Tag: Gbaramatu kingdom

  • APC chieftain takes Buhari’s message to Tompolo’s turf

    The people of Gbaramatu Kingdom, one of the largest Ijaw kingdoms in Delta state, have been charged to vote for President Muhammadu Buhari on Saturday to reap the full benefits the federal government has to offer.

    A chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Delta state and coordinator of the Delta South Canvassers for Buhari, Chief Michael Johnny, who gave the charge to the people of Gbaramatu in Warri on Wednesday, said it is time for the people of the state to move away from playing opposition.

    Gbaramatu Kingdom in Warri South-West council area of Delta state is the home base of former warlord and leader of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), Chief Government Ekpemupolo, also known as Tompolo.

    Speaking to his people during the meeting in Warri, Jonny, who is also a member of Buhari Presidential Campaign Council, said a vote for Buhari will bring more development to the kingdom, which was neglected by past PDP governments.

    “Being a member of Presidential Campaign Council of Buhari Support Groups Committee, I know that President Muhammdau Buhari will win the presidential election, I respect the fact that Gbaramatu indigenes are in different political parties but my concern is that in the next democratic dispensation come May 29, the Gbaramatu people cannot afford to be in opposition,” he said.

    He however assured that there will be peace in Gbaramatu kingdom before, during and after the elections, urging the residents to vote for Buhari and APC on Saturday, noting that Buhari is a friend of Gbaramatu kingdom.

  • Tension in Gbaramatu as military deploy aircrafts, gunboats

    Tension in Gbaramatu as military deploy aircrafts, gunboats

    The mood was apprehensive around Gbaramatu Kingdom, Warri South-West council area of Delta state on Monday as residents and leaders sighted military aircrafts and gunboats around their communities.

    The Nation gathered that military aircrafts were seen hovering around the palace of the Gbaramatu paramount ruler in Oporoza, just as many gunboats were seen in different communities across the kingdom on Tuesday.

    Meanwhile, military sources on monday evening told The Nation that there was no cause for alarm as the hardware seen were only meant for routine patrol of the Escravos and Trans-Forcados Pipeline and not any special operation targeting specific communities.

    Speaking on the development, the spokesman of the Gbaramatu Council of Chiefs, Chief Godspower Gbenekama, expressed worry of what he described as fresh deployment of military equipment and personnel to Gbaramatu, a situation which he feared might negatively affect efforts currently being made to persuade the dreaded Niger Delta Avengers (NDA) to let down its guards.

    “Some few hours ago, military aircraft was roving round our palace and there were troops with gun boats all over Gbaramatu Kingdom.

    “While we are appealing to the Niger Delta Avengers to sheathe their sword, we don’t know the rationale behind, and why the deployment of troops and gun boats.

    “Gbaramatu people are not at war with the Nigeria government, why is it that anytime there is crisis anywhere; something happens in Bayelsa, or Rivers state,the first place of call is Gbaramatu?

    “We don’t want what happened in 2009 and 2016 to happen again. So let the military restrain itself and we are still appealing to the Avengers to sheathe their swords.

    Read Also: FG urges Niger Delta militants to remain calm

    “The Avengers that were operating in 2016 that would say something, the next day they take drastic action are same people still operating but somehow they are now listening to us including the traditional ruler that they should sheathe their sword and give government sometime.

    “And thank God nothing has happened since the renewed threat so why the deployment? Military presence in Gbaramatu and other part of Niger Delta region is capable of escalating the crisis.

    “Let the military back down. We are also appealing to agitators to sheathe their sword. While we still appealing to the agitators, the military should back down so that we can sustain the peace while the federal government embark on one or two projects in the region.

    However, explaining the development, the Commander of the Nigerian Navy Ship (NNS) Delta, Commodore Ibrahim Dewu, said what had been misconstrued to be a military assault was a routine patrol exercise in the area, saying the hardware seen were not deployed to harass any community or any person.

    “What they are speculating as military deployment is routine patrol along Escravos and the Trans Forcados Pipeline. Once we sense any security concern on that line, our men usually move in to patrol the area. Nobody is deploying any gunboat or jets to specific communities. It is a normal patrol”, Dewu explained.

  • Neconde Energy denies violating Gbaramatu people’s rights

    Neconde Energy Limited, the exploration and production (E&) arm of the Obijackson Group, has denied violating the rights of the people of Gbaramatu Kingdom.

    The firm, which said it aims to increase its current oil production of between 15,000 and 17,000 barrels per day (bpd) from its oil mining lease (OML) 42 in Delta State of the Niger Delta to 60,000bpd by the end of the year, said it has the interest of the people at heart.

    Neconde operates the oil field in joint venture (JV) with the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC), the E&P arm of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). OML 42 is one of the oil fields divested by Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) and co-venturers – Total, and Eni/Agip in joint venture with the NNPC.

    The oil firm also debunked allegations of violation of the rights of the indigenous people of Gbaramatu Kingdom leveled against it the Gbaramatu Traditional Council. The allegations include displacement of indigenes employed at the flow stations and hijacking of contracts from local contractors. The Council also alleged that the management of Neconde Energy Limited (NEL) refused to honour an agreement to transfer five per cent of its 45 per cent equity in OML 42 to the host communities and that there has not been any community reentry project since recommencement of oil exploration activities in the oil filed since 2012. The claim was made by Jones Creek, Egwa, Odidi and Batan host communities These are the four fields that host OML 42 operation.

    The Managing Director of Neconde Energy, Frank Edozie, stated this during a media parley in Lagos. According to Edozie, the company had taken some strategic steps such as the rehabilitation of the Batan and Odidi flow stations to enable it achieve improved output.

    Edozie craved the understanding of the communities, noting that since the acquisition of the asset, the firm has been battling one issue to the other, from operatorship of the asset, which was only resolved in February this year, pipeline vandalisation and community issues.

    In order to remain afloat, he said the company adopted transporting its crude though the use of barges to the terminal where the oil is transferred to ocean moving vessels. He said expected production from the asset on acquisition was at least 100,000bpd but production currently is between 15,000 and 17,000bpd.

    Edozie also noted that before Shell divested the asset, it was producing 230,000 to 250,000bpd, therefore, he hopes to see more understanding from the communities in the next series of meetings the Neconde management will have with the communities.

    He said: “The allegation bordering on hijacking contracts from local contractors is untrue. Local contractors have been providing and continue to provide many services that are key to the operations of the NEL and its Joint Venture (JV) partner NPDC. However, it is common knowledge that operations have been epileptic due to frequent and sometimes prolonged outages of both the Trans-Forcados Pipeline and the Forcados export terminal. These frequent outages have made it difficult for the JV to effectively manage some of the contracts it employs in its operation. One of such contracts is the Operate and Maintain (O&M) contract through which the JV manages its field activities. To reduce significant losses to the JV due to wasteful contractual exposures, a decision was made by the JV to manage these O&M activities directly using JV personnel. Consequently, O&M contracts which expired at the end of 2016 were not renewed.

    “The most absurd of the allegations by the Gbaramatu Traditional Council is the claim that the management of Neconde Energy Limited refused to honour an agreement to remit five per cent of its 45 per cent equity to OML 42 host communities. Over the years, we have established an enviable track record through implementation of high-impact pro-social initiatives and activities. Our community development programmes, which cover health, education, infrastructure development, economic empowerment and sports, have contributed significantly to higher quality of life and standard of living in our host communities, and we remain committed to dialogue to resolving any genuine disputes with them.”

  • Applying Alaibe’s recommendations for devt of Niger Delta

    Applying Alaibe’s recommendations for devt of Niger Delta

    The assurance, by the federal government, that all the oil bearing communities in the Niger Delta will enjoy equal treatment in the distribution of developmental projects is a soothing balm to the wounds of communities that have over the years suffered neglect by successive administrations in the various attempts at addressing the vexed issue of even development of the region.

