Tag: illegal bunkering

  • Navy arrests 35 aliens, 16 Nigerians for  ‘illegal’ bunkering

    Navy arrests 35 aliens, 16 Nigerians for ‘illegal’ bunkering

    •Recovers $21,750, six boats, AGO, phones, others

    Naval operatives have arrested 31 Beninoise, four Pakistanis and 16 Nigerians for alleged bunkering.
    The suspects, who were arrested at different operations between July and last month on Lagos waters, were handed over to the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) yesterday.
    They are Honffo Djidenu, Hounssa Bergakola, Atungbe Paul, Honffo Eminu, Hounssa Achilit, Honffo Djoelit, Blessing David, Attau Abel, Sunday Odepo, Francis Agba and Peter Honfo.
    Others include Batoromi Digi, Noel Megbe, Jerome Ilewagbemi, Kankor Bidemi, Amuse Awatu, Isaac Torwuloten, Martins Aviwe, Kojo Cheji and Edumo Rofor.
    Jimoh Megbe, Jockten Tomatu, Ado Leon, James Oke, Dominic Nwagu, Ado Rafino, Isaac Ogboji, Oluwaseun Ogbugbure, Femi Lawal, Ojajune Adekola and Victor Thompson were handed over to EFCC for further action.
    Also handed over to the anti-graft agency were eight suspects- Inspector Lukeman Rabiu, Seun Oguntoyi, Bobola Kuti, Inalu Dela, Olupara Racheal, Vincent Victor, Gladys Daniel and Adegoke Adetunji arrested for alleged pipeline vandalism at Glonik Hotel, Abule-Egba, Lagos last week.
    The Commander, NNS BEECROFT, Commodore Maurice Eno, said the Navy recovered $21, 750, 10,400CFA, N150, four wooden and two fibre boats, three tankers with one laden with Premium Motor Spirit (PMS), 29 phones, a spare battery, three sim cards, four hand bracelets, six necklaces and seven finger rings from the suspects.
    Other recoveries include a yellow flash light, one plug spanner, a bag containing two clothes, three laptops and tons of products suspected to be AGO.
    Giving details of the arrests, Eno, who was represented by BEECROFT’s Executive Officer (XO), Cpt. Tajudeen Osoba, said on July 5, about 5:40p.m., operatives on patrol boarded and arrested a merchant vessel, MV GLENNSTAR, within Lagos Safe Anchorage Area (LSAA).
    He said the vessel was suspected to be conveying illegally-refined petroleum product at the time of arrest, adding that it had 11 crew members onboard.
    “It was discovered that she was laden with about 800MT of AGO and claimed to have discharged 200mt at ABO oil field in Escravos offshore, Warri. Preliminary investigation showed the vessel did not pick the product from the right source.
    “On September 9, intelligence report available to NNS BEECROFT showed the presence of a wooden boat alongside a vessel conducting illegal transaction in petroleum products. A team was despatched to investigate and arrest the perpetrators.
    “Upon approach, the vessel was identified as MT MATRIX, while the boat had six persons and about 140 drums. Investigation showed the six persons were Benin Republic nationals and had $3,300 suspected to be money for payment of illegal petroleum product.
    “At the time of the arrest, MT MATRIX had a crew of 17, comprising four Pakistanis and 14 Nigerians. She had 10 drums of AGO on her weather deck.
    “On September 26, NNS BEECROFT’s patrol team intercepted a fibre boat lurking around the Single Buoy Mooring (SBM) within the LSAA. Upon interrogation, it was observed that the boat had two persons onboard and was laden with petroleum product suspected to be illegally-sourced AGO.
    “Investigation showed the boat illegally sourced the product in the area. The two persons confessed to have bought the product from an unidentified vessel. As at the time of arrest, the suspects had N16,680 believed to be the balance after the illegal transaction.”
    On the same day, Eno said three wooden boats were intercepted at LSAA after they were observed to have had drums and pumping machines.
    He said: “There were 21 persons onboard and investigation showed 20 of them were from Benin Republic, while the last person, a woman, is a Nigerian and the coordinator of the illegal transaction.
    “At the time of arrest, the suspects had $21,750, 32,000 CFA, N6,320 believed to be money meant for the transaction. The vessel and its crew, wooden boats and their crew, the Beninoise, three Nigerians as well as the pipeline vandals have been handed over to EFCC.

  • War against illegal bunkering, kidnapping in Delta

    War against illegal bunkering, kidnapping in Delta

    They had almost turned Delta state into a no-go-zone and virtually converted the image of the ‘Heart Beat’ state to something of a heartache as the most common reports were of kidnapping and massive oil theft and unbridled attacks on national oil and gas assets. They were gradually tagging a strange identity on the state that naturally ought to have been identified as peaceful and progressive.

    This ugly and heartbreaking trend was gaining concern from virtually every quarter, especially in government and this was why the Delta State House of Assembly’s Committee on Security, chaired by Hon Michael Diden, almost immediately after its inauguration in November 2015, constituted a special task force, comprising of men of the 19 Battalion, the state police command and community vigilante, to curb these dangerous criminal activities. This task force’s categorical terms of reference were to ensure the eventual eradication of kidnapping and oil bunkering activities across the state, working with all community and security stakeholders. The kidnap and killing of the Obi of Ubulu-Uku, Obi Edward Akaeze Ofulue II, in the earlier part of the year was a high point of the notoriety of the burgeoning criminal enclave in the state.

    The challenges posed by hoodlums against innocent and unsuspecting citizens of the state in the first quarter of the year, particularly in Sapele, Jesse, Oghara and Mosogar, Effurun, Ughelli, and three other cases in the riverine communities of Omadino and Aja-Ogolo in Warri South council area, Oria-Abraka in Ethiope East, and Ebrumede in Uvwie council area, coupled with vandalism of oil facilities by criminals, alone, left nothing to be desired.

    Swinging into action to fulfill its mandate to rid the state of the menace of crimes, tainting the image of the state in the consciousness of the wider-world, the task force went after some targets, recording huge successes. The successes recorded by the committee in the rescue of over 12 victims, including a teenage girl, Alima Rivina, Deacons of the Heaven on Earth and Mountain of Fire Churches, the wife of Committee’s chairman, Mrs. Light Diden and a host of others, were not without the prompt responses from men of the Nigerian Army, DSS, police and Anti-kidnapping committee, a sub-committee of peace and security committee.

    Narrating the experience on the tedious task so far, the member representing Warri North Constituency in the state’s House of Assembly, who is also the brains behind the new security initiative, Hoourable Diden, who is popularly called Ejele, said the terrains where these criminal activities take place and the unusual brazenness of the criminal masterminds had posed serious challenges to the task force, he however noted that the challenges, breathtaking as they seem, have not deterred the committee and its task force from following the mandate to success.

    “There were times we had to chase these vandals from one community to another. There were even cases of shoot-outs by these vandals to scare our men away from apprehending them. It was a tug of war at a point in February this year, at Aja-Osoro / Ubgoritseduwa communities in Warri South council area, when we went on a joint team with the 19 Battalion to raid the communities of illegal oil brunkerers, who were into local refining of petroleum products. They carry out the cooking of crude oil. Some of these camps were fortified against external invasion, they even have sophisticated arms with which they tried to fend us off, but if not that we went with well trained soldiers and superior weapons, we wouldn’t have been able to dislodge the hoodlums”, the chairman of the committee disclosed.

    According to him, in that raid alone, more than five cooking camps were destroyed, even as adding that the task force was able to prevent the communities from further tampering with facilities or siphon crude oil from the wells at Okpomani Oil Field. Speaking further, he said four months after the successful operation, the task force, in collaboration with the local Conoil surveillance workers at Okogho/Ubaleme Field, oil thieves who were specialists in the siphoning of crude oil into waiting vessels for local refining, burst the hideouts of some sophisticated syndicates and brought their decades of oil theft activities to a halt. He said several of their operational tools were seized and destroyed.

    Speaking further, Ejele said between July and September at Okwo-Oro, along Sapele-Warri Road, three petroleum tankers were intercepted by the Land Patrol Team of the House Committee and handed over to the police command in the state, adding that the task force recovered the ones that were illegally ferrying finished products (Kerosene/petrol) to the northern part of the country at Adeje/Okwo-Edjeba communities.

    “With our early intervention, we were able to chase the vandals from this point (Adeje/Okwo-Edjeba) with the help of the Adeje local vigilantes. They were unable to load from the point. This same group of vandals two months ago relocated from there to break open another point along the same major trunk, but this time at Okwotolor. We were still able to forestall their activities. This time with the help of the military”, Hon. Diden disclosed.

    Recounting the successes so far achieved by his committee in the fight against kidnapping across the state, Ejele said the people now breathe a bit easier. According to him, kidnappers had sneaked into the oil City of Warri, Ughelli, Sapele, Mosogar, Jesse and Orero-Okpe communities, making the months of April, May and June the most difficult and dreadful in the memories of several residents and families from these areas. Kidnapping syndicate held these communities like an evil hold throughout their reign. Travelers through these communities had their hearts in their mouths until they arrived at their irrespective destinations. Traders closed from market places early while shop owners locked-up before night.

    They were armed to the teeth with various weapons ranging from pump action riffles, locally made pistols, shot guns to AK 47 riffles. Their ages ranged from 18 to 22 years, said Sinfianu, one of the suspects now in police custody. The list of casualties of this terror armed gangs is endless. It inflicted agony, tears and sorrows in many homes across the state. No day passed without any reported cases of kidnapping in these communities.

    They were brutal, wicked and could rape their female victims with impunity, said a top police source. The activities of these terror armed gangs soon became a thing of the past. Like the saying goes that any episode that has a beginning must have an end. Residents of these communities can now sleep with two eyes closed as the hoodlums have been chased away through the combined efforts of anti-kidnapping committee and other security agents.

    In the State capital, Asaba, for instance, kidnapping has become a forgotten occurrence as their last attempt to kidnap a female politician (name withheld) was foiled by a crack team from the anti- kidnapping committee.

    “Both the general public and the business community are appreciative of this development in the state. The reason for this feat is the regular policing of the cities by special squad from the anti-kidnapping and other security agents operating within and around Asaba. Their regular presence on the streets must have given the criminals much cause for a rethink” said a resident of Warri, Eng. Tobore Kemute. Surveillance of known black spots has also helped in nipping the activities of these criminals in the bud.

    According to Barrister John Ogbemi, a resident of Asaba who said he had lived in Asaba for over Twenty years. We have witnessed several years of kidnapping both at nights and broad day light. “They have inflicted pains, sorrow, agony and tears on residents. But recently, statistics in the state have shown that record of kidnapping and vandalism of oil facilities has changed. Social life, particularly night activities, have returned to Asaba. The committee which was set up to compliment the effort of other security operatives has made us proud”, said Barrister Ogbemi.

    Some of the leaders of the kidnapping syndicate and vandals were recently swooped-on by a crack team from the state police command and surveillance squad from the anti-kidnapping committee led by Austin Opubor, Mabiaku Omassan and Abraham Obarume. The suspects were trailed by members of anti-kidnapping to their various hide-outs where they were arrested with mobile phones of the victims.

    Giving graphic details of the arrest of one of the suspects (name withheld), Mr. Austin Opubor, Mabiaku Omassan and Abraham Obaruine said “immediately we got report of the kidnap of the victims, we mobilized our personnel to the field because we believe that the police cannot achieve it all alone without the support of other stake-holders. Making a major breakthrough in apprehending some of the suspects so far was quite tasking”.

  • Navy arrests 25 for “illegal bunkering”, recover products

    Navy arrests 25 for “illegal bunkering”, recover products

    As part of efforts to eliminate economic sabotage and criminality, the Nigerian Navy (NN) has arrested 25 suspects for illegal bunkering in the Niger Delta.

    Thirteen of the suspects were apprehended in Akwa Ibom by operatives of the NNS JUBILEE with 103 drums filled with illegally refined diesel and 188 empty drums starched in three wooden boats.

    According to the Director Information, Commodore Chris Ezekobe, three suspects were apprehended by the Forward Operation Base (FOB) ESCRAVOS, where six wooden boats carrying suspected stolen products were destroyed around Sandhill Creek in Warri South, and recovered two wooden boats laden with 300 Metric Tones (MT) of stolen crude oil and a pumping machine during the raid.

    “The 13 suspects allegedly involved in illegal bunkering activities were arrested around Ibeno area of Akwa Ibom State in three Cotonou boats. Two of the boats were carrying 55 and 48 drums of suspected illegally refined AGO respectively, while the third Cotonou boat was carrying about 188 empty drums. The suspects and exhibits have been handed over to officials of Nigerian Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC) for necessary action.

    “A patrol team deployed by NNS PATHFINDER raided Adokiakiri Creek around Okirika and Dutch Island at Onne, Rivers State. During the operation, the team arrested eight suspects and destroyed four speedboats laden with 100MT of illegally refined AGO.

    “Two barges containing 500MT of suspected stolen crude oil were also destroyed by the team. In another raid, the patrol team arrested three suspects onboard MV OMETE VI and a large wooden barge laden with about 120MT of illegally refined AGO around FOT Onne in Rivers State.

    “NNS DELTA patrol team raided an illegal refinery site at Saba Creek in Warri South LGA of Delta State. During the operation, a suspect was arrested while the illegal refinery site and a Cotonou boat laden with about 82MT of suspected stolen crude oil were destroyed.”

  • NSCDC uncovers illegal bunkering site in Lagos

    NSCDC uncovers illegal bunkering site in Lagos

    Operatives of the National Security and Civil Defense Corps, (NSCDC) yesterday uncovered illegal fuel bunkering activities at a boundary between Mosan Okunola and Agbado/ Oke Odo Local Council Development Areas of Alimosho, a suburb of Lagos..

    The operatives were led by NSCDC Commandant, Tajudeen Balogun to the site where it was discovered that some people had been siphoning petrol from a Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation( NNPC) pipeline across a river in the communities.

    The pipeline was reportedly vandalised by a syndicate in the area.

    Although, the suspected vandals had fled before the arrival of the operatives, but the law enforcement agents recovered some of their tools including long  pipes and hose with which fuel is  scooped from the vandalised pipeline.

    The operatives however arrested a security officer, Sam Benedict, who was in charge of the toll collection of a makeshift bridge constructed across the river linking the neighbouring communities.

    Sam who denied knowledge of the illicit operation said he was employed by his boss for toll collection ranging from N20 to N200 from pedestrians and motorists.

    He added that the business was solely run by his boss who is a lawyer.

    Our correspondent observed a couple of tankers parked along some streets leading to the river bank,while no petrol station was sighted in the area.

    At the scene, some chairs and empty soft drink containers were seen on the path leading to the vandalized pipeline. The items, according to the NSCDC operatives indicate regular activities in the creek.

    The commandant, however, vowed to investigate those behind the operation, noting that appropriate sanctions would be meted on culprits.

    He urged residents of the community to desist from backing criminals involved in vandalism, warning that such could lead to unexpected jeopardy.

    Balogun said : “We got an intelligence report from our division here that something fishy was going on in this area and I am here to confirm it. What we have seen is a petroleum pipeline has been vandalised and normally our own duty is to confirm and get across to the appropriate authorities. In this instance, NNPC should come over immediately to seal it up so that our national asset will not be disturbed by  wastage, sabotage and miscreants.

    “We are still extending our investigations to know the perpetrators of this act because that thing did not just happen. Somebody worked on that pipeline to drill it with the intention of siphoning  petrol which is economic sabotage.Our own intelligence group will sniff around to see if there are some collaborators within the community, who are aiding and abetting illegality and will work with appropriate authorities to see how we can stop this from happening.”

    Continuing, he said : “We are working in conjunction with the Lagos state government to clear all the creeks so that doing anything under darkness will not be allowed. We appeal to the communities around here, residents who live here permanently that there is no need to be selfish and supporting criminal to do this kind of act.”

    The corps also called the attention of the  government to the recent leakages of NNPC pipelines, following the discovery of another fuel well at a school on 2, Taiwo Aina Street.

    The commandant emphasized the need for the NNPC to proactively tackle the challenge with proactive measures, noting that the inherent hazards were beyond economic sabotage.

    The well, he said, currently poses danger to toddlers who often use the school premises.

    “The most important thing is that right now, to avoid disaster which could be manmade, because when petrol is usually in a place like that, and there is fire, you can imagine what will be the case. To make matters worse, this is the premises of a school. We have little children here,” he added.

     

  • Niger Delta: JTF arrests 21 oil thieves

    Niger Delta: JTF arrests 21 oil thieves

    … Destroys illegal oil bunkering sites

    The Joint Task Force (JTF) in the Niger Delta, Operation Pulo Shield, has arrested 21 suspected oil thieves, destroyed illegal oil bunkering sites in multiple raids in the region.

    This is contained in a statement by Lt.-Col. Ado Isa, Media Coordinator of JTF, in Yenagoa on Thursday.

    Isa said the raids were conducted within 10 days.

    Isa said that troops deployed to Oka pipeline in Ikpoba Okha Local Government Area of Edo impounded an illegal oil bunkering truck with registration number EDO BEN 117 ZN.

    He said that the truck loaded with 16 plastic tanks of 1500 litres capacity was siphoning illegally refined Automotive Gas Oil (AGO) at the time of arrest.

    The spokesman said the products estimated to be about 24,000 litres were suspected to have been illegally siphoned from the NNPC pipeline.

    He added that some of the vandals fled prior to the arrival of the troops while the truck was in the custody of the JTF for further investigation.

    He said some of the arrested were made at Ughelli-Warri and Orerokpe Community in Okpe and Ughelli North Local Government Areas of Delta.

    The spokesman said that items recovered from the suspects were rolls of stolen armored cable, two circuit breaker, 12 cutouts, two saw blades and bags of substances suspected to be Indian hemp.

    Isa said the recovered items were in JTF custody and would be handed over to the prosecuting agency after the preliminary investigations.
    He said JTF troops also apprehended an illegal oil bunkering tanker laden with 33,000 litres of substances suspected to be illegally refined AGO.

    Isa further said that five suspects were arrested while trying to flee the scene, while the truck was impounded.

    The spokesman said also that a notorious suspected kidnapper was arrested in connection with the kidnap of one Mrs Ufoma James.

    He said that the suspect was arrested at Oghara in Ethiope West Local Government Area of Delta.

    Similarly, he said Sector 2 of the JTF operating on Gbenekrukru general area of Southern Ijaw Local Government Area of Bayelsa, destroyed six illegal bunkering sites where oil thieves operated.

    He listed items found and destroyed at the site to included four storage tanks, illegal oil storage pits and drums filled with illegally acquired AGO, hoses and pumping machine.

  • Govt prosecutes 23 for oil theft, illegal bunkering

    The Federal Government is prosecuting 23 cases involving the use of barges and vessels for oil theft and illegal oil bunkering, the Commander, Joint Task Force (JTF), Major-General, Emmanuel Atewe, has said.

    Atewe said the cases are at the Federal and State High Courts in Yenagoa, Bayelsa  State capital, and Federal High Court, Port Harcourt, Rivers State.

    He said the cases are at various levels of litigation, adding that the JTF is pursuing the cases vigorously with a view to ensuring that people found culpable are brought to book.

    He said the barges and vessels were used to steal crude oil worth several billions of naira, adding that speedy hearing and adjudication of the cases would help in tackling the problem. He said the cