Tag: Bayelsa

  • Bayelsa: One year after Timipre Sylva

    Bayelsa: One year after Timipre Sylva

    By the time Chief Timipre Sylva was one year old in office as Governor of Bayelsa State in 2008, he had struck a chord that gave clear clues about where he was heading. He proved he had adequately prepared for the onerous task of governance in a state that had seen probably the worst bashing in the hands of ecological degradation and militants fighting a brutal and merciless war against the government, society and oil companies.

    He had no illusion what he had set upon himself. Sylva knew the war was one that must be won on behalf of the people who voted him into power. He had to battle the militants while tackling the issue of statecraft in a relatively new state like Bayelsa.

    The burden he shouldered was akin to what the Greek mythological Atlas did when he carried the sky on his shoulders as a punishment for offending the erratic god Zeus.

    Because the militants had also resorted to hostage-taking in addition to their war in the creeks, Sylva inherited quite a handful of abductees. It was a scary situation that could discourage any administrator from serious business. An ordinary person would have used it as an excuse not to deliver on his election promises.

    But not Sylva! He moved into action to deal with the host of monsters he had inherited. In his first year in office, he adopted what he and his team called the “Triple E” Strategy: Engagement, Education, and Enforcement. By which he meant his administration would first engage the militants in a dialogue to convince them to drop their arms. Thereafter, he would offer education to those willing and malleable for academic work. For those averse to the classroom, he would empower them for artisanship and lastly through a series of multi departmental policies enforce the execution of the strategy.

    The plan succeeded and became the forerunner to what we now celebrate as the Amnesty Programme of the Federal Government . He went on to record great achievements in the following years after winning peace as a basis for development. Indeed by October 2008, a group, Security Watch Africa, which is respected for its integrity in monitoring security concerns in Nigeria and across Africa, had recognised the work of Sylva and rolled out honours for him. He was awarded two prizes for his “dogged efforts to install stability and peace in a terrain said to have been rendered a no-go area by heavily armed militants.” The two awards Sylva got were Best Governor on Security Matters and 2008 Best Governor on Conflict Resolution. He beat other formidable contenders such as Babatunde Fashola (Lagos), Bukola Saraki (Kwara) and Ibrahim Shekarau ( Kano), among others, who were shortlisted.

    Later, Bayelsa under Sylva, after peace had been won, was to witness a steady improvement in education, power generation and supply.

    The trend was to continue until last year when in the typical Nigerian spirit that kills the goose that lays the golden eggs, the sledgehammer fell on Bayelsa and stopped the music and dance of progressive governance. One year of the Henry Seriake Dickson government in Bayelsa has not been as portentous of a promising future as that of Sylva Whereas in one year of Sylva as I have shown above, you could point to a road map that indicated serious and purposeful governance, you have no such thing in the past twelve months of Governor Dickson . He has spent the period in a futile chase of the ghost of Sylva, who, mercifully, has refused to join issues with him but has rather allowed his achievements to speak for him .

    Dickson has remained stagnant and clay – footed, rooted in one spot of unfounded and sometimes ridiculous claims about his predecessor. The governor hasn’t posted any strategic performance to offer an inkling that he is poised for great achievements for the rest of his term. The first move a leader makes marks him out. It is true some leaders are slow, hesitant starters. But even in such stuttering steps, you would discern an element of certainty and knowledgeability of governance.

    We have not seen this in Dickson. And this is making us Bayelsans nostalgic about the past era of Sylva . Dickson should stop weeping about a phantom legacy of debts and empty treasury and give us what Sylva gave us : Hope !

     

    By James Wanimighe

    Sagbama, Bayelsa State.

  • Gunmen kill two soldiers, naval personnel in Bayelsa

    Unknown gunmen on Tuesday attacked and killed two soldiers and one retired naval personnel in an ambush on Ekpelebiri-Angiama River, Sagbama Local Government Area, Bayelsa State.

    Sources in the community told the News Agency of Nigeria that there was commotion as sound of gunfire between the gunmen and soldiers filled the air sending people in area scampering for safety.

    A civilian, identified as the driver of the motorised barge being used by the soldiers, was reportedly taken away as hostage by the gunmen.

    Media Coordinator of the Joint Military Task Force (JTF) in Yenagoa, Lt. Col Onyema Nwachukwu, said the soldiers were detailed to escort an oil barge belonging to Sterling Global Services Oil Company Limited.

    Nwachukwu told journalists on phone that two soldiers were killed in the attack.

    He said the gunmen ambushed the soldiers and opened fire on them.