    Vice President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo, reportedly gave the assurance not long ago when representatives of Gbaramatu Kingdom in Delta State paid him a courtesy visit.

    For far too long, communities in states that are derisively considered as ‘fringe members’ of the Niger Delta have suffered what can at best be described as official neglect in the distribution and siting of developmental projects, for the simple reason that they are not the ‘mainstream’ oil bearing states, and therefore do not suffer the same level of destruction of the environment and other negative consequences of oil exploration and production, like the latter.

    It is the reason Niger Delta has inadvertently come to be synonymous with states like Rivers, Bayelsa, Akwa Ibom, Delta, Cross River and Edo. It is hardly remembered that Ondo, Imo and Abia states are also in the Niger Delta. In fact, reference is sometimes made to Delta, Rivers and Bayelsa as the so-called core Niger Delta. It doesn’t help matters, either, that people in these three states see themselves, rather arrogantly, as the ‘real Niger Delta’ people, through utterances and actions.

    But thank God for the Buhari administration. Recent actions of the government suggest that we are about to witness a significant departure from what has been the usual practice of concentrating developmental efforts on some selected sections of the Niger Delta, perhaps because all the noise, threats and actual destruction of oil installations and facilities by armed militants have been coming from those sections. The all-inclusive approach of the federal government to finding lasting solutions to the problems of the entire Niger Delta, not just a few states, is undoubtedly the panacea to the restiveness that has seen the country being held hostage, with the predictability of the rising of the sun.

    The government has started on a good note by engaging stakeholders in the Niger Delta in dialogues that are meant to chart the way forward for the region. One of such activities was the recent tour of the region by the vice president, during which he held town hall meetings with people from all segments of the society. Before then, President Muhammadu Buhari had held a meeting with representatives of the region in Abuja, at which the demands of the people of the region were presented in documentary form.

    If past experience is anything to go by, it will not be surprising to see the government follow up by setting up a committee to draw up a plan of action for implementing the demands of the region, both from the president’s meeting and the vice president’s various town hall meetings. There should be no need for this. The government has a working document to serve as guide for a systematic development of the region, one that would satisfy the yearnings, demands and aspirations of all the communities in the region.

    Timi Alaibe, a former managing director of the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), has been a one-man advocate for equitable distribution of resources and developmental projects in the region, irrespective of percentage of contribution to the national oil revenue, or degree of negative consequences suffered from oil exploration and production activities. For him, environmental degradation, like oil spill, does not recognize state or community boundaries. Nor is underdevelopment or unemployment concentrated in some sections of the region.

    The former presidential adviser on the Niger Delta Amnesty Programme does not lose any opportunity to speak on the issue of even development of the region wherever he finds it – at public lectures and media interviews.

    Alaibe’s ideas of what are required to ‘liberate’ the Niger Delta from the shackles of underdevelopment and poverty, quite lofty as they come, are encapsulated in the Niger Delta Development Master Plan that he personally authored. The document is a guide for the systematic and sustained development of the region, quite different from the periodic handouts that successive governments have been content to giving the people of the region.

    Though yet to be fully implemented, save for one of the pillars that deal with demobilization, rehabilitation and reintegration of former militants, the Master Plan has remained largely unused. Perhaps the document waited for the Buhari administration that is designing a new approach to solving the problems of the region, to be fully implemented.

    Is it a coincidence that the Senate has just exhumed the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) that had remained buried in its closets for nearly a decade, just when the federal government is trying to design new initiatives to tackle the Niger Delta problem? Perhaps it is not. The PIB and the Niger Delta Master Plan find common grounds in some areas, such as joint ownership of oil infrastructure by communities, which would make them assume full responsibility for its security. There is also the issue of involving oil bearing communities in profit sharing of oil proceeds. Both documents are on the same page on this.

