Tag: Bayelsa State

  • EFCC arrests NABDA DG over alleged N23m scam

    EFCC arrests NABDA DG over alleged N23m scam

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) said it has arrested Prof. Lucy Ogbadu, the Director-General of National Biotechnology Development Agency (NABDA), over alleged N23 million fraud.

    Spokesman of the commission, Wilson Uwujaren, disclosed this in a statement he issued on Thursday.

    Uwujaren said Ogbadu was picked up by EFCC operatives in Port Harcourt on Wednesday, following her alleged link with the Bayelsa State Director of Bio-resources Development Centre, Josiah Habu.

    Habu, according to him, is being investigated by the anti-graft agency in a case of fraudulent diversion of N75 million.

    He said investigations by the EFCC revealed that Ogbadu allegedly received N23m through a bank account belonging to the wife of Habu, Mrs Esther Habu.

    The EFCC spokesman stated that Ogbadu admitted the transaction in a voluntary statement made to the commission’s investigators.

    “Further investigations also revealed that Mrs Habu is one of the contractors with Bio-resources Development Centre, Odi, Bayelsa State.

    “A total of N603 million has been traced to her in different deals involving over 20 directors of the centre across the country.

    “Ogbadu’s involvement is being investigated. She has been duly served with bail conditions while investigations continue,’’ Uwujaren added.

    Ogbadu, a professor of microbiology, was appointed NABDA director-general in November 2013.

  • Saraki running Otuoke varsity without due process, say workers

    Saraki running Otuoke varsity without due process, say workers

    Workers in the Federal University, Otuoke, (FUO), Bayelsa State, have accused the institution’s Pro-Chancellor and Chairperson of the Governing Council, Gbemisola Saraki of running the university like a personal business without due process.

    The workers under the Joint Action Committee (JAC) of the university, comprising the Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU), the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities (SSANU), the National Association of Academic Technologists (NAAT) and Non-Academic Staff Union (NASU) faulted Saraki’s leadership style.

    They alleged that Saraki failed to receive a report of a properly-constituted Committee on Staff Verification established to look into the issues of staff welfare, promotions and salary disparity.

    The committee, which was also mandated to verify tax remittances, pension remission, statutory allowances, confirmation of appointment, was said to have submitted its report to the Governing Council.

    According to the workers instead of Saraki to work on the report of the committee, she abandoned it and unilaterally set up a separate Ad-Hoc Committee to consider staff welfare and complaints.

    Saraki’s ad-hoc committee was also asked to probe the protest that occurred in the institution on May 23, 2017.

    The workers in a communique issued last weekend after the end of their emergency meeting held at the ASUU Secretariat Complex of the university, rejected the new ad-hoc committee.

    They insisted on knowing the outcome of the first committee.

    The document was signed by Chairman, ASUU, Dr. Joseph Omoro; Chairman, SSANU, Kalizibe Joseph; Chairman, NAAT, Ama Uduma and Chairman, NASU, Bestman Egba.

    They further said that the pro-chancellor was conducting the meeting of the institution’s governing council in Abuja instead of FUO.

    They threatened to shut down the university if after 21 days ultimatum, with effect from Friday, June 23, 2017, the council failed to address all the issues raised in the communique.

    The communique said: ”Members of the unions demand the immediate release and implementation of the verification report. In this way, staff complaints, staff issues and staff welfare will be resolved and subsequent fallouts can then be addressed.

    ”We, therefore, wish to state that the constitution of another Governing Council Ad-Hoc Committee on staff complaints, staff issues and staff welfare is completely unacceptable and is, therefore, rejected.

    ”That the failure to release and implement the original reports on staff verification undermines the integrity of the council and breaches the trust between council and unions.

    ”We forbid any member of the four unions from participating in the activities of the Ad-hoc committee either as a member or as a respondent.

    ”The Pro-Chancellor should be reminded that the council is constituted on the basis of representation to include internal and external members of the university community, hence the decision of the council should be collective.”

    The workers argued that the establishment of the ad-hoc committee was deliberately conceived and designed to create industrial unrest in the university.

    They accused Saraki of making herself a ”demigod” and failing to move the university forward through collaborations and interactions and with stakeholders.

    The workers appealed to the council to carry out an assessment tour and audit of all projects in the university from 2011 to date.

    They lamented that the audit was necessary because of the number of abandoned projects in the institution, which had become a source of worry and concern to them.

    They also demanded the immediate constitution of the Central Appraisal and Promotions Committee (CAPC) to conclude all outstanding promotions, upgrades and proper placement of both teaching and non-teaching staff of the university.

  • Navy takes free medical mission to late Alamieyeseigha’s community

    Navy takes free medical mission to late Alamieyeseigha’s community

    The Central Naval Command (CNC) of the Nigerian Navy, at the weekend, embarked on free medical mission to Amassoma, the community of late former Governor Diepreye Alamieyeseigha, in Southern Ijaw Local Government Area, Bayelsa State.

    The people of the community led by their Traditional Ruler, His Royal Highness, Amananaowei of Amassoma, Maj. Graham Naigba (retd) participated in the medical mission and were freely treated of various ailments.

    The Flag Officer Commanding (FOC), CNC, Rear Admiral Mohammed Garba, who led senior officers of the command to Amassoma, said the medical mission was borne out of the desire to tackle the health needs of the people.

    He said the navy since September 2016 has been going to various communities in its Area of Operation (AoR) to offer free medical treatments to the people.

    Garba said such medical missions, as part of civil-military relations, had enabled the navy to move closer to the people and win their confidence.

    He also added that the mission would form part of his handover not to the new FOC, who was expected to take over from him soon.

    He said the communities visited by the navy appreciated the gesture, which had helped to drastically reduce attacks on oil pipelines.

    According to him the people had shown their appreciation by giving timely information of miscreants’ and vandals’ activities to the navy.

    “Such information has given us the intelligence to be more proactive in handling issues of economic sabotage. Out of their appreciation of what we do for them, they come to is and give us information”, he said.

    On his part, the traditional ruler, Naingba, thanked the navy for their gesture describing it as commendable.

    He appealed to them to do more for his community to enable his people overcome the scourge of diseases.

    He said the community had never witnessed such well-organised and big free medical intervention and assured the navy of his community’s cooperation.

     

  • Woman catches 50yr-old lover raping her 15yr-old daughter

    Woman catches 50yr-old lover raping her 15yr-old daughter

    A woman, Blessing Joshua, 40, has allegedly caught her lover, Oku, raping her 15-year-old daughter in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State.

    The woman said she was shocked to see her 50-year-old lover, Oku Ekanem, from Akwa Ibom defiling her crying daughter.

    The incident, which occurred at 1am on Monday at Swali area of the city generated outrage from members of the public.

    The state security outfit, Operation Doo Akpo reportedly stormed the crime scene and arrested the suspect.

    The victim’s mother, Blessing narrated her trauma to the International Federation of Women Lawyers (FIDA).

    She said: “It happened on Monday at about 1am. I was watching television with my neighbour till late and retired to bed at about 1am. It was not quite long, I heard the scream of my child and l ran to the direction of the scream. But l was shocked when I saw him defiling my child.

    ” He claimed it was the work of the devil and I told him that this would be last time, the devil would use him and that I would take the matter seriously.

    He pleaded and barricaded the door to prevent me from calling neigbours. But I tricked him and ran outside with my child to call police patrol team at our junction.

    “He was arrested but he denied the act. But a test carried out at the hospital showed otherwise.”

    Reacting to the development, the Chairperson of FIDA in Bayelsa State, Dise Erhisere described the incident as “barbaric and ‎wicked act’.

    “It is barbaric and inhuman. We condemn it and call on mothers to be vigilante and careful with their girl child”, she said.

     

  • Dickson’s aides, Igbo youths trade words on division

    Dickson’s aides, Igbo youths trade words on division

    Igbo aides appointed by Governor Seriake Dickson and the leadership of the Ohaneze Youth Council (OYC) in Bayelsa State are engaged in verbal war over an alleged promotion of division among the ranks of Igbos by the aides.

    The youth body accused the aides of undermining the umbrella Igbo group in their various political activities in the state.

    The President of OYC, Chief Chinedu Arthur-Ugwa, insisted in an interview in Yenagoa Tuesday that Chief Okwudili Okoh and Mr. Chukwu Eze, Special Assistants to Dickson on Non-Indigenes Affairs were causing division instead of uniting the Igbo people in the state.

    He said that instead of representing all the Igbo people in the state, the duo were the habit of selecting suspended members of the OYC to attend their meetings and programmes.

    Arthur-Ugwa faulted Okoh’s remarks describing him as “self-acclaimed” and brandished pictures of Okoh decorating him as the authentic OYC youth President in the state.

    He said: “We do not want to take issues with them, but the man in question handed over to me as Ohaneze youth leader and later described me as self-acclaimed.

    “He is carrying the suspended members to Government House, bypassing the leadership. How can he even say Ohanaeze Ndigbo national has been scrapped? He doesn’t have the power to delve into national issues”.

    He asked the appointees to turn a new leaf, saying it was abnormal and counterproductive for them to work against the same body through which they got their positions.

    He said: “Let them retrace their steps and come back home and stop undermining our constitution. Ours is to guide them as our representatives in government, now they are forming another group. Ohanaeze remains the supreme body over both born and unborn Igbo persons all over the world.

    “They should ordinarily be working for us. They have climbed the Ohanaeze ladder to government house, now they want to break the ladder. That is bad”, he maintained.

    He said that a petition written to police authorities of plans by the appointees to cause crisis in the state was receiving serious considerations by security agency.

    “We wrote a petition to the police asking them to stop using suspended members when they have meetings in government House. We asked that they should be called to order. We are not fighting them.

    “We told the police that we will embark on a protest if the SAs do not stop undermining the Ohanaeze. Our intention is not to destroy them, but let them work with the authentic youth groups. They are creating problems for themselves. They want to kill Ohanaeze because of their selfish interest”, he said.

    He appealed to the governor, who he said was not be aware of the activities of the appointees to wade into the matter.

    “Before these people cause a breakdown of law and order, which we don’t want, let the governor wade in. The power of the SA does not supersede that of Ohanaeze Ndigbo”, Arthur-Ugwa said.

    Okoh earlier said that Ohaneze youth wing national had been scrapped and had ceased to exist.

    “How can a branch claim leadership of Ohaneze Ndigbo, if the national leadership does not exist, how can local leadership exist? “, he said.

     

  • Alleged election fraud: EFCC to arraign ex-Rivers REC Khan

    Alleged election fraud: EFCC to arraign ex-Rivers REC Khan

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), at the weekend, re-arrested the former Resident Electoral Commissioner for Rivers State, Mrs. Gesila Khan. She will be arraigned tomorrow.

    It was gathered that Khan, who hails from Bayelsa State, was picked up in Yenagoa on Saturday afternoon.

    Khan, who presided over the 2015 elections in Rivers State, was first arrested on April 15, 2016 following multiple allegations of financial fraud, including partaking in N650.9m and $115m poll bribes.

    The EFCC believes that the bribes were to alter the outcome of the 2015 general elections.

    Khan, who was redeployed to Cross River State at the time of her initial arrest, was, however, granted an administrative bail on May 3, 2016 after fulfilling some conditions, which included bringing a first class traditional ruler as a surety.

    But the team, it was gathered, returned on Saturday, to the residence of Khan in Yenagoa to re-arrest her, but could not find her at home.

    The team reportedly went to the palace of the traditional ruler, who took her on bail, and requested him to produce her.

    It was gathered that Khan was in her village preparing to attend the burial of the late Gordon Obua, the Chief Security Officer (CSO) to former President Goodluck Jonathan, when the traditional ruler called her on telephone asking her to return to Yenagoa.

    A source, who spoke in confidence said: “The EFCC came to look for her but they could not find her. They went to the palace of the traditional ruler who took her on bail.

    “Madam travelled to her village. She was preparing to return to Yenagoa to attend the burial of Obuah, Jonathan’s former CSO when he received a call from the traditional ruler requesting her to return immediately.

    “When she reported at the palace, a team of the EFCC was already waiting for her. She was immediately picked up and taken to Port Harcourt. She could not attend the burial”.

    The Southsouth Zonal Head of EFCC, Mr. Ishaq Salihu, confirmed the arrest, saying she would be arraigned tomorrow.

  • Gunmen kill police sergeant in front of Bayelsa police station

    Gunmen kill police sergeant in front of Bayelsa police station

    There was confusion in Sagbama Police Station, Sagbama, Bayelsa State, at the weekend, following the killing of a policeman in front of the station by unidentified gunmen operating in the area.

    The policeman, a sergeant, whose name could not be determined, was reportedly shot dead at about 8:30pm by the gunmen, who were said to be riding across the station on a gateway motorcycle.

    The hoodlums said to be two in number, however, escaped before the policemen at the station could recover from the commotion caused by the incident.

    Sources said the fleeing gunmen shot at a group of policemen in front of the station but that the bullet hit the sergeant killing him at the spot.

    One of the sources, who spoke in confidence, said the incident created panic and tension in the area and wondered why the colleagues of the deceased policeman could not go after the killer hoodlums.

    “We heard gunshots from the direction of the police station. It was not certain what was going on but residents took cover for safety.

    “It was late we were told that hoodlums riding on a motorcycle killed a policeman and escaped. How could they escape after killing the policeman in front of a police station?” He said.

    The Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Mr. Butswat Asinim, confirmed the incident saying the police were looking for the hoodlums.

    He said: “The policeman was killed in Sunday at about 8:30pm in front of the Sagabma Police Station by two unknown gunmen on unregistered motorcycle.

    “We are working to establish the motive behind the dastardly act because they didn’t stop. We recovered the rifle of the dead policeman. They shot at the policemen and zoomed off but we have swung into action and some people have volunteered useful information”.

  • Weep not for Goodluck Jonathan

    Weep not for Goodluck Jonathan

    A major ammunition with political foes of President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan which shot down his re-election bid in 2015 was the accusation that he favoured the Niger Delta region over other parts of the country. Specifically, his critics alleged that the choicest appointments he made went to Ijaw people, with Bayelsa, his home state, particularly favoured. This allegation was practically made into a song, one that played loudly and was enjoyed to the hilt by other sections of the country.

    However, those of us who are Ijaw knew this was nothing but fallacy. It was effectively shown up as such before the election, which Jonathan eventually lost to General Muhammadu Buhari of the All Progressives Congress (APC). The widespread assumption that Jonathan did so much for the Niger Delta, especially the ordinary Bayelsan, was ripped up by the former President himself. Perhaps unintended. Unknown to him at the time, he was making a rod for his own back.

    The former President, standing on the podium at the Adokiye Amiesimaka Stadium, venue of the presidential campaign rally in Port Harcourt, unwittingly invited what would come to haunt him later.  With the trademark wide grin pasted on his face, he danced and waved enthusiastically to loud cheers from his supporters. While speaking, Jonathan admitted that he had done very little for the Niger Delta, but promised to make amends if re-elected. Perhaps, the admission was made in the hope that other parts of the country would view him as a non-sectional leader, while the people of the Niger Delta would be seduced into longing for four years of intensive development of the zone.

    It did not pan out either way. In fact, what happened was that Jonathan, unknowingly, invited Niger Delta activists to come up with a narrative that his five-year presidency amounted to a waste for the ordinary Bayelsan and Niger Deltan.

    A confirmation of this was delivered by Jonathan himself after he lost the re-election bid. It was at a state banquet held in his honour by Governor Henry Seriake Dickson at the Dr. Gabriel Okara Cultural Centre in Yenagoa on May 29, 2015.