    “I can confirm that some of our soldiers on board the barge belonging to Sterling Global Oil Resources Limited ran into an ambush along Angiama-Ekpelebiri waterways in Sagbama Local Government Area.

    “There was a shoot-out between the soldiers and the unknown gunmen.

    “Two of our men lost their lives and two other civilians sustained injures,’’ Nwachukwu said, adding that three of the unidentified gunmen also sustained gunshot injuries.

    He said the military outfit had deployed troops to the area and were on the trail of the gunmen.

     

  • Bayelsa Speaker’s mum kidnapped

    Gunmen have abducted the 70-year old mother of the Bayelsa State Speaker, Kombowei Benson.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that Mrs. Betinah Okunwa Benson was abducted from her home in Korokosei, Southern Ijaw Local Government, at 12.30 a.m.

    A statement by Benson’s Media Assistant Piriye Kiyaramo said the gunmen stormed the octogenarian’s home and forcefully took her away to an unknown destination.

    “Information reaching the Office of the Speaker indicates that the gunmen, who came in two speed boats, shot sporadically into the air to scare away people before going away with their victim.

    “The incident has been reported to the police,” the statement said.

    Police spokesman Fidelis Odunna confirmed the report, saying the command had launched a manhunt for the kidnappers.

    “It is confirmed that the speaker’s mother has been kidnapped.

    “We learnt of the kidnapping early this morning, but we have started work to see what we can do to free her,” Odunna said.

    He assured the public of the command’s determination to rescue the victim.

    Odunna said the command has sent detectives to track down the criminals.

     

  • Navy parades 23 ‘oil thieves’ in Bayelsa

    The Central Naval Command (CNC) in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital, has paraded 23 ‘oil thieves’.

    The suspects were handed over to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) at the CNC headquarters yesterday.

    Ten Indians and two Nigerians were arrested on a vessel, MT AKSHAY, with 157,822 litres of crude oil.

    Nine Nigerians and two Ghanaians were arrested aboard MT. EVE with 75,000 litres of Automated Gas Oil (AGO).

    The two vessels were intercepted by the Navy on routine patrols around Brass River last November.

    He said: “The vessels are not listed in the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) tanker nomination schedule.

    “They do not have the Nigerian Port Authority’s (NPA’s) bunkering permit or the Joint Task Force’s(JTF’s) certificate of registration for the vessels engaged in movement of crude oil.

    “The Naval headquarters has directed that MT AKSHAY and MT EVE with its cargo and the suspects should be handed over to the EFCC for future investigation.”

     

  • Bayelsa saves N20b

    • State to increase IGR

    Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson has said the state has N13.433 billion as the gross inflow in November.

    Dickson spoke at the monthly transparency briefing, tagged: “Bayelsa State Transparency Initiative” monthly briefing for November, which took place at the Banquet Hall of the Government House, Yenagoa.

    He said of the amount generated, N2.395 billion was from statutory allocation, N9.572 billion came from the 13 per cent derivation accruing to the state. VAT got N625,326,631; disbursement from SURE account N1.65billion.

    He said the total deductions in the same month amounted to N2.3 billion.

    Putting salaries for political appointees at N327million and the monthly overhead for ministries and agencies at N1.6 billion, Dickson said “even this figure will be reduced by next year”.

    He recalled that a balance of N23.572 billion was brought from October, and when added to the total capital payments for the month it amounted to N9billion and that of recurrent at N2 billion, the total funds available for November was put at N20,89,108,172,38.

    “Because of the robust development agenda, enthusiasm and commitment, some concerns have been expressed whether we are not doing too much.

    “The truth is people find it difficult to believe that all these are possible but it is possible with dedication, commitment, discipline and prudent management of scarce resources a lot can be done.”

    Highlight at the briefing was the signing of a N31.3 billion contract awarded to a Chinese firm for the Yenagoa-Oporomo road.

    He emphasised the importance of opening up the major link roads to the riverine areas, including the Nembe-Brass road, which will lead to the Brass LNG project; the Ekeremo-Agge Road which is also the site for the deep sea port.

    Another contract awarded included the Sagaba-Ekeremo Road.

    As part of measures to boost the state’s revenue profile, the governor has constituted the state board of internal revenue with Torukuru Godson as its chairman.

    Speaking at the inauguration at the Government House, Dickson urged the board to develop new revenue streams and work out modalities to block all leakages and wastages.

    The governor, who described the board’s assignment as critical to the administration’s restoration agenda, urged it to work closely with the Ministry of Finance and a committee, headed by Deputy Governor Gboribiogha John Jonah.