    The federal government must walk its talk by ensuring even distribution of developmental projects in the entire Niger Delta region, which is in line with Alaibe’s recommendations in the Master Plan. This is what would give every community and hamlet in the region a sense of belonging. Some sections should no longer be made to feel that they are the special children that deserve to be pampered, while others pick the crumps that fall from the table.

    If the time has come for the people of the Niger Delta to feel differently (positively) about living in the area that serves as the goose that lays the golden egg, that feeling should spread everywhere.

     

    Ms Adeyeye, an environmental rights activist, lives in Akure

     

     

     

  • Military invasion: Ijaws demand payment of N100bn judgment fee

    Military invasion: Ijaws demand payment of N100bn judgment fee

    Leaders of Gbaramatu kingdom in Warri, Delta State have expressed concerns that the Federal Government failure to pay N99.99 billion judgment debt on the 2009 bombing of their communities could give rise to fresh insurgence in the area.

    The community leaders, in a letter to President Muhammadu Buhari, expressed concerns that youths are getting agitated because of the effect of the invasions on their Iives and future.

    They said although the Federal Government did not appeal the December 5, 2013 judgment, which ordered it to pay the 53 communities N99, 999,999,999.30, it was yet to pay off over three years after.

    The judgment was delivered in a suit the communities filed against the FG, after the bombardment and invasion by the Joint Task Force, during the bloody face-off with MEND and search for its leader, Chief Government Ekpemupolo from May to June 2013.

    They said the bombardment led to “deaths, maimings, displacements, including school children and wanton destruction of properties and means of livelihood.”

    The letter, dated April 25, reminded the president that, “some of the children who were victims of the 2009 bombardment are now young men and women who can tacitly relate their economic and social woes of today to what befell them and their parents in 2009.

    “The result is that there is serious dissatisfaction, grumbling, disharmony and rumbling in Gbaramatu because of the non-payment of the judgment debt, which ought to operate as fine closure to the issue,” the letter noted.

    Chiefs Jonathan Ari, Clark Gbenewei and former Regent of the kingdom, Elder Oyagha PT Heavens, who signed the letter along with three others, expressed concern that their resort to the court of law to seek redress is resulting in frustration and helplessness.

    They noted that the situation was because “the machinery for the enforcement of the judgment is in the hands of the very judgment debtor – the Federal Government,” yet their expressed belief that the rule of law and justice was better than “their opposite”

     

  • Ensure peace in your domains, Jonathan task rulers

    Ensure peace in your domains, Jonathan task rulers

    Former president Dr Goodluck Jonathan has tasked traditional rulers to ensure peace in their domains.

    Jonathan gave the advice on Tuesday during the official presentation of Staff of Office to the monarch of Gbaramatu Kingdom, Oboro Gbaraun 11 Aketekpe, Agadagba, Pere of Gbaramatu Kingdom.

    The ceremony was performed in Oporoza, the administrative headquarters of Gbaramatu Kingdom.

    The king who is the 26th Pere of Gbaramatu kingdom ascended the Royal Stool on March 15, 2016.

    The former president said that no meaningful development could be achieved in an atmosphere of rancour.

    ”There cannot be development without peace so it is the duty of the traditional rulers to ensure that peace reigns in their communities,” he said.

    Jonathan said that he was quite impressed with the level of peace in Gbaramatu despite the perception outside that the kingdom is volatile and unsafe.

    ”Today we are all happy, the way we hear of Niger Delta and indeed Gbaramatu, you may think that people cannot gather together here peacefully,” he said.

    Jonathan urged the people to support the new monarch to enable him to have a successful reign.

    Also speaking the Delta State Governor, Ifeanyi Okowa said there was no alternative to peace.

    He expressed joy at the different ethnic nationalities present at the ceremony saying that his government was committed to entrenching unity among the diverse ethnicities.

    The governor also urged the people to only agitate in a constructive manner by way of embracing dialogue.

    He said that his administration was committed to developing the riverine communities.

    ”It is time to start embracing peace. We need to stay together to move forward as a state and as a people.

    ”We need to start showing our presence in the creek and the only way we can do that is for people to create the right atmosphere to generate resources.

