Udengs Eradiri, and the Ijaw Youths Council (IYC), Central Zone, condemned the gruesome murder of the corps members. Eradiri and the IYC Chairman, Tare Porri, led a high-powered delegation of Governor Seriake Dickson’s aides on youths to pay a condolence visit to the state Coodinator, NYSC, Bolade Loto in Yenagoa.

    The youth commissioner said the governor was devastated by the report of the killings and mandated them to visit the IYC management in the state. Addressing Loto, he said: “As a state, we heard what happened. Our principal, the governor, was very touched and concerned about this ugly incident and we must express our condolence as a state government to the NYSC. “Young people who came to serve their nation don’t deserve to die in the process. For us, we are sorry that such will happen in our environment. It should not happen to the NYSC, not to youths who are serving their fatherland. “But the government is doing everything possible to ensure that the culprits are brought to book. It is unfortunate that the society has gone this bad. We condemn what happened and we are doing our best to engage young people. “There is no reason why a young person will take another person’s life. Youth corps members are priceless assets to every nation. Our condolences go to their families and we will work very hard to ensure it doesn’t happen again”. Porri said it was unfortunate that such dastardly acts were happening in Yenagoa despite the presence of many security outfits. He accused the security agencies of conspiracy and urged them to step up their game and guarantee security in the state. He said: “It was a terrible and shocking incident that happened to us as Ijaw people. We are not known for things like this. It is unfortunate that young people who were serving our fatherland could be killed in such manner. “But my concern is that this sincerely calls for sober reflection. We have many security outfits in the state. We have the Nigerian Army 16th Brigade of the Nigerian Army; Central Naval Command of the Nigerian Navy; Mobility Command of the Airforce; Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC); the Joint Task Force; Operation Delta Safe (ODS); the police; the DSS and other security outfits and this kind of incident is happening. “The Bayelsa State government is doing its best but these other security agen

    cies should do their best. I don’t know what is happening, whether it is conspiracy. I call on the security outfits to step up their game. It is life that we are talking about. We are worried and concerned”. Also, a former governor of the state, Chief Timipre Sylva, condemned the killing of the corps members and derided the the government for failing to secure Bayelsa. He said: “It is a very sad thing that some NYSC members were killed in their own lodge. They were not even outside. They were in their own lodge when two of them were killed. “My heart goes to the families of these corps members. They were very innocent people serving the nation but they are no more with us not because of their fault but because the government could not protect them”. Also the Sagbama branch of the Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) condemned the brutal murder. A statement by its Chairman, Dise Sheila Ogbise, said the unwarranted murder of two was the latest in a spate of incessant violence, killings and criminal activities in the state. She said: “The insecurity in Bayelsa is alarming and a concern to peace and development in the state.” Corps members’ concern over their safety In fact, corps members are worried over their safety. Barring any change in plans, the youth corps members will be on the streets to protest the death of their colleagues and constant attacks on them by hoodlums in the state. A corps member, who identified herself as Blessing, said they were no longer safe in Bayelsa. She complained that they were targets of attacks by cultists, who rob them of their smart phones and other valuables. Blessing said most of their lodges had been attacked by hoodlums and called on security agencies to provide adequate security for them. Also another corps member, Joy, described the killing of her colleagues as very unfortunate. She lamented the constant attacks on corps members’ lodges by criminals and appealed to the government and security