    Lamenting the state’s low Internal Generated Revenue (IGR), the governor noted that his administration would not depend on federal allocation to execute its infrastructural development initiative.

    “I don’t see any reason why multinational companies operating in the state with the massive degradation they wreak on our environment will not pay tax to our state…. Where we need amendment of the law, work with the Attorney-General that I have already mandated so that we can create an enabling legal environment when necessary.”

    Others members of the committee are Mrs. Ezougha Ogborodi (Legal Adviser and Secretary), Anthony Ikobho, Felix Pere-Kalama, Joseph Freeman Isowo and Anthony Audy with two directors to represent the Inland Revenue Board.

     

     

  • Pirates abduct four sailors in Bayelsa

    Pirates attacked a supply vessel and kidnapped four sailors off the Niger Delta coast, the International Maritime Bureau said Monday.

    “Pirates armed with guns attacked, boarded an offshore supply vessel … and kidnapped four crew members,” the IMB’s Piracy Reporting Centre said of the Sunday attack.

    There were “no injuries to crew members and (the) vessel continued passage to a safe port,” it said.

    The attack occurred some 40 nautical miles off of Nigeria’s Bayelsa state, the IMB said. It provided no further details on the nationality of the crew or the ship.

    AFP news agency says such kidnappings occur regularly off Nigeria’s oil-producing Niger Delta region, with hostages typically released after payment of a ransom.

    A 2009 amnesty deal led to a sharp drop in unrest in the region, but criminality remains widespread.

    On December 17, four workers from South Korea’s Hyundai Heavy Industries and a Nigerian were abducted by armed men while working at a construction site in Bayelsa.

    The five were freed unharmed on Friday night.

    On the same day, well armed pirates stormed and ransacked an oil tanker off the Niger Delta and kidnapped five Indian crew members.

     

  • Kidnappers release four South Korean workers in Bayelsa

    Kidnappers release four South Korean workers in Bayelsa

    Four South Koreans and a Nigerian who were abducted last week in the Niger Delta have been released, police said yesterday.

    The four foreign hostages were handed over to South Korean officials in the country late on Friday after police arrested the suspected kidnappers.

    “The victims were picked up from Azikoro, Bayelsa State by men of the special security outfit at about 9 p.m.,” the Police Commissioner Kings Omire said.

    Police spokesman Fidelis Odunna, said: “They were released voluntarily because we had suspects in our custody, and owing to a hit on their camp, they had to let the men go.”

    Omire said another Nigerian taken had already been released, meaning all six who were abducted were now free. The two arrested suspects were being interrogated, he said.

    There was no immediate comment from either the South Korean government or Hyundai Heavy Industries, the conglomerate that employs the abducted workers.

    Gunmen abducted two Lebanese men working for Nigerian construction company Setraco in Delta State this month, and killed a soldier protecting them.

    The 83-year-old mother of Finance Minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala was kidnapped on December 9 in Delta State but was freed five days later after a military search.

    In the north, where Islamist militants operate, another form of kidnapping of foreigners has emerged this year.

    A French national working for a renewable energy company, Vergnet was abducted close to the border with Niger on Wednesday.

    French intelligence agency, DCRI, believes the kidnappers were linked to “terrorist activity”. Islamist groups linked to Boko Haram have been behind similar kidnappings.

  • Gunmen kidnap Koreans in Bayelsa

    Gunmen on Monday abducted four South Koreans working for Hyundai Fabrication Company.

    They were kidnapped on Okpoama Island, Brass Local Government Area of Bayelsa state.

    Police spokesman Fidelis Odunna told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the gunmen stormed the company’s site by boat and abducted the Chinese workers.

    He said the police had deployed detectives to comb the creeks for possible clues, adding that “strategic security measures are being put in place to forestall a reoccurrence’’.

    Community sources told NAN that one of the four kidnapped men was the company’s Operations Manager, who was simply identified as Mr J.H. Kin.

    A source said the gunmen blindfolded their hostages and took them away in their speedboat.

    Another the source said the abduction was carried out in a “commando-like-manner’’, as many of the company employees who witnessed the incident were reportedly helplessly.

    Officials of the Joint Military Task force (JTF) and policemen have been deployed in the creeks to hunt down the kidnappers and secure the release of the expatriates.

    However, the whereabouts of the kidnapped men have not been ascertained. No group has claimed responsibility.

    The police said a Nigerian, Mr. Tekeyo Weni, initially kidnapped along with the Korean but dropped, is assisting investigators.