    The occasion, brimming with Jonathan’s close aides, officials of his government and the crème de la crème of the Ijaw nation, was akin to a stock-taking exercise. Addressing the gathering, Jonathan said he thought Bayelsans would boo him for neglecting them but was amazed by the level of love the governor and the people of the state have shown him.‘‘…When you are in high office and you finished serving, you are afraid of going back home, … at the late hour, it dawns on you that you could have done that, you failed to do this, you failed to do that… you begin to fear whether the people that come to receive you will curse you, hoot at you,” Jonathan thundered.

    Clearly stated by the former President was that despite his administration’s neglect of Bayelsa State, Governor Dickson’s support for him never wavered. What, perhaps, went unstated was that Governor Dickson also remained steadfast despite the former President’s wife undisguised attempts to humiliate him.

    As a matter of fact, mutual friends of the duo were persuaded that Governor Dickson’s affection for the former President was like that of a son for the father, a state of affairs that angered many Ijaw activists like me.

    We believed that such strong affection for a man, whose administration neglected the Ijaw nation, amounted to a betrayal of the Ijaw cause for which Isaac Boro, Melford Okilo, DSP Alamieyeseigha fought and died.

    The former President would, again, confirm Governor Dickson as a dependable ally. The confirmation was made during the run-up to the December 2015 Bayelsa State governorship election, which Governor Seriake Dickson won.

    On 8 September 2015, while making a strong case for the re-election of Governor Dickson, the former President described the governor as a man of uncommon leadership qualities and a ‘‘trusted and dependable person’’.

    Thus, when the news media erupted with the reports, on 16 May, that Governor Dickson accused Dr. Jonathan of neglecting the Niger Delta during his five-year presidency, it came as no surprise to me. Why? Jonathan himself had admitted doing so. The governor made the remark at the annual Isaac Adaka Boro Day celebration at the Izon Warri in Yenagoa.

    After a careful reading of the governor’s speech, I realised-as any reader capable of reflection should-that Dickson’s comments were directed, exclusively, at the political elite, notably ministers and other appointees of the Jonathan administration. In very clear terms, the governor pointed out the studious refusal of people in this category to team up with him in his efforts to develop the state.

    Even then, it would require a mighty effort not to be tempted to interpret Dickson’s remarks as suggesting that Jonathan wasted the chance by the Ijaw to develop the Niger Delta because he was the leader. The leader, by nature, provides direction to the led. Not the other way.

    Ijaw leaders invested significant efforts, time and resources in the quest for true federalism, resource control and an opportunity to have one of them lead the country as president.

    The strength of this agitation, arising from decades of minority oppression, led the late sage, Chief Obafemi Awolowo to say: “I look forward to the day, not in the far distant future, when an Ijaw would be president of our Republic and a Birom or vice versa.”

    Awolowo’s hopes were fulfilled when Dr. Jonathan got the chance. Did he use it well for the Ijaw nation? He has answered the question by himself.

    It is important for every Nigerian to understand that there should be adequate collaboration between the government of Bayelsa State and the Federal Government principally because the challenges posed by the environment cannot be surmounted by the state government alone.

    The dip in revenues accruing to the states of the federation makes this doubly difficult. The failure of the former President to adequately take care of the Niger Delta has been seized upon by the Buhari administration to reject requests for collaboration from the Bayelsa State government.

    The Buhari’s administration’s default question is: Why did such collaboration not take place when a Bayelsan was President?

    While I am not an admirer of Governor Dickson, I am persuaded that his disappointment with the former President is well founded. I think this is the position of well-meaning Ijaw person. It is a fact that oil exploration started in Ijawland, precisely in Oloibiri, Ogbia Local Government Area. Despite prosperity the country has seen from oil, Ijawland remains grim and in the grip of poverty and environmental degradation.

    It would have been amusing, were it not for its seriousness, that some people are making an issue of Governor Dickson’s observation, which Jonathan himself publicly admitted.

    Even if Jonathan had not admitted, evidence would have declined to support any grand claim he would make. The failure of the Jonathan administration to build the East-West Road, the only highway linking the Niger Delta region with the East and West, and his neglect of the federal road to Bayelsa State and the one to his community in Otuoke would have punctured any confected narrative of good performance.

    Dickson, it bears repeating, is not a man I admire. But his courage is an attribute I cannot dismiss. One of the first roads he constructed within his first year in office was the road from Sagbama to Toru-Orua, his community.

    So, my advice to those who love Jonathan more than he loves himself is:  If they must weep, they should weep for the grotesquely underdeveloped Ijaw nation, not for Jonathan, who frittered an opportunity to correct the wrongs of the past.

    For those with little or no knowledge of the Ijaw, they remain one of the world’s most oppressed people. A little background could help put the Ijaw situation in sharper focus. Bayelsa is the only homogeneous Ijaw state. It is the hub of neglect and therefore, agitation in the Niger Delta region.

    By nature, the Ijaw are activists, an attribute imposed on them by their challenging environment. It was this environment that gave rise to Major Jasper Isaac Adaka Boro, a native of Kaiama, Bayelsa State. Boro and his colleagues famously launched the 12-Day revolution against the Nigerian state, the foundation for the Niger Delta struggle.

    The founding fathers of Bayelsa State wanted the state they were agitating for to be the Jerusalem of all Ijaw scattered across Nigeria. It was against this background that late Governor DSP Alamiesiegha, nicknamed “Governor – General of the Ijaw nation” gave appointments and scholarships to Ijaw irrespective of whether they were from Bayelsa or not. The pattern has continued under Dickson, who was famously described by Alamieyeseigha as his successor in the Ijaw struggle.

    The implication is that a Bayelsa governor must attend to the needs of all Ijaw people, as he is viewed as a governor of the Ijaw nation. Bayelsa State was also conceived to only offer opportunities to only Ijaw.

    It also explains why Bayelsans tend to see public funds as something to be shared among themselves. I can say with authority that before Dickson became governor, public servants in the state were not paying Personal Income Tax. Similarly, citizens were not paying electricity bills, as they were borne by government.

    Bayelsa, as stated earlier, sits atop vast oil and gas deposits. Oloibiri in Ogbia Local Government Area of Bayelsa State was where oil was first struck in commercial quantities in Nigeria. This has counted for nothing, with the treacherous terrain serving as impediments to wholesale development by successive state governments. This is made worse by inadequate or half-hearted interventions by the Federal Government, which has also continued to ignore agitation for more accruals. Successive state governments did their best and the current one is doing same, within the limits of its resources. Their efforts, however, have been like a drop in the ocean.

    This is why it is important to have a State/Federal Government collaboration on projects such as the Brass LNG, construction of an airport, deep seaport, good road networks to the oil terminals. There is no doubt that these big-ticket projects are way beyond the financial capacity of state government, even if it does nothing else for 10 years.

    One cheering news is that Dickson is building an international airport which, when completed, will transform the economy of the state but he must pay off salary arrears being owed public servants or else we boo him!

    The Jonathan presidency raised hopes. Jonathan was expected to allot oil wells to interested Ijaw businessmen and hit the Atlantic, where Ijaw people’s wealth lies, on three fronts: Brass, Oporoma- Koluama and Ekeremor-Agger. These fronts host the oil terminals, but are inaccessible to motorists. The prevalent belief in Bayelsa is that the state cannot develop until it has access to the sea. Having access not only entails building roads, but also having a deep seaport and an airport to make the state play an active role in the Gulf of Guinea.

    These, sadly, did not happen under Jonathan.

    • Comrade Soweibo is a Niger Delta activist based in Yenagoa and wrote in via soweibo50@gmail.com
  • Cultists kill 26-year-old in Bayelsa

    Cultists kill 26-year-old in Bayelsa

    Suspected cultists have gunned down a victim identified as Jackson Olali, 26, along Tombia Road, Yenagoa Local Government Area, Bayelsa State.

    The gunmen were said to have shot their victim at about 10:30pm on Saturday creating panic at a junction close to a popular hotel in the area.

    Family sources, who described the victim as a peace-loving man, said Olali was on his way to charge his mobile phone following power when the incident occurred.

    “We saw some armed young boys invade the place where the deceased was charging his mobile phone.And there was argument. One of the armed men came from behind and shot him in the head”, a source, who spoke in confidence said.

    Also, a 26-year-old girl identified as Debora Eteh was attacked with acid along Tombia road by a suspected jealous lover identified as Suoyonye Harry

    A source, who spoke in confidence said: “We learnt that they were both lovers and had a major disagreement. The victim was said to have pulled out of the relationship and relocated to the Bayelsa state capital.”

    “The suspect Suotonye Harry traced his victim from Port Harcourt down to yenagoa, before perfecting the evil act by bathing is victim Deborah Eteh with substance suspected to be acid.‎”

    But residents in the area were said to have apprehended the suspect and handed him over to the Akenfa Police station and took the victim to the Federal Medical Centre.

    Contacted, the Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Asinim Butswat said he was yet to be fully briefed on the incidents.

  • Probe invasion of Jonathan’s hotel, youths urge FIRS

    Probe invasion of Jonathan’s hotel, youths urge FIRS

    Youths from Niger Delta region, Monday, appealed to the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) to investigate alleged invasion of a hotel belonging to former First Lady, Mrs. Patience Jonathan, by its officials.

    Officials of FIRS besieged the Aridolf Resort and Spars along Isaac Boroh Expressway, Bayelsa State, on May 3 and attempted to seal off the place following alleged N10million unpaid tax.

    Youths from the hotel including workers reportedly intervened and stopped them from closing the hotel.

    But youths under the auspices of the Niger Delta Youths Coalition for Peace and Progress (NDYCPP) said a thorough investigation must be carried out to determine the real motive of the officials.

    The Acting Chairman, NDYCPP, Chief Henry Nabena, lamented that the officials disrupted their meeting and later claimed that they were attacked by the militants.

    Nabena, who spoke in Yenagoa, said the report that FIRS officials were attacked by militants was a smear campaign against members of NDYCPP and proprietors of the hotel.

    He said that describing members of the youth group as militants was falsehood against the integrity of a group of non-violent youths working for advancement of peace in the Niger Delta.

    He said: “The FIIRS officials came with men in police uniforms without name tags on their uniforms and were well armed.

    “Also among them were young men with chains and padlocks in their hands, making the operation highly suspicious as one with extortionist intentions.

    “Interestingly, it was about that time the leadership of Niger Delta Youth Coalition for Peace and Progress was holding a very strategic peace and security meeting at the Hotel’s Conference Hall.

    “The officials of FIRS burst into the meeting hall and disrupted it, embarrassing members of the Coalition with their unruly and unethical conduct”.

    He demanded unreserved apology from FIRS for reports alleging that some 50 militants attacked its officials at the hotel.

    “The publication orchestrated by the FIRS is totally untrue, baseless, malicious, provocative, vexatious, sensational and intended to malign the person of the former first family

    “The leadership of FIRS should caution their personnel on the essence of ethical and civil conduct in carrying out their official and legitimate duties.

    “We urge the management of FIRS to retrain their line-managers towards carrying out their legitimate functions with best practices, professionalism and ethical compliance .

    “They should shun the temptation of being cajoled or used by disgruntled politicians to witch-haunt their perceived political rivals,” he said.

    He advised that as a central revenue collector for the government, FIRS should discharge its duties with manifest transparency and accountability at all times.

    He said that the youth group wanted an investigation and would not allow the falsehood to stand even if it involved seeking redress in the courts.

    But an official of FIIRS, who spoke in confidence, said there was an ongoing nationwide enforcement of compliance.

    He said: “There is need to first ascertain if the raid was by FIIRS officials in the first place because there is Internal Revenue service in every state, if that is cleared then they can lodge a complaint as FIIRS is structured to handle complains.”