    agencies to stop the insecurity in Bayelsa.  “I feel very bad. I don’t know them but then, I can imagine how their families feel. We came out to do service to the nation and then they were killed. The government and security agencies are supposed to ensure our safety”, she said. The state Coordinator, NYSC, Boladei Loto,  expressed disappointment at the incessant attacks of corps members in the state, saying it had become worrisome. “These hoodlums have been attacking corps members serially. The Director-General has had cause to write to the state governor and the matter reduced. There is no day we don’t record cases of attack against corps members”, he said. Loto described the incident as very heart-breaking, pathetic and very shameful, charging the police to thoroughly investigate the killing and bring the perpetrators to justice. She said the NYSC had already contacted the families of the deceased persons, adding that Akpos Honest, the brother of one of the deceased, George Onokpoma, had been crying uncontrollably. Loto said the motive behind the killing was still unknown since the murderers left the scene of the incident without stealing any valuable. Narrating how the incident happened, she said: “When I was notified of this incident at the middle of the night on Wednesday, I immediately sent messages to the DG of NYSC, the Deputy Governor and the SSG. “They all replied me to express their shock for this dastardly act. Up till now, I am still in shock. I keep asking myself, why? What could have happened because reports have it that they took nothing from them. Since then, we have been in constant touch with the DG of NYSC and with the state government. “That very morning, I visited the surviving corps member in the hospital. I ensured the hospital quickly and promptly gave the corps member the needed attention. The two families that lost their children had been contacted. They are still in shock, wondering what their children could have done. They are still weeping”. The State Commissioner of Police, Mr. Olusholla David, visited the State Secretariat of NYSC and met with Lotto. David expressed shock over the incident and assured the NYSC of a rejigged security strategy to ensure the safety of serving corps members in the state. The police boss promised to brief Governor Seriake Dickson on the incident, adding that the perpetrators would be found and brought to justice. He said: “There is nobody that will hear the incident that will not be shocked. The corps members in the state may be scared but please assure them that there will be improved security under my watch”, he said.

     

  • Iocs responsible for high infant mortality rate in Bayelsa says Dickson

    The Governor òf Bayelsa State, the Honourable Henry Seriake Dickson, has again attacked the multinational oil firms for brazenly destroying the Niger Delta environment without adherence to international best practices in their activities.

    The Governor said that the mindless activities of the multinational oil firms in the oil-rich state was responsible for the high infant mortality rate in Bayelsa and indeed the Niger Delta.

    The State Commissioner for Information and Orientation, Mr. Daniel Iworiso-Markson, quoted the Governor to have said that a UN survey revealed that crude oil spillage causes the death of over 16,000 infants within the first month of birth in the Niger Delta.

    Dickson noted that the Niger Delta environment was in turmoil and the livelihood of the people in peril because of the insensitive degradation of the environment by international oil firms who are driven solely by a quest to make money.

    He said that the flagrant abuse of the Niger Delta environment as clearly shown by available statistical evidence, indicated that about 40 million barrels of crude oil are spilled into the damaged environment of the Niger Delta as opposed to four million barrels in the United States.

    He lamented that the ravages oil production had reduced life expectancy in Bayelsa and other oil producing states in the Nigeria by ten years below the National Average.

    The Governor said that the Bayelsa State Government under his leadership would intensify proactive measures to attract necessary attention to the mindless destruction of the Niger Delta environment and the People’s means of livelihood by the oil firms.

    Consequently, the Governor inaugurated a ten-man Commission òf  Inquiry on Environmental Degradation under the chairmanship òf the Archbishop òf York, Dr. John Sentamu.

    The Governor noted that the panel of highly reputable local and foreign experts had a nine-point mandate to investigate “the environmental, health, socio-economic, cultural and human damage caused by operations of both local and multinational oil companies.”

    Governor Dickson noted that the panel was set up to hold oil firms accountable to the imperative to adopt international best practices in their oil exploration activities.

    He added that the IOCs had a responsibility to adopt the same operational standard to the environment of Bayelsa as Norway, Scotland and the United States.

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    The commission has a mandate to hold public and private hearing and submits the report of its finding in nine months.

    In his remarks, the Chairman of the Commission, Dr. John Sentumau promised a holistic investigation into the impact of oil spillage in Bayelsa and the Niger Delta.

    He expressed shock at the detrimental effect of oil spillage and called on the international community to give priority attention to the protection of the environment which he described as the collective heritage of mankind.

    The committee comprises of a former President of Ghana, Dr. John Kufour, Baroness Valerie Amos, Prof. Engobo  Emeseh, Dr. Anna Zalik, Dr. Kathryn Nwajiaku-Dahou (Secretary), Prof. Roland Hodler and Prof. Michael Watts.

    The immediate past  Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Barr. Kemasuode Wodu, is the commission’s  Legal Counsel.

     

  • APC chief mourns Gabriel Okara

    A founding member of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Bayelsa State, Prince Preye Aganaba, has described the death of a literary icon, Pa Gabriel Okara as a big blow to Africa

    Aganaba said the late octogenarian was an inspiration to many people and an asset to the Ijaw nation.