    Hyundai Fabrication Company fabricates metal materials used by the Brass Liquefied Natural Gas Company (BLNG).

    According to NAN investigations the local communities have been at loggerheads with the company over its failure to employ youths from the area.

    In a statement yesterday, The South Korean foreign ministry said the four employees from Hyundai Heavy Industries Co. were at the worksite in Bayelsa state to prepare for the construction of several factories when they were abducted.

    Ministry spokesman Cho Tai-young said the armed men initially took away the South Koreans and two Nigerian workers in a speed boat but one local Nigerian was later released.

    The kidnappers phoned Hyundai officials on yesterday morning and said the abductees were safe, the ministry said. The kidnappers said they would contact them again, the statement added.

     

  • Gunmen kidnap Chinese workers in Bayelsa

    Some gunmen on Monday abducted four Chinese nationals working for Hyundai Fabrication Company.

    The incident took place on Okpoama Island, Brass Local Government Area of Bayelsa.

    Confirming the report, the Police Public Relations Officer in Bayelsa, Mr. Fidelis Odunna (DSP), told the News Agency of Nigeria that the gunmen stormed the company’s site by boat and abducted the Chinese workers.

    He, however, said the police command had since deployed detectives to comb the creeks for possible clues, adding that “strategic security measures are being put in place to forestall a reoccurrence.’’

    Community sources earlier told NAN that one of the four kidnapped men was the company’s Operations Manager, who was simply identified as Mr. J.H. Kin.

    A source also told NAN that the gunmen blindfolded their hostages and took them away in their speedboat.

    The source said the abduction was carried out in a “commando-like-manner’’, as many of the company staff who witnessed the incident watched helplessly.

    NAN also learnt that officials of the Joint Military Task force (JTF) and policemen have been deployed to the creeks to hunt down the kidnappers and secure the release of the expatriates.

     

  • Bayelsa awaits crash report

    Bayelsa awaits crash report

    The Bayelsa State Government said it is awaiting the outcome of investigation into the navy helicopter crash that killed Kaduna State Governor Patrick Yakowa, former National Security Adviser (NSA) Gen. Andrew Owoye Azazi and four others.

    Governor Seriake Dickson spoke yesterday in Yenagoa, where he received the investigation team from the Federal Government led by the Chief of Naval Staff, Vice Admiral Dele Ezeoba.

    The governor, who described the crash as a monumental tragedy, reaffirmed his administration’s commitment and support for the investigation.

    He commended the naval chief and the team for their prompt response by visiting the state to carry out an assessment of the crash site at Tombi, in Nembe Local Government Area.

    Dickson expressed the condolences of the government and people of Bayelsa over the death of Yakowa, noting that he was a guest of the state, building relationships.

    On the former NSA, Azazi, the governor said: “Here we have lost one of our best, who means so much to the state and has contributed towards nation building.”

    Dickson described the navy pilot among the dead as diligent officers, who had served in the state during the flood period and commended their sense of duty and professionalism.

    “I condole with the entire military, as well as their families for the tragic loss. We are all mourning the loss of these great patriots.”

    The governor remarked that the navy had been a critical pillar of support to the state in the quest to ensure peace and stability.

    He said the administration had already declared three days of mourning in the state, adding that all formal government activities had been suspended.

    Dickson assured the chief of naval staff that the state government would continue to play its constitutional roles and called for more interactions from the navy to discuss issues of common interest.

    Ezeoba had urged Nigerians to remain united despite of the pain and grief occasioned by the national loss.

    According to him, “in spite all, we will continue to give thanks to God.”

    Ezeoba said that President Goodluck Jonathan had directed a detailed investigation into the crash, and gave the assurance that necessary steps would be taken to unravel its cause.

    Kano State Governor Rabi’u Kwankwaso described the late Yakowa as a leader who contributed immensely for mutual coexistence in Kaduna and the entire country.

    This is contained in a statement issued by the Director of Press, Malam Halilu Dantiye, in Kano.

    According to the statement, Kwankwaso made the remark while addressing supporters of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), who paid him a courtesy visit at the Government House.

    In the statement, Kwankwaso said that the late Yakowa had always worked very hard with other Northern governors to ensure that peace returned to the Northern part of the country.

    It also described Yakowa as “a complete gentleman and a leader’’, who was committed to the socio-economic development of his people.

    The statement described the late Azazi, as a fine military officer who served his country very well.

    It condoled with the families of the late Yakowa, Azazi and the pilot, Murtala Daba, who hailed from Kano State and others who lost their lives during the ill-fated helicopter crash.