Tag: Edwin Clarke

  • Clarke sues for peace as FG, PANDEF unite for Niger Delta development

    Clarke sues for peace as FG, PANDEF unite for Niger Delta development

    The Federal Government and the Niger Delta Leaders under the aegis of Pan Niger Delta Elders Forum (PANDEF) met for several hours at the Presidential Villa on Thursday and agreed to partner to actualize the FG’s new vision for the region’s development.

    The meeting, presided over by Acting President Yemi Osinbajo, was attended by the Ministers of Environment, Niger Delta Development Affairs, State for Petroleum, and the Chairman of NDDC, Sen. Ndoma Egba.

    Also in attendance were Chief Edwin Clarke, Alabo Graham Douglas, Chief Timi Alaibe, Chief Alfred Diette-Spiff, former Akwa Ibom Gov. Victor Attah and a host of other Niger Delta leaders.

    Elder statesman and leader of PANDEF, Clarke, who addressed state House Correspondents at the end of the meeting described it as very fruitful and called on the people of the region to maintain peace and await the implementation of the FG’s vision.

    “The message is that everyone should maintain peace,’’ Clarke said adding that the group had seen the commitment of the federal government to pursue its development agenda in the region.

    ““The meeting was excellent.  We met with Mr Acting President and he was very honest, truthful, forthright and we were very satisfied.”

    Clark denied an ultimatum was issued to the federal government on the vision’s implementation but added that the parties agreed on many things with PANDEF and the ministers presenting their separate addresses and Osinbajo rounding off.

    “We saw his genuineness, truthfulness, forthrightness; he is a gentleman and we support him and we are satisfied,” he said.

    The PANDEF leader stated that the region would withdraw from its former position and embrace the path laid by the federal government for the development of the region.

    According to him, the region and FG have agreed to work together noting that the issue of dialogue will also take place.

    He assured the Niger Delta people that the 16-point agenda they presented to the FG was fully discussed as well as the government’s 20-point agenda.

    On why the Niger Delta leaders were not speaking with one voice, the elder statesman said there were no other leaders in the region with dissenting voices.

    He said that MEND was represented at the meeting noting that the group’s acclaimed spokesman did not exist.

    “Jomo Gbomo does not exist as a human being. That is a ghost name and a fake name. MEND was here, all other organizations were here.

    “I am the leader of the Niger Delta and every leader you can think of from Cross River to Edo state was here,’’ he stated.

    Buttressing the points, he minister of State for Petroleum, Dr Ibe Kachikwu, acknowledged that there was no ultimatum from any part of the region to the federal government.

    He said that the meeting was to find solutions to the Niger Delta issues adding that it was basically to explore how government had gone ahead with the fulfillment of the parties’ undertakings on the 16-point agenda raised during the tour of the region.

    He said several issues including the University at Okerenkoko, issues related to the development of the Niger Delta generally, amnesty programme and how well it was working, and NDDC operations were discussed.

    “Today was an environment of calm, peace and friendliness and mutual dialogue of the issues for them to understand where we are coming from and understand the most pressing problems that we have,’’ he said.

    He acknowledged that PANDEF pledged commitment to work with the federal government to find solutions to the problems confronting the region.

    He said that the alarm that was generated was that government should hurry up with the projects as the people were getting worried and tired and wanted to see positive actions on all the items.

    He said that PANDEF was convinced with  the explanations of the Acting President and had realized that the government was not playing about the vision to correct the wrongs in the region for over 30 years.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that as the meeting was on the Acting Presidential Spokesman, Laolu Akande, released a fact sheet on the vision showing that the FG had set aside an initial one billion dollars for the clean-up and environmental remediation of Ogoniland.

    According to the fact sheet, 200 million dollars will be disbursed yearly for the first five years and work on the project will be conducted in line with international best practices.

    Akande stated that already soil and water tests had been done in preparation for the clean-up and 15 technical assistants from Ogoniland hired to be part of the work.

    He said that to drive infrastructure, the FG has released funds for the continuation of various sections of the East-West Road adding that as at March 2017, the overall project completion was substantial with some sections reaching 99 per cent completion.

    Akande stated that the FG had plans to construct health centres in the states and communities of the region which on completion would be fully equipped to address some of the health needs of rural dwellers.

    He added that FG had started the process of replacing illegal refineries in the region with modular ones, including options on how to involve the communities as shareholders in the proposed Modular Refineries.

    He said that the ground-breaking of the first set of such refineries were expected in the 4th quarter of 2017 and the government  would supply crude to the local refineries at reasonable price.

    Akande stated that the measure was to serve as an incentive to stop the current practice whereby illegal refiners vandalised and stole the crude adding that each Niger Delta state was expected to host two modular refineries.

  • Osinbajo, PANDEF meet in Aso Rock 

    Osinbajo, PANDEF meet in Aso Rock 

    Acting President Yemi Osinbajo on Thursday night met behind closed doors with members of the Pan Niger Delta Elders Forum (PANDEF).

    The meeting started around 7p.m at the Vice President’s conference room.

    Some of those attending the meeting included Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Pastor Usani Uguru Usani, elder statesman, Edwin Clarke and Alfred Diete-Spiff.

    Other are God knows Igali, Timi Alaibe, Obong Victor Atta, Graham Douglas, Dan Etete, Captain Idahosa Okunbo, Paul Ogbebor, and Senator Ndoma Egba.

    The meeting was still in progress at the time of filing this report.

    Details Later…

     

  • Militancy: Buhari gets fresh demands from new group

    Militancy: Buhari gets fresh demands from new group

    • Group seeks demilitarisation of Niger Delta

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday received fresh demands towards ensuring peace in the Niger Delta region.

    Buhari, a fortnight ago had received a 16-point demand from Niger Delta Stakeholders, under the aegis of Pan Niger Delta Forum led by Amanyanabo of Twon Brass Bayelsa State, King Alfred Diete Spiff and elder statesman, Edwin Clarke.

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Tuesday received the fresh demands on behalf of the President from the Niger Delta Peoples Congress (NDPC) at the State House, Abuja. The group was led by Amanyanabo of Twon Brass Bayelsa State, King Alfred Diete Spiff.

    From the excerpts of the presentation, signed by Congress Secretary, Professor Benjamin Okaba, the group said it was in the Villa to re-affirm the submissions made earlier and to prioritise the concerns and place them in clearer perspectives.

    It reads: “This is premised on our objective assessment of the anxieties, sentiments and myriads of reactions from the key drivers and players in the crises across and outside the region that immediately trailed the meetings.

    “We are very confident that our modest contributions as articulated below would constitute the panacea to the age long crises in the Niger Delta Region.

    The demands as presented to the Vice President include:

    “The fundamental concern is political reconstruction and fiscal federalism. We are persuaded to uphold that the nation practices true federalism with legitimate and acceptable division of power among the constituents (the center and regions) and the principle and practice of ownership and management of resources by the constituents. The derivation principal should allow the different unit annex and control its resources and pay appropriate and agreed tax to the centre.

    “Demilitarization and peace/confidence building: we are persuaded to request the federal government to stop further invasion of the region under any guise; release unconditionally all freedom fighters from detention and deploy political solution to the issues surrounding the leadership of the agitators/freedom fighters; cause multinational co-operations not only to relocate their operational bases to the region but more significantly create a minimum of 6,000 jobs for the teeming population of unemployed and restive youths of the region; cause the resumption of academic activities at the Nigerian Maritime University, Okerenkoko, Delta State and establish similar institutions in other parts of the region

    “*Funding Interventionist agencies: Cause the release of over 800 billion Naira outstanding allocations yet to be paid to the NDDC; we request the building of more refineries (modular type), petrochemicals and other petroleum related industries to add value to the crude oil and gas produced from the region.

    “*Environmental and Human Right Protection: To drastically reduce the current state of environmental degradation and threat to life occasioned by the activities of the mult-national cooperation in the region, we recommend that the federal government should: urgently cause the appropriate agencies and co-operations to begin the comprehensive remediation (clean up etc) of the Niger Delta environment affected by oil spill; provide medical facilities and attention to people suffering from ailments associated with oil and gas activities; prompt the legislative process for the review of the nation’s laws on Environmental impact and give stiffer penalties to defaulters; cause the immediate implementation of all laws stopping Gas flaring in the region; cause the establishment of Internally Displaced Persons camps for the re-settlement of displaced persons at Bakassi, Gbaramatu, etc.”

    Speaking with State House correspondents at the end of the meeting, two members of the delegation, Mike Oloyebo and Hendricks Okpokeme shed light on the fresh demands.

    Oloyebo said: “This is Niger Delta Peoples Congress. King Alfred Diete Spiff and other leaders, about 38 member delegation came again to represent the aggrieved people because you can’t be finding peace without taking into consideration of the problem of the boys in the creeks.

    “That is what we have come to inform the presidency and I am very sure the aggrieved people were represented in this meeting and we don’t have any political affiliation to any other group, we have come genuinely concerned to solve this problem once and for all.” He added

    Asked if his group was different from the first one, he said that the mission of the groups is the same towards finding lasting peace in the region.

    He said: “The mission is the same, we are trying to find peace whether we are talking about differences or not,we are all one people.”

    On the response of the Presidency to the presentation, he said: “It was very positive,we have a president that is very honest with governance and the issues that affect Nigerians and I am very sure that what he told us that the issues are very legitimate and we should go back and try to get a roadmap for permanent peace and that is what we are doing.”

    From the meeting, he said that more consultations and interactions will follow, which will end in a summit.

    He said: “We are going to do a stakeholders summit in the Niger Delta in the next one month where everybody will be invited to the table to hear what government want to do. So that if we continue to ask the government to do things for us, without us stopping the bombing, then it does not make sense.

    Asked if the first meeting did not achieve its purpose, he said: “After the first meeting there were a lot of distractions and other issues, we were misrepresented. The people said we came to ask for oil bloc for ourselves and they came with specific demands and we have come to inform the presidency this is the demand of the aggrieved people.”

    Okpokeme said: “Certain salient issues were left out in that presentation, issues of derivation which was completely delisted from the list, then we specifically had an item where the boys demanded for their 6000 job loss from the multinationals,the amnesty programme we are asking for a democratization to capture some legitimate beneficiaries who were left out in the first exercise,these were some of the key issues that were left out in the first exercise.”

    A Presidency source that attended the meeting said that the Vice President told the delegation that they should first address the issue of continued vandalism in the region which he said is the most important thing.

    The Vice President, he said, noted that the problems in the region have always been there.

    He said if the elite in all regions of the country decide to end the problems in their regions, the problems will be resolved.

    He was also said to have told them that independent producers who are Nigerians are always suffering from vandalism and not IOCs.

  • Falana to Jonathan: ignore calls to remove  northeast governors

    Falana to Jonathan: ignore calls to remove northeast governors

    Lagos lawyer Mr. Femi Falana (SAN) has criticised Ijaw leader, Chief Edwin Clarke, for allegedly calling for the removal of Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states’ governors over Boko Haram insurgency.

    Falana urged President Goodluck Jonathan to ignore Clark’s call for the removal of the governors.

    In a statement yesterday in Lagos, the frontline lawyer noted that it was illegal and unconstitutional for the elder statesman to call for the removal of the governors.

    Though he admitted that Chief Clark wielded enormous influence at the Presidency, Falana said his call for the removal of the governors was diversionary and without legal backing.

    He said: “There is nothing like partial declaration of a state of emergency in the 1999 Constitution; what Section 305 (c) of the Constitution contemplates is the recourse to ‘extraordinary measures to restore peace’ and security, where there is a breakdown of public order and public safety. This, in effect, means that all democratic institutions should be suspended to permit the military exercise full control until peace and order return.”

    Falana said Section 305 of the Constitution, which empowers the President to declare a state of emergency in any part of the country, does not make any provision – expressly or impliedly – for the removal of elected democratic structures.

    “In other words, the power of the President to take ‘extraordinary measures to restore peace and security’ under a state of emergency does not include the removal of elected public officers or the dissolution of democratic structures,” he said.

    The frontline lawyer stressed that governors could not be held “vicariously liable” for the inability of the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces to stem the rising wave of insurgency in the country.

    Falana said: “It is submitted that the adoption of ‘extraordinary measures’ should not be construed outside the ambit of the power of the President to deploy the Armed Forces and the police to restore public peace whenever there has been a breakdown of law and order in the whole country or any part thereof. In the process, the fundamental rights of all persons in the affected areas, save the right to life, may be infringed upon in the interest of defence, public safety and public order.

    “To that extent, Section 45 (2) of the Constitution provides that ‘an Act of the National Assembly shall not be invalidated by reason only that it provides for the taking, during periods of emergency, of measures that derogate from the provisions of Section 33 or 35 of this Constitution; but no such measures shall be taken in pursuance of any such Act during any period of emergency save to the extent that those measures are reasonably justifiable for the purpose of dealing with the situation that exists during that period of emergency’.

    “‘Provided that nothing in this section shall authorise any derogation from the provisions of Section 33 of this Constitution, except in respect of death resulting from acts of war or authorise any derogation from the provisions of Section 36 (8) of this Constitution’.”

    The lawyer said since Clark could not refer to any law or decided case to justify his stand, the Ijaw leader was merely advising President Jonathan to follow the “bad example” of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, who suspended former Plateau State Governor Joshua Dariye and Ekiti State Acting Governor for six months in violation of the Constitution.

    He described the Obasanjo era as a period of “executive recklessness” which has been consigned to the dustbin of history.