    He, however, said Okara’s passing was a transition to glory and a higher call destined for only those whose sojourn on earth left behind ever green memories not faded even by the relentless passage of time.

    He recalled some of his great works sucj as “the Fisherman’s Invocation (1978), the Dreamer, His Vision (2005), and his early novel, The Voice (1964) and the poem, The Call of River Nun, saying they remained the forerunner of African modernist poetry.

    Aganaba who prayed comfort for his family and loved ones, urged them to seek solace in the fact that the playwright, poet and novelist, lived a rich and fulfilled life.

    Aganaba said the most memorable words of the late poet was still very fresh in his memory  when he was asked in  a 2014 interview with The Nation to describe the  critically acclaimed poem  “The Call Of River Nun”.

    Aganaba said: “When the question was thrown to him Pa Okara said, ‘The Call of River Nun, may be described as a poem of remembrances, a desire to live freely without any fear, without any enemy’.”

    “Those words should be the template of the human race, to make the world a better place for all, irrespective of gender, religion or ethnicity”.

    Also Vice Presidential Candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) in the February 23, 2019 election, Mr. Peter Obi, on Tuesday mourned the passage of renowned poet, writer and administrator, Dr. Gabriel Okara, describing it as the loss of an African literary giant.

    “Gabriel Okara was not just a celebrated poet but, indeed, one of the greatest writers ever to come out of Africa. With his death, the continent has lost a literary giant,” Obi said in a statement issued by his media office.

    He described Dr. Okara, who died on Sunday in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, at the age of 97as a rare breed. “Pa Okara was not just a poet and writer but also an accomplished administrator of men and resources. As Life Patron of the Association of Nigerian Authors (ANA), he played a critical role in molding the present and future generations of Nigerian writers,” Obi said.

    He also praised the late Okara’s exemplary life of contentment and incorruptibility, noting that these are qualities needed to be imbibed by the present generation of Nigerians to get Nigeria out of the doldrums.

    The former Anambra State Governor condoled Okara’s family, the Bayelsa State Government, the Ijaw nation and the Nigerian literary community, urging them to take solace in his rich legacies of hard work, excellence and probity.

     

  • Slain corps member’s brother seeks motive behind killing

    Akpos Honest, the elder brother to George Onokpoma, a serving member of the National Youths Service Corps (NYSC) shot dead in cold blood by rampaging cultists in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, is still at a loss as to why his deceased brother was visited with such violence.

    Akpos, a broadcast journalist, who said his dead brother was a twin, noted the deceased lived an upright life and was fondly called a pastor by members of his family.

    Speaking to our correspondent in Yenagoa, Akpos said he sought to know from the NYSC and the police the crime his brother committed to deserve such gruesome murder without getting answers from them.

    He said the police merely told him that his brother died in the hands of cultists and that such killings were common in the state.

    Describing his brother’s death as very painful and unbearable, he said he made all efforts to redeploy him to Rivers State but that his brother out of his uprightness rejected the offer.

    Akpos said his brother waited for two years before receiving his call-up letter adding that George also turned down his offer to work his posting to Rivers, where he works.

    But Akpos vowed to explore all legal means to avenge the death of his brother saying George would not die like every other corps members, who were killed in similar circumstances and were forgotten by the government.

    He said since the death of his brother, the management of NYSC had not deemed it necessary to send a delegation to his grieving mother.

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    “My mother single-handedly brought us up. We are seven in number. But George was very exceptional”, he said adding that his mother had not slept since the incident happened.

    Also, former Governor of the state, Chief Timipre Sylva, condemned the killing of the corps members and derided the the government for failing to secure Bayelsa.

    He said: “It is a very sad thing that some NYSC members were killed in their own lodge. They were not even outside. They were in their own lodge when two of them were killed.

    “My heart goes to the families of these corps members. They were very innocent people serving the nation but they are no more with us not because of their fault but because the government could not protect them”.

  • PIND positions Niger Delta poultry farmers for N12.65b chicken market

    The poultry market in the Niger Delta, estimated to be over N12.65billion, is expected to grow by several billions annually for the next couple of years. Southsouth Regional Editor Shola O’Neil and Mike Odiegwu look at how hitherto disadvantaged poultry farmers and processors are being trained to benefit from the growth.

    Zigha Ayibakuro, an agro-entrepreneur from Bayelsa State, usually spends his days strutting around and watching his 4,000 chickens in his poultry at Opolo, Yenagoa. He is the proud owner of a processor plant, and apart from his birds, he relies on 40 out-growers for a steady flow of birds for his processing plant.

    Business is good, but it is also set to get better for the man popularly called Zah, and he is looking forward with hope, as he recalled with excitement a meeting with the Foundation for Partnership Initiative in the Niger Delta (PIND Foundation) in 2014, and how his life has changed for the better.

    Prior to that meeting Ayibakuro’s Zah consultancy firm only had an office accommodation in Yenagoa, from where it rendered training and entrepreneurial support services to a small number of clientele.

    All that changed after he attended PIND’s Company Diagnostic Training in Warri, Delta State that year. It was one of several done by the Chevron Nigeria Limited, CNL-funded NGO to help financially disadvantaged members of the region and SME’s like Ayibakuro’s ZAH to get better deals from their economic and social endeavors.

    His relationship with PIND changed his perceptions, increased his understanding of business opportunities in the region and propelled him and others to begin massive investment in poultry and other sub-sectors.

    He started as a trainer, but rather than be contented with fees from training others to see and take advantage of opportunities that he provided on behalf of the foundation, he delved fully into poultry farming and processing, because of the massive opportunities he was exposed to by the training.

    He has acquired 6,000-chickens per hour processing facility and is currently working on its takeoff. While waiting for that venture to come on stream, he has started another 2,000 birds per day processor at Opolo, Yenagoa, using a locally fabricated machine acquired through PIND’s technical assistance.

    “PIND helped in strengthening our operational processes and at the same time started doing studies and showing us opportunities in the region that we can take advantage of. So, being a smart entrepreneur you can’t be teaching people best practice in business without investing in the opportunities.”

    “PIND has invested in poultry study, understanding the opportunities in poultry value chain in the Niger Delta – where the market is and where the opportunities are. So, what some of us are simply doing is leveraging the study to maximize the opportunities.”

    Chidi Precious Agbunno is PIND Foundation’s Market Development Manager. Before assuming his new position, he was in charge of business linkages and poultry intervention, and has ample expertise in the foundation’s work with poultry farmers across the region.

    Speaking exclusively with Niger Delta Report, he said PIND started work in the sector under its business linkages programme, with initial focus on supporting local community suppliers to American oil giant, Chevron Nigeria Limited.

    “We did some assessments in Chevron to look at their supply chain, to identify areas where local community enterprises can participate more. We looked at construction, we looked at catering and food processing, we looked at marine services and in all these we saw opportunities in catering because we found that Chevron was buying a lot of food items.

    “They were buying over $7million worth of chicken annually – between 2012 and 2013, when we did the assessment. We found huge opportunities to increase the participation of local community contractors (LCCs), and by extension, we also support older farmers who can as well benefit in that huge market, not just in Chevron but in other oil and gas companies,” he said.

    Apart from the over $7m (or N2.52bn), spent by Chevron on chicken, the analysis showed that Shell Nigeria, AGIP and other oil firms were also spending heavily on poultry meat and products.

    “By the time we put all these together we thought that the market for processed chicken in the Niger Delta was worth about $35millions in a year, and that is a huge market. We did further value chain analysis to understand how the local industries are tapping into that market.”

    Sadly, the study showed that the local industry’s benefit from the huge subsector was very small, as poultry products supplied for these operations were sourced from outside the region.

    “Most of the processed chicken was coming in from the Southwest because the Niger Delta region, Warri and environs in particular do not have chicken processing capabilities.

    “We also found that it is not just chicken, even eggs, there was huge demands for eggs by the catering companies, hotels and fast food outlets in the region. Demand was huge and the local production capacity was quite low and we don’t have chicken processing plants to meet that demand.”

    The studies, he said, showed that egg producers were not as productive as those in the Southwest, resulting in eggs being more expensive in the delta states than other parts of the country.

    “We tried to find out why that was the case. We found that our farmers are not as competitive as southwestern farmers and so local egg distributors go to Southwestern states and even North Central  (Kwara) to buy large quantity, as much 1,000 – 4,000 crates per week to supply catering companies and the local markets.”