    ”If after two years you do not begin to see changes, you can hold us responsible,” he said.

    The monarch, Oboro Gbaraun 11 said he would build bridges of understanding with all the neighbouring ethnic nationalities to engender oneness.

    The highlight of the event was the presentation of staff of office to the king as well as a boat regatta by various Ijaw communities in the kingdom.

    Mr Kingsley Otuaro, Delta Deputy Governor, Mr Monday Igbuya Speaker, Delta House of Assembly attended the ceremony.

    Others were: traditional rulers from Urhobo, Itsekiri, Ijaw nations, members of the National and Delta House of Assembly, Commissioners, Clergymen and representatives of US Consulate among others.

  • Avengers: Ijaw youths accuse military of violating ceasefire 

    Avengers: Ijaw youths accuse military of violating ceasefire 

    Lament military invasion of Gbaramatu communities

    The umbrella body of Ijaw youths, the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), Worldwide, yesterday, accused the military of violating a ceasefire agreement between the Federal Government and the militant group, the Niger Delta Avengers (NDA).

    The IYC in a statement signed by its Spokesman, Mr. Eric Omare, said it was wrong for the military to invade some communities in Gbaramatu Kingdom, Delta State, at a time the government was planning to hold discussions with the Niger Delta region.

    Omare said the sudden presence of the military in the communities had raised doubts over the sincerity of the government to initiate peace in the region through dialogue.

    “The Federal Government cannot in one breath declare ceasefire and at the same time forcefully invade Ijaw communities in Gbaramatu Kingdom of Delta State allegedly looking for militants”, he said.

    He said in the early hours of Wednesday, the military stormed Tebujor community, a clan in Gbaramatu shooting sporadically into the air.

    He said the military operatives apprehended six youths from the community over allegations of pipeline vandalism.

    He identified the arrested youths as Eddy Ikpidi, Tekena Uka, Dboy Oboko, Jamaica Oboko, Coasta Kelly Tortor and Atani Yawuru.

    But Omare said: “While we do not support sabotage of oil facilities considering the negative effects on our environment, the IYC seriously frowns and condemns the continuous invasion and harassments of Ijaw communities and innocent people by the military under the guise of looking for pipeline vandals.

    “The military has no reason to embark on continuous invasion of Ijaw communities and arrest our people in the name of looking for Avengers or pipeline vandals. Our communities and people are peaceful and law abiding people.

    “The continuous invasion of Ijaw communities is a demonstration of lack of sincerity on the part of the federal government to genuinely dialogue with the people of the Niger Delta region to address the renewed militancy and issues affecting the region”.

    He noted that no meaningful dialogue could take place without sincerity of purpose and confidence in the process by the people of the region.

    “Events of the last few days are fast eroding our confidence. We call on the military to carry out deep intelligence gathering and stop the unlawful arrest and invasion of Ijaw communities. The arrested youths of Tebujor community, Gbaramatu Clan, Delta State should be released”, he said.

     

  • We didn’t invade Oporoza community  – Army

    We didn’t invade Oporoza community  – Army

    Relevant armed forces authorities in the Niger Delta have debunked reports of a military operation into Oporoza, the headquarters of Gbaramatu Kingdom, Warri South-West council area of Delta state in the early hours of Monday.

    Some national dailies and online news outlets had Tuesday  reported a military invasion of Oporoza, in search of members of the Niger Delta Avengers (NDA), a self-styled insurgent group, which had claimed responsibility for all recent destructions of oil and gas facilities in the creeks.

    However, authorities at the 3 Battalion, Effunrun Barracks, Effunrun, Delta state, said the report of an invasion of Oporoza community was not true as there was no such operation as suggested by the report.

    When the Nation spoke to the Commanding Officer of the cantonment, Major Monday Anzaku, Tuesday, he said he was not aware of any military invasion or special operation in Oporoza as suggested by the news reports.

    “Believe be there no such thing as we have just read in the newspapers. This is my area we are talking about, how would there have been a military operation of the nature described by the newspapers without my knowledge? Even if such would be initiated from my headquarters, I would be instructed on what to do. The report is not true,” Anzaku said.

    Also, reliable sources from the Nigerian Navy Ship (NNS) Delta, when reached to confirm if the command was involved in an operation at Oporoza on Monday, said there was no operation to the area, which involved them.

    Although unable to reach the Commander of the NNS Delta, Commodore Raimi Mohammed, a very reliable source, when asked for confirmation simply relied ” negative”.

    Meanwhile, a source from the community had told the Nation on Monday afternoon that there was no problem in the community. According to him “I have called and asked my people and they said there was nothing unusual, just the normal security patrols that come and go, nothing unusual”.

    It would be recalled that several strategic oil and gas facilities, belonging mostly to Chevron Nigeria Limited (CNL), the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and the Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC), have been destroyed by the insurgent group.

    President Muhammadu Buhari has also recently ordered the Nigerian armed forces to go after those behind the destructive activities, which has dipped Nigeria’s crude oil export by about 510,000 barrels of oil per day.

     

  • Good news for Gbaramatu kingdom from London

    A London court has accepted a N99.9 billion judgment obtained against the Presidency, the Attorney General of the Federation (AGF) and the Commander of the Delta Joint Task Force, Major General Sarkin Yarkin Bello (now retired) by the people of Gbaramatu communities of Delta State.

    Mr. Justice of Holroyde of the Queen’s Bench Division of the Royal High Court of Justice England and Wales, in a judgment last Monday, ordered that the judgment delivered in December 2013 by Justice Ibrahim Buba of the Federal High Court, Asaba, in which N99.9 was awarded as damages against the defendants, be registered in England solely against Maj. Gen. Bello.

    The London court declined to register the judgment against the President and the AGF, citing the principle of state’s sovereignty.

    By the London court’s decision, the judgment creditors – people of Gbaramatu communities of Delta State – are now at liberty to apply for an order freezing Maj. Gen. Bello’s accounts wherever they could be traced globally.

    The judgment creditors had on June 22, 2009 sued the President, the AGF and Maj. Gen. Bello before the Federal High Court, Asaba, alleging that the Task Force led by Bello descended on the communities on May 5, 2009 killing, maiming innocent residents while properties worth billions of naira were equally destroyed.

    In his judgment, Justice Buba upheld the plaintiffs’ claims and held that “the bombardment of the plaintiffs’ communities in the Gbaramatu Kingdom of Warri South West Local Government Area? of Delta by the Defendants resulting in the demolition/destruction of houses, household furniture/wares, boats, canoes, domestic animals and displacement of members of the communities is in violation of section 217 (2)(c) of the 1999 constitution and is therefore unconstitutional.

    “That the sum of N49 billion is awarded in favour of the plaintiffs as special damages against the defendants jointly severally.

    “That the sum of N50 billion is also awarded as aggravated and punitive damages against the defendants jointly and severally for the unlawful bombardment and sacking of the plaintiffs’ communities which resulted in wanton destruction of their houses, household furniture and other wares, their domestic animals, canoes, boats, sacred places, artefacts, etc and which resulted in total displacement of members of the communities for minimum of three months from 15th May 2009, the effect of which was that members of the communities were living in the swampy mangrove forests in subhuman conditions while others were in a concentration camp and suffered loss of income, disease, and mental torture and the education of their children of school age was disrupted.”

    Before applying to the Queen Bench Division  High Court of Justice in London to register the judgment, the communities wrote twice to the then Attorney General of the Federation, Mohammed Adoke (SAN), asking the Federal Government to comply with the judgment.

    Two years after the judgment was delivered, the government neither complied with it nor challenged it on appeal.

    The people of the kingdom are eagerly awaiting what will happen next after this judgment has been registered by the London court.

    Will it lead to the money that will be frozen in the ex-JTF chief’s accounts being transferred to them? Time will certainly tell.