Tag: Bayelsa State

  • Ijaw youths stop Asari Dokubo from holding Biafran meeting in Bayelsa

    A bloody clash was averted on Saturday by the police in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, following failed attempts by a former militant leader and Niger Delta activist, Asari Dokubo, to hold an expanded inaugural meeting in support of Biafra.

    It was gathered that the Chairman of Ijaw Youths Council (IYC), Central Zone, Kennedy Olorogun, got wind of the Biafran meeting and mobilized his executive council members and other youths to the venue of the gathering.

    Olorogun was said to be angry that Dokubo chose Bayelsa, a homogeneous Ijaw state, to hold such meeting and ordered the founder of the Niger Delta Peoples Volunteer Force (NDPVF) to leave the state or face the wrath of the youths.

    It was learnt that Dokubo, who recently declared his support for the actualisation of Biafra, gathered over 300 persons from across the states in the South-East and South-South to hold the meeting.

    The meeting was reportedly convened under the auspices of the Biafra National Council (BNC) and not the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB).

    Read Also: Northern Igbo leaders ignore Asari Dokubo

    Confirming the development, Olorogun said over 300 persons including Dokubo were  already gathered at a hotel in Yenagoa when he led Ijaw youths to the place.

    He said quarrel ensued between him and Dokubo when he told the former militant leader that the meeting would not hold in Ijawland.

    “When we got the information, we stormed the venue of the meeting to stop them.

    “They tried to resist us but we told them we were prepared for them because we will not allow any part of Bayelsa to be used for a meeting calling for the actualisation of Biafra.

    “I wonder why Dokubo decided to bring such meeting to Bayelsa. But we stopped them.

    “It was getting out of hand but the police intervened to stop possible violence. My happiness is that we stopped the meeting from holding”.

  • Bayelsa gets Content Board’s oil, gas committee

    THE Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) has inaugurated a Community Interface Committee (CIC) for the Nigerian Oil and Gas Park Scheme NOGaPS) located at Emeyal 1 in Ogbia Local Government Area of Bayelsa State.

    The committee was set up to enhance the interface between the communities, the contractors and the Board and would ensure community participation, cordial relationship and promote compliance to the Community Content elements of the project.

    The Executive Secretary NCDMB, Simbi Kesiye Wabote, inaugurated the committee at a town hall meeting held to formally introduce the contractors that will execute the newly approved work scopes on the industrial park. He explained that the committee would ensure conducive environment for the execution of the contracts awarded for the development of the site at Emeyal 1 NOGaPS. “Hence, the Board deemed it fit to constitute a committee made up of representatives from the communities, the contractors and the Board,” Wabote said.

    Enumerating the roles and responsibilities of the committee, Wabote stated that His Royal Highness Jephthah Ogba Wolisi will serve as the chairman. Other members include representatives of the host communities, contractors and the NCDMB, while Mr. Kelly Olaye of the NCDMB will serve as the secretary. The committee’s existence will terminate at the completion of the project or whenever the management of NCDMB determines that their services is no longer required.

    Wabote commended President Muhammadu Buhari for approving the next phase of the project which entails the key infrastructure for the NOGaPS site. He noted that the Federal Government was impressed with the harmonious manner the contractors have been working with the community since the commencement of the project.

     

     

     

  • Bayelsa 2019: Between Lokpobiri and other APC aspirants

    As the leading political parties in Bayelsa State prepare for the November 16, 2019 Governorship Election, the most critical task before the main opposition party, All Progressives Congress (APC), is to choose the right governorship candidate. Already most informed observers of the politics of the oil-rich South-south state today say most of the myths that have sustained the ruling party, the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), seem to have been broken so much that any serious opposition party, with the right candidate and agenda, stands the chance of dethroning the ruling PDP.

    For example, one of the myths that PDP leaders used to deceive Bayelsa electorate since 1999 when the party first took over the state’s Government House, was the claim that PDP was an Ijaw party. Another was that only PDP has the interest of the people of Bayelsa at hand. Today, the poor performance and outright betrayal of the common people’s interest by the Dickson-led PDP state government have become so clear that the people are no longer deceived by these claims. All over Bayelsa, the people are angry and hungry for change.

    So, informed observers, especially supporters of APC, said the party is not just a viable alternative but the current choice of many. They also believe that if the party does the right things, APC in Bayelsa State today has what it takes to win the forthcoming governorship election. This is because the party has become truly rooted in all the parts of the state. In fact, current pre-election surveys at the grassroots level show clearly that while many people now openly express feeling of disappointment and betrayal against the PDP, increasing number of the people believe that APC could be the right alternative.

    These being the facts, APC leaders and their supporters should understand that all they need to do to win the forthcoming governorship election in Bayelsa State is to set their house in order and ensure they pick the right candidate for the governorship election. This is the crux of the matter, for it may be right today to assert that the fortunes of APC in the forthcoming governorship election depends, to a very large extent, on the candidate the party finally picks for the election. This is because the current feeling of betrayal against the ruling PDP in the state has been blamed largely on the usual tendency in Bayelsa State to vote people into public offices simply because of the party platform they contested on. As a result of this tendency, many people, who would not have won critical elections, have found themselves in positions of authority. Because such people have nothing to offer ab initio, they usually fail to deliver dividends of democracy to the people. Bayelsans are today tired of this kind of politics and are therefore out to vote only for a candidate they know and believe in.

    This explains why APC must not just bank on the increasing popularity of the party in the state but must ensure it fields a candidate that is known, tested and trusted.

    Before ministerial nominees were screened, many believed the race for APC’s governorship ticket was between the party’s leader in the state, former Governor Timipre Sylva and Senator Heineken Lokpobiri, who is also a former Minister of the Federal Republic. The understanding was that amongst the lot that were being touted for this critical assignment of leading the political attack against the ruling party, only the two have the strength of character, political muscle and experience needed to beat PDP in Bayelsa.

    Today, following Sylva’s nomination and successful screening as a Minister, Lokpobiri has become the strongest if not the only serious candidate APC should field if it hopes to really beat Governor Dickson-backed PDP candidate in the governorship race. Some insiders said the feeling amongst important stakeholders within Bayelsa APC is that the leaders, especially the supporters of Sylva and Lokpobiri should work together, combine their strengths since they are aware that they would be fighting against incumbency factor. Everybody in Bayelsa knows today that the ruling PDP hopes desperately that the proposed Sylva/Lokpobiri collaboration in APC does not work out. They hope the two will never agree and that APC would be deceived by all the other factors being touted to field a light weight as its governorship candidate.

    Instead of making this mistake, APC leaders in Bayelsa should look beyond personal interests; unite and take advantage of the prolonged disagreements within PDP leaders in the state. While the ruling PDP continues fruitlessly to resolve the apparent disagreement between the supporters of former President Goodluck Jonathan and Governor Seriake Henry Dickson over the successor of Dickson, APC should join hands to choose its strongest and most acceptable aspirant. For APC, which is still in opposition, this is no time to experiment with a candidate that is little known by all Bayelsa electorate within and outside of APC.  On this note, although APC today has three frontline aspirants for its governorship ticket; which include Heineken Lokpobiri, a Senator and former Minister of the Federal Republic; Prince Preye Aganaba, an engineer and Diseye Nsirim-Poweigha, a retired Commissioner of Police, it seems to me that the wisest thing APC should do is to vote for Lokpobiri. He, more than any of the other leading aspirants, is well known by all within APC and outside of APC. He has more political experience than the rest and has all it takes to compete more than the others.

    Besides, age and experience are all on his side. Keen observers of the politics of Bayelsa agree that in their quest for real change, Bayelsans are today fascinated by the prospect of getting a young and dynamic governor to replace Dickson. Although both Lokpobiri and Aganaba can boast of age being on their sides, it cannot be contested that Lokpobiri has the rare opportunity of combining age and experience.

    Born March 3, 1967, Lokpobiri began his robust political career as a grassroots representative of his people and from there, soured to the federal level. A lawyer, who earned his first law degree in the neighbouring Rivers State University of Science and Technology, Port Harcourt, and later got his Doctorate Degree (PhD) from Leeds Beckett University, UK, Lokpobiri began his public office service as a member of Bayelsa State House of Assembly from 1999 to 2003. He served as the Speaker of Bayelsa State House of Assembly from June 1999 to May 2001.

    In April 2007, he was elected a Senator on the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) platform in Bayelsa State, for the Bayelsa West Constituency. He later served as the Minister of State for Agriculture and Rural Development. Given his solid background as an experienced politician, who have served at all critical levels both in Bayelsa and outside, many say APC would be the better for it if it settles for him.

    Although the other major contestants like Prince Preye Aganaba, a prince of Aganaba Kingdom and a pioneer member of APC in Bayelsa State and Nsirim-Poweigha, the only female aspirant, who served as Commissioner of Police in Niger State, are also not push overs in their own rights, many think it will be in the interest of all if they and all the other interest groups and powerful stakeholders file behind Lokpobiri. Such unity is the only strategy that can make APC to defeat Dickson-backed PDP candidate in Bayelsa.

    • Mr. Ayebanua, a public analyst, wrote in from Yenagoa.
  • Anger in Bayelsa over whereabouts of abducted Siasia’s mother

    Residents and the Bayelsa State Chapter of the Sports Writers Association of Nigeria (SWAN) have raised concerns on the whereabouts of Beauty Ogere, the abducted mother of a former Coach and skipper of the Super Eagles, Samson Siasia.

    Residents said it was a sign of incompetence on the part of the police and other security agencies to allow the 80-year-old woman to be in kidnappers’ den for over 25 days.

    They lamented that the silence of the police, the Department of State Security (DSS) and other security agencies was disturbing and asked the security commanders in the state to either free the woman or resign their positions.

    Some of the residents derided the security architecture in the state for their lacklustre and alleged unserious attitude on the case of Siasia’s mother.

    The whereabouts of the woman and those of kidmapped 66-year-old Florence Donana and her 17-year-old granddaughter,  remained unknown.

    The victims were whisked away from their Odoni community, Sagbama Local Government Area, Bayelsa State, on July 15 at about 2am.

    Two days after the incident, the kidnappers established contacts with Siasia’s  family and demanded N70m to set the victims free.

    Siasia, however, begged the kidnappers to set his aged mother free unconditionally saying he was out of job and had no such money to pay them.

    But a family member said the kidnappers brought down the ransom from N70m to N50m without consideration to the health of the woman.

    Read Also: Whereabouts of Siasia’s mother still unknown 

    The Bayelsa State Chapter of SWA said it was disturbing that several weeks after her abduction, Ogere Siasia is still being held hostage by suspected kidnappers.

    The Chairman of SWAN, Alambo Datonye said: “Nearly a month since the woman’s kidnap on July 15 at her country home at Odoni in Sagbama Local Government Area of the State, the old woman is still languishing in the hands of her abductors.

    “This should not happen to anyone talkless of an aged mother of Coach Siasia who brought joy to millions of Nigerians and Bayelsans as a player and a tactician donning the national colors, bringing glory to the country.

    “We therefore call on the kidnappers to release Madam Ogere Siasia unconditionally and reunite her with her loved ones.

    “We also urge security agencies and government to act swiftly and efficiently to ensure the release of the woman and others that are being held against her will.

    “No sane society develops with individuals held against their will, with the perpetrators of this unconscionable act getting away scot free.The pain and trauma the Siasia family is going through is better imagined than experienced.

    “As concerned members of the society, SWAN in Bayelsa call on the relevant agencies to be alive to their responsibilities of safeguarding the lives of every citizen and bring to a halt criminal activities such as kidnapping which is antithetical to the very essence of our collective humanity”.

     

     

  • How my successor will emerge, by Dickson

    Bayelsa State Governor  Seriake Dickson has listed the qualities expected from his successor. He said the person should possess courage, focus, capacity and compassion to protect the collective interests of the Ijaw nation.

    The governor, who spoke in Yenagoa, the state capital, at the weekend, said owing to the challenges facing the state, Bayelsa could not afford to have what he described an establishment errand boy as governor.

    He also emphasised that the next governor should have a clear agenda and be God-fearing to serve the people with humility and compassion.

    He said: “The next governor of the Ijaw nation must be courageous. He must be ready to defend the Ijaw nation at all times. He must not be the errand boy of any ethnic group. I will be sad to see the governor òf Bayelsa playing just politics, without being able to take a decisive position on issues.”

    Dickson said he had raised the standard of governance in Bayelsa and promised to publish an audited account of his eight years stewardship, in line with his administration’s policy of accountability and transparency.

    He said: “The shoes I am leaving behind are very big. Posterity will judge.

    “Only very few of the people who come to talk to me have the interest of the state at heart. There is no free money to give anybody in Bayelsa. Don’t kill for anybody. None has the power to make you a billionaire.

    “Our people are oppressed. We have a lot of stories to tell Nigerians. When it comes to speak for the Ijaw nation, I have not been found wanting. I want that tradition to continue. I want my people to be safe.

    “More, than any other time, Bayelsa needs a governor with the requisite courage to lead the Ijaw nation. What is at stake is your destiny and survival. Our people are Balkanized into small units from Ondo State to many many other states.

    “In the Niger delta, the Ijaw voice must be heard. I hope those buying the forms are aware of the enormity of the responsibilities of being the governor of Bayelsa state.”

    Dickson attributed the peaceful atmosphere in state to the new culture of tolerance and maturity, promoted by his administration in the last seven and half years.

    He commended the political class for the peace in the state, in spite of the multiplicity of aspirants. The governor expressed the hope that all political parties and candidates would abide by the rules for the greater good of the state.

    He said the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) has many governorship aspirants because it remained the only solid and robust platform that could win election in Bayelsa.

    He described the development as a testament to his democratic style of governance where people are allowed to pursue their ambitions without any form of interferance.

    Dickson said: “In spite of the multiplicity òf aspirants, we have a new political culture, there is no incidence of violence. I am happy that the state is growing politically.

    “I want to see more engagement, I want to see people talk about their dreams and visions, I want to see more of the issues being addressed. The fact that you have 21 or so aspirants gives the clarity that PDP is the only party that can guarantee success; the platform that can connect with our people.

    “It tells a lot about the capacity of the party and the leadership that I have provided to make it attractive”, he said.

    On the council poll, Dickson decried the desperation of some politicians, who according to him, did not mean well for the state.

    He said the election would hold as planned by the State Independent Electoral Commission (SIEC).

    The governor also pointed out that the boycott of the council election by the main opposition party, APC would not in any way affect the credibility of the poll.

    He added: “What happened was unfortunate. It showed the desperation of some politicians in the state. I know people who are planning to forge identities of delegates. You can imagine how they can come within the party to frustrate local government election”.

  • PDP primary election: Dickson convenes meeting of party’s elders

    Bayelsa State Governor, Seriake Dickson, has convened a crucial meeting of the state’s Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) Elders Council ahead of the party’s governorship primary election.

    The Chairman of the Council, Air Vice-Marshal Larry Koinyan, in a statement at the weekend said that the meeting would hold on Tuesday at the Governor’s conference room, Government House, Yenagoa.

    Koinyan said former President Goodluck Jonathan and prominent PDP elders were expected to attend the meeting.

    Read Also: Why I want to succeed Dickson,by SSG

    He further called on all the statutory members of the council inaugurated in line with constitutional provisions to attend the meeting.

    He explained that the maiden meeting of the council would hold with the entire PDP State Executive Council led by its Chairman, Chief Moses Cleopas, in attendance.

    Koinyan said that matters concerning the September 3 primaries of the party would be discussed at the meeting.

     

     

  • Abubakar, Obasanjo, Jonathan, others for Dickson’ mother’s memorial cancer centre launch

    BAYELSA State Governor, the Honourable Henry Seriake Dickson, is set to organise a memorial service in honour of his mother, Mrs. GoldCoast Dickson as well as the formal presentation of Henry Seriake Dickson Foundation on Thursday, August 8, 2019.

    The late Mrs. Gold Coast died of Lung Cancer on August 8, 2018, at the M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston Texas, United States of America seven months after being diagnosed of the ailments.

    The Special Adviser to the Governor on Media Relations, Mr. Fidelis Soriwei, said in a statement at the weekend that the memorial service scheduled to take place at the country home of the Dicksons, Toru Orua, Sagbama Local Government Area, would be followed by a formal presentation and launch of the Henry Seriake Dickson Foundation.

    Soriwei said the event scheduled to hold under the chairmanship of former Head of State, Gen. Abdusalami Abubakar, would have former President Olusegun Obasanjo and former President Goodluck Jonathan as Special Guests of honour.

    He said that HSD Foundation was being set up by the governor in fulfillment of his promise to raise a cancer awareness centre, the Goldcoast Dickson Cancer Centre, to tackle the cancer scourge in the Niger Delta communities and in other parts of the country.

    Read Also: Dickson’s headache in Bayelsa

    Soriwei said that the cancer centre would render the invaluable service of spearheading a well-coordinated action against the killer disease especially through early detection, treatment and dialysis.

    He said the Dickson family would also carry out a groundbreaking ceremony to mark the commencement of the construction of the cancer centre deliberately designed to be the most resourceful centre against the endemic nature of cancer in the society.

    He stated further that the President of the Senate, Ahmed Lawan, the Speaker of the House of Reps, Femi Gbajabiamila, National Chairman of the Peoples Democratic, Prince Uche Secondus, his All Progressives Congress Counterpart, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, the Chairman of the Nigerian Governor’s Forum,  Dr. Kayode Fayemi and all governorsare expected at the event in which the Amayanabo of Twon Brass, King Alfred Diete Spiff and Hajia Maryam Abacha, would be father and mother of the day respectively.

  • Bayelsa launches new Yenagoa city project

    The Bayelsa State government will launch a new Yenagoa City project to control development at the capital city on August 7.

    The government also condemned the invasion of Azagbene community in Ekeremor Local Government Area by the Army following the murder of two soldiers in the area.

    Commissioner for Information and Orientation Daniel Iworiso-Markson on Thursday said the decisions were taken at the 109th State Executive Council meeting.

    According to him, the launch would attract people from all walks of life, and Certificates of Occupancy (CofO) will be issued to persons already allocated plots of land in the new city.

    Iworiso-Markson said the government was doing everything within its reach to enable Bayelsans and friends of the state, who acquired plots in the highbrow area, develop their landed property with ease.

    He said: “One of the things we must bring to the fore regarding the launch of the New Yenagoa City is the fact that there will be controlled development. As much as possible, the city, as being envisaged, will compare favourably with any of its kind anywhere in the world, given the amenities that have been provided there already.

    Read Also: We’ll conduct free, fair election in Bayelsa, says INEC

    “An 18-hole Golf course; rebranded Castle Hotel and a Polo Club which is at its final stage of completion are all there. C of Os will also be issued for most of the plots that day; there are over a thousand plots there. This is another way of generating revenue for our state, but more importantly, we have created a GRA that we all will be proud of.”

    The commissioner also condemned the murder of soldiers by criminals at Azagbene, and the consequent sacking of the community by the military in a reprisal. He, however, called on leaders and the media to partner the government in sensitising the youths on the need to shun criminal activities in the interest of peace and development.

    “We all have our roles to play as religious leaders, community leaders, political or opinion leaders, and even youth leaders, by talking to our people because it is our people, the innocent ones, who suffer whenever such senseless actions happen. The Odi incident is still very fresh in our memory,” he added.

    The governor’s Special Adviser on Security, Chief Boma Spero-Jack, condemned the murder, but said the military should have adopted a professional means of seeking justice rather than sacking the community.

    According to him, the government has dispatched a committee to carry out an on-the-spot assessment on the destruction in Azagbene to provide some relief to the people.

  • Three suspected robbers killed

    THREE suspected robbers, who specialised in operating in commercial tricycles, were killed yesterday in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, by a mob.

    One was severely injured.

    The angry residents were said to have apprehended the suspects following their failed attempt to rob their victim.

    The suspects were identified as Nsikan Phillip, 23, from Akwa Ibom State, Lucky Iniokpo Lucky, 21, and Perekebina, 18, both from Toru-Ebeni community in Sagbama Local Government Area of Bayelsa State.

    Read Also: Police kill four teenage robbers in Edo

    It was learnt that the incident, which occurred at Dimrose Street, in Biogbolo community, threw the entire street into jubilation.

    The suspects were reportedly apprehended by members of a local vigilance group.

    Contacted, police spokesman Asinim Butswat said the victims were not dead at the time they were handed over to the police.

    He said the police recovered a locally made pistol, the tricycle and rushed the suspects to a hospital in Yenagoa.

     

  • Spills, compensations: Will communities’, Shell’s wrangling ever end?

    Residents of Odimodi and other communities around Ramos Rivers and tributaries in Burutu Local Government Area of Delta State and others in Bayelsa State are again spoiling for a fight with Anglo-Dutch Shell Petroleum Development Company. This time, the bone of contention, reports SOUTHSOUTH REGIONAL EDITOR, SHOLA O’NEIL, is nonpayment of compensation for devastations wreaked by the May 17, 2018 crude oil spill from the company’s 24″ Trans-Ramos Pipeline.

    The relationship between Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) and some of its host communities in Burutu area of Delta State has been strained by incidents of spills, compensation (non-)payment and other disagreements in recent times. The tie between the parties is akin to that between the famous Tom and Jerry in Cat and Mouse TV show.

    The no-love-lost affair took a dangerous detour on May 17, last year, when communities reported that the Trans-Ramos Pipeline of the multinational oil company located in the swamp of Western part of the Niger Delta, ruptured, pouring over 1,000 barrels of crude oil into the river and creeks, much to the angst of the host communities, that already experience hardship from the effect of crude oil exploration and exploitation.

    For some of the affected communities, there is respite in the form of relief materials and moves by Shell to pay compensation. Yet, there are dozen others who are still at daggers drawn with the oil giant over their alleged neglect and ‘deliberate plot to evade responsibility’.

    Ironically, the 100,000bpd TRP spill of May 17 is one which cause was mostly agreed by the polluter and those affected. Usually, communities and Shell bicker over whether crude oil spillages result from equipment failure or ‘third party’ intervention–a loose term that could mean vandalism or theft or a dozen reasons which exonerate the company and free it from liability. The strategic pipeline, which pours into SPDC’s Forcados Terminal, has suffered attacks by agitators and vandals in recent times.

    SPDC’s representative at one of the National Spill Detection and Remediation Agency (NOSDRA)-brokered meetings, Mr. Anibasa Usman, conceded that it resulted during a “Pigging (pipeline cleaning) Operation” and Shell sources told our reporter that it was “clearly operational failure” that caused over 1,000 barrels to pollute the waters.

    Shell’s Media Relations Manager, Mr. Bamidele Odugbesan, told Niger Delta Report that the company regretted the spill, clarifying that ”the Trans Ramos Pipeline (TRP) was re-opened on Sunday, April 21, this year after successful repairs and testing.”  He did not overtly state what caused the spill in the e-mail sent to our reporter.

    Odugbesan further explained: “No spill is acceptable to us in SPDC and the 2018 incidents on the TRP in Aghoro and Odimodi are regrettable. SPDC JV attaches high priority to its asset integrity and implements a work programme to appraise, maintain and replace key sections of pipelines and flow lines. Seventy kilometers of flow lines were installed last year, bringing the total distance of flow lines and pipelines replaced over the last seven years to approximately 1,300 kilometers.”

    Yet, the suspicion and acrimony between the company and its host has led to heightening tension in the area.

    A group known as “The Polluted, but Excluded Communities in the Odimodi Area” (POBECOM), and others have been at loggerheads with the company over inclusion and exclusion from list of communities impacted, and by extension those to get compensations and relief materials to cushion the effect of loss of means of livelihood and other attendant dangers from the incident. The anger extends to NOSDRA, which the communities said is colluding with Shell to shortchange them.

    Earlier, the Odimodi communities and ‘Trans-Ramos Pipeline Oil Spill Impacted Communities Forum’ (TROSICF), had accused Shell of deliberately removing them from the list of impacted communities, claiming that it was a ploy to reduce its liability through remediation, compensation payment and provision of relief materials.

    The Joint Investigation Visit convened by NOSDRA was rejected by those communities.  The JIV, which is a process to ascertain the cause and extent of the spill preparatory to clean-up and remediation has always been a subject of conflict between the company and host communities. This is because, while the communities try to establish ‘equipment failure’, SPDC on the other hand strives to blame ‘Third Party’. The May 17, last year spill, though free from this tangle, was seized by groups’ denunciation stemming from alleged subversion of existing regulations, reduction in the size and impact of the spill to “inclusion of extraneous matters” by SPDC.

    The Warri Zonal Office of NOSDRA inferred, in a meeting last year that Shell tried to evade responsibility by avoiding communities impacted in Delta State. NOSDRA Yenogoa Office confirmed that SPDC Geomatics team left out impacted communities in Delta. It concluded that the company was unwilling to carry the Warri Zonal Office along in the JIV.

    Mr. Osteen Igbapike, a lawyer representing some of the impacted communities in Trans-Ramos and others in Burutu, Delta State, was unambiguous, in a chat with our reporter that the JIV was fraught with irregularities.

    “It was a case of the tail wagging the dog,” he alleged in a telephone interview with Niger Delta Report. He insisted that Shell took charge of the operation and decided which areas to include and which to leave out.

    “The grounds for my clients’ rejection and others who rejected it are very clear. Firstly, those who signed the (JIV) report are those who didn’t go to the field for the JIV. They were hired from the communities to sign,” he said.

    While the Warri-based lawyer did not mention names, our reporter gathered that a traditional ruler who was not a part of the team signed the document, contrary to the regulation.

    “Secondly, Shell carried out damage assessment on its own spill. That should have been a separate process; JIV is just to ascertain the cause and extent of the spill, but damage assessment is carried out after the exercise.

    “Thirdly, the exercise was not inclusive; Shell deliberately excluded several communities in Burutu Local Government Area. They just handpicked communities that had spill points and excluded all other communities, even though they shared same water body. They made peace with only Odimodi town, and neglected the others, even though there are many other communities that were affected.

    Our findings showed that SPDC is in negotiation with Aghoro I and II, Agge, and Amazor in Bayelsa State, but mostly rejected Delta communities along the River Ramos, because, according to an SPDC source, the spill from the pipeline did not get to other communities or they were not impacted.

    Following the discordant tones from the riverside communities, NOSDRA, on September 11, last year convened a meeting of stakeholders, including SPDC and the polluted communities in its Abuja office.

    The meeting was chaired by the outgone Director-General Dr. Peter Idabor, who, after listening to all sides of the stories, resolved to carry out a Post-spill Impact Assessment (PSIA).

    The minute of the meeting, a copy of which was obtained by our reporter, revealed the anger of excluded communities and their representatives.  And against that background, on November 7, last year, a letter, signed by Olubunmi Akindele on behalf of NOSDRA D-G, invited stakeholders to the PSIA, which commenced on November 14. It was gathered that PSIA lasted from November 14 to early December when the participants pulled out from site, and it was concluded in February, this year.

    However, seven months after, our investigations revealed that the report of the PSIA has been kept under lock and key by NOSDRA. The current D-G, Mr. Idris Musa, who was contacted on the development on Tuesday, told our reporter that “we are calling the stakeholders for a meeting next week.”

    Leaders of POBECOM and TROSICF, who spoke with our reporter about the situation, were distinctly unimpressed by NOSDRA’s and Musa’s handling of the situation so far.

    A number of them felt the return of Musa, as a D-G of NOSDRA was to defeat any action against SPDC over the spill.

    Chief Presley Angeyama of POBECOM, said. “NOSDRA has merely been in motion, yet there is no movement.

    “SPDC and NOSDRA are working together to sweep the issue under the carpet; they want to shortchange us as they have done with several spills in the past, notably the Bonga Spill, which was handled by D-G Musa.

    “The JIV showed clearly, and Shell accepted for once, that the spill was as a result of their operation failure, and yet they are not willing to do the needful.”

    Speaking in the same manner, Chief Godspower Numa and Mr. Ebi Kodokodo, Chairman and Secretary respectively of TROSICF, expressed displeasure over the handling of the issue by the agency under the watch of D-G Idris Musa.

    Kodokodo particularly decried perceived inability or unwillingness of the agency to compel SPDC to carry out clean-up, remediation and restoration of the areas affected by the spill. He alleged that the agency was in the know of Shell’s “plan to dodge its responsibilities resulting from the spill.”

    Continuing, he said. “Every time we call to find out what has become of the PSIA, they (NOSDRA) will say it is the consultant that is holding it. How is that even possible that NOSDRA will allow its hireling to hold everybody to ransom? We know it is a delay tactics to stall the process and force us to play by their rules.

    “Now, they are calling selected communities to Port Harcourt (Shell office) to further their divide-and-rule agenda. Shell is relying on a JIV, which, apart from being illegal, has been overturned by the resolution of the September 11, last year meeting convened by NOSDRA.”

    Documents obtained by our reporter indicated that the communities have petitioned several government agencies, including the Office of the Attorney- General of the Federation, NOSDRA, Federal Ministry of Environment and the House of Representatives Committee on Environment, drawing attention to perceived illegality of damage assessment and payment negotiations being done by Shell with selected communities.

    Contacted on the allegation that the oil company was negotiating with communities, Musa told our reporter that he was not aware, adding “I do not work on hearsay.”

    He maintained that the agency would go ahead with the meeting with the proposed stakeholders to determine the next step.

    The NOSDRA D-G’s position contradicts SPDC claim that all was set for payment of compensation to impacted communities as contained in Odugbesan’s statement dated July 16, this year.

    He said. “The signed report of the TRP JIV identified impacted communities and we are in negotiations with these communities for compensation. The JIV is a multi-party exercise involving oil and gas industry regulators, the community, representatives of the state government, security agencies and representatives of the operator (in this case SPDC), to investigate any spill incident with a view to finding, among other things, the cause and impact of the incident.

    “The TRP (Trans-Ramos Pipeline) incidents JIVs were duly signed off and are available on the SPDC JV’s spill website. Recently, NOSDRA has also concluded a Post Impact Assessment and is evaluating this assessment with a view to giving its report.”

    Igbapike and the member representing Burutu Federal Constituency in the House of Representatives, Mr. Julius Pondi, were adamant that nothing would come out of the meeting, especially with the position of SPDC on the JIV.

    Igbapike said NOSDRA is powerless to address issues affecting SPDC because of alleged compromise.

    “PSIA and Damage Assessment have proven that every one of those communities in the area was affected, and even though shell participated fully in the exercise, they are going ahead with the negotiation because they do not regard our laws.

    “Now they are trying to pay off some individuals so that the communities would be divided, and others would not have voice to speak out against the injustice because those who received payment would naturally be on the side of Shell.

    “This is a pipeline that erupted at several points and polluted the environment by spilling thousands of barrels of crude oil, yet the polluter is dictating who would suffer and who should be compensated,” he said.

    Pondi, who visited the area shortly after the crude oil spill last year, told our reporter that he doesn’t expect any cheery news for the embattled impacted communities.