    It was against this backdrop of huge gap in demand and supply that PIND started training of entrepreneurs to process poultry meat and farmers to produce birds and eggs more efficiently. But first, they worked with local SMEs to see opportunities in chicken processing and to set up processors. While at the same time also working farmers on best practices to produce quality birds in cheaper and more profitable ways.

    One of the earlier beneficiaries was Ayibakuro. His 6,000-bird per hour capacity processing set-up was sited in Yenagoa, with the aid of PIND. The facility would soon come on stream. In Ondo state, PIND supported Prince Blessing Omogbemi’s 50,000-bird per month Perfect Works processor, and in Delta state, it worked with Toju’s Wenedel Integrated Farm. The latter was able to attracted funding of N16million for the project.

    Apart from the fund and technical supports, Ayibakuro explained that the studies carried out by PIND Foundation were invaluable for him and others. “If as a private businessman you want to carry out such studies, you spend nothing less than N20million to do analysis and travel. But PIND had taken the pains and the cost to do the studies.”

    “It is because we are relating with PIND that is why we have that kind of vision because we now understand that the market is scalable. As long as they are giving birth to people, everybody eats chicken. There is no cultural barrier to eating chicken. There is always a market for chicken,” he added.

    But it was not bread and butter all through, according Chidi Agbunno, because there would be no chicken to process if there are no farmers to produce the chicken, just as there would be no incentives for farmer to increase their output if there are no processors with capacity to take more.

    To create a steady supply stream, PIND focused on eliminating hurdles facing local poultry farmers’ quest to increase their productivity and competitiveness. To this end, technical and business trainings were provided for an initial 120 farmers drawn from five states.

    “We looked at farmers generally, how can we improve their capacity and productivity, and we found that the best way is to reduce the mortality rate. We found that farmers sometimes were experiencing up to 50 percent mortality; some were getting 100 percent mortality, which is a total loss. Even mortality rate that is above 20percent is still very high.”

    To achieve this, specialist agro-service and master service providers such as Dr. Shanon Ohaka, Dr. Fish Israel, and Ayodeji Badejo were engaged to train would-be trainers and farmers on best practices. The target was to reduce mortality rate to about 10percent through best poultry practices: best feeding practices, vaccination and ensuring that the right drugs are available and administered at the right stage.

    “We were working with vet input companies to be able to do that and also helping with assessing the market as well to enable them sell their birds, because by the time they reduce mortality, they will have access to more birds,” Agbunno said.

    Master Service Providers (MSPs) working with PIND also helped to identify local poultry consultants to reach the farmers and train them on good poultry practices and also to identify and work with input companies. There were also efforts to help farmers to source for funds to start or scale up operations.

    As in other sectors where PIND has intervened, there was no cash gift; but instead, interested partners were sourced to provide services that are paid for by farmers.

    ”We brought in Nigeria Content Board to help farmers with inputs, day-old chicks and feeds for 500 birds each, some vaccines, and heating support. The service providers also trained these 120 farmers; there were business trainings and also technical training and then they were prepared.”

    “These 120 farmers have actually finished their first circle, they have grown 500 birds each (60,000 total) and they have supplied to chicken processing plants and the plant is also supplying processed chicken now to fast foods in the Niger Delta.”

    Agbunno disclosed that over 1,200 farmers have been trained under the Poultry Linkage Programme of PIND, revealing that the target was to reach 6,000 before the project winds down.

    Commending the training, Ayibakuro said poultry processing and farming could help build peace in the region, stressing that incident of kidnapping, violence and criminalities would greatly reduce when youths are exposed to such trainings.

    “I can’t regret my partnership with PIND. We are busy expanding and going beyond poultry to invest in fish production, cassava, and palm oil. We realize through PIND that the opportunities are endless because people must eat in the region. The day we start feeding ourselves as Niger Delta people, kidnapping, restiveness and other forms of criminality will stop.”

    “Like I have always said working with PIND over the years for me is a goal. PIND doesn’t give anybody money. It doesn’t share money to people. What PIND does for you is to help you reduce the bottlenecks when it comes to scoping of opportunities in the Niger Delta.

    “PIND is making the investment process easy by telling people that there is money in poultry. Beyond helping reducing the stress in understanding the opportunities, they also help you in building capacity. It is not just in poultry, PIND does it in every sector. PIND also organise capacity building sections, training on best practice, methodology, documentation and planning.”

  • We will complete N50bn bond repayment in June, says Bayelsa

    The Bayelsa State Government has said it would complete repayment of the N50bn bond facility obtained by the former administration of Chief Timipre Sylva by June this year.

    The Commissioner for Information and Orientation, Mr. Daniel Iworiso-Markson, said in Yenagoa that it was part of the major resolutions reached at the State Executive Council meeting.

    In a statement signed by the Special Adviser to the State Governor on Media Relations, Mr. Fidelis Soriwei, the Commissioner noted that, when completed, funds currently being used to service the bond would be channelled towards finishing key ongoing projects in the state.

    Iworiso-Markson who listed the priority projects to include the Sagbama-Ekeremor Road, Yenagoa-Oporoma Road and Ayama/Ogbia-Okodi Road, said government had already worked out funding modalities in its bid to expedite work on the projects.

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    According to the commissioner, the council reaffirmed the present administration’s resolve to bequeath legacies for successive governments to build on, for sustainable development of the state.

    He said: “We are determined as a government to finish well and strong. Going by the resolutions reached in Council, it is clear that this government will leave no stone unturned to ensure that we deliver optimally to Bayelsans.

    “Our resolve is that Bayelsans at the end of the day will judge this government by the footprint we’ve been able to establish. Everything we’ve done from day one to this moment is a testament to our resolve to leave lasting legacy that even successive governments will follow.”

    Expatiating on the funding modalities, the Commissioner for Finance, Mr. Maxwell Ebibai, noted that the state government was expanding the “Contractor Infrastructure Development Finance Scheme”, a model which was used in financing other critical infrastructural projects in the state.

    Under the scheme, he said contractors were empowered to borrow funds from financial institutions to execute projects and present their certificates of work done for government to pay.

    Ebibai pointed out that the model helped to check the issue of slow pace or outright abandonment in the execution of government projects.

    He said: “The Contractor Infrastructure Development Scheme is essentially to ensure that contractors have unhindered access to funds. Under the scheme, the state does not borrow but the contractors may borrow to execute government jobs so that the projects will not slow down or stop.

    “The state government only guarantees for payment for jobs already done. It is some kind of public private partnership arrangement between the state, contractors and banks. In this scheme, we are considering projects that we cannot manage from our monthly cash flow.”

  • The problem with Bayelsa, by Keniebi Okoko

    Keniebi Okoko is one of the wealthiest persons in Bayelsa State. As a successful entrepreneur, Okoko, who hails from Gbarain, Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, has been nursing the ambition to become the governor of the oil-rich state.

    In the 2015 governorship election, Okoko, who is the son of Prof. Kimse Okoko, a notable Ijaw scholar and leader, made efforts to clinch the ticket of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) but the party favoured the second term bid of the incumbent Governor Seriake Dickson.

    The philanthropist has, however, continued to identify the potential of Bayelsa and the state’s economic advantage. Speaking to the Niger Delta Report in Yenagoa recently, he tries to juxtapose the state with Singapore. He wonders why Bayelsa is still struggling with development despite its huge resources while Singapore is far ahead with less resources.

    “If you go to Singapore, I have been to Singapore at least six times in my life. If you go to Singapore, it is more or less a small island surrounded by water. Singapore has no oil, but has refineries. Singapore exports a lot of fish products and Singapore is doing extremely well economically.

    “Bayelsa on the contrary has oil which is called black gold. Bayelsa has vegetation for rice farming; I can use the Peremabiri Rice Farm as an example. We have a good texture of soil to grow crops. Bayelsa is bigger than Singapore in size and in population if am not mistaken.  What is so difficult in developing Bayelsa? That was why I made that comparison. We have more resources.”

    What is the problem with Bayelsa? Okoko traces the problem to lack of education.

    “Well, I believe that Bayelsa as a whole needs to focus on education. Mental poverty is worse than financial poverty. If a mind is not developed and equipped, a man cannot give what he does not have,” he says.

    He adds: “Our people are not completely exposed to good education systems. Our people are not well travelled like other tribes. The Ijaw man is determined to succeed, if you give the Ijaw man the right playing ground, he will perform, I can assure you. So I believe that what we should do as a people is to focus on education.”

    In his assertions, the billionaire businessman said emphasis should not be placed on classroom education. Bayelsa needs to blend theory with practical. The state needs to harp on skill acquisition. “Classroom education is one aspect, and outside classroom education is another aspect,” he says.

    He continues: “Not everybody can experience education in the classroom or to the university level.  There is a proverbial saying that all fingers are not equal. But you can balance the gap of the fingers. Creating skill acquisitions with the right personnel to man them give you the opportunity to train the less privileged on the skills that can develop them.

    “For example if you go to China, you have where they train people on ICT, you have where they train people on bricklaying, you have where they train people on every artisan job you can think of. When the Amnesty Programme was going on, I was privileged to try to get something for some of the people, so I went to China to look at some of the schools in Wanzu.

    “I was amazed, it was almost like a university of any magnitude, but it was just a skill center. If we have three in the three senatorial districts that are of high class, it will help to reduce the number of children that are not equipped to fend for themselves, or not equipped to face the future.

    “On the other side, classroom education, in the universities today, I don’t know what is happening. You hear stories of lecturers abusing students; you hear stories of excessive selling of handouts. The educational system has gone down the drain.

    “We need to refocus on the educational system, encourage our people with scholarships to go to school. Sign a contract with the schools that the certificates will be returned to you based on the fact that they will come and work for four, five years, and then you release them so they put what they have learnt back into the system.”

    Okoko acknowledges the efforts of Governor Dickson in developing the educational system of the school. He says the governor has done his best. He says his duty as a leader is to add to what the governor has done in the sector.

    He says: “I think the governor has given it a good try. I think that the intentions are good. I believe that he has genuine intentions for the job, and I believe he has tried his best.

    “My duty as a leader is to try and add to what he has done, to build in any way we can help the government to improve where they have stopped in any capacity we find ourselves with good suggestions, and trying to develop a good road map to drive the Ministry of Education, to push his policies forward and help him being that I am in the same party with him.”

    Okoko urged youths in the state to have role models and stopped being used by politicians as thugs. He appeals to leaders to take responsibility in shaping the future of the youths in the state. He laments the condition of the youths in the state saying they lack hope.

    He says: “If a man does not understand the good around him and what it is for, he doesn’t value it. If a man is not part of a project, he cannot value the project. If a community does not understand why this will develop them, over and over again they will do it. That’s mental poverty. What will develop you is what you are killing, that is the mental poverty.

    “Hope is dead in Bayelsa. The young people don’t have hope so they are looking for any means. Give them back hope. Sell leadership through qualities, be transparent, and open to them. Take them through processes of trainings. Mentorship, who is your mentor or who are you mentoring?

    “Who are you looking up to? Why do you wake up in the morning? What is the core reason for your existence? Have someone you look up to. I have someone I look up to everyday. I have three people I look up to – Professor Kimse Okoko, Pastor David Ibiyomie and Bishop (David) Oyedepo.

    “By any standard, these are men to look up to. So I aspire to want to be like them. Who are these young men looking up to? What are we selling to them as leaders and parents? When I was growing up, Prof. Okoko will always tell me, ‘my son a good name is better than riches’. ‘My son I don’t have money, but nobody can insult me in Nigeria’. He is going to be 80 with diabetes but he is looking younger than people that are in power. Healthy, strong, vibrant and sometimes driving himself. These are the things we should be asking ourselves if we want to be true; if we are not going to be political about everything.

    “What are we giving the youths, what are we selling to them? I come to the village, young men come and be chanting Keniebi slogans and I say ‘shut up, what’s that nonsense about?’ I say ‘stop it and don’t vote for me if that is what you will be doing’. I tell them ‘what do you want for your future?’ You say you want to support me for governor, what am I doing for you?

    “They were quiet because they have nothing else to trade on. With one thousand naira, they start carrying guns and shoot themselves.  What are we teaching the young ones? So let’s be true to ourselves. The reason those things were stolen is because they didn’t have the reason and the value those things were there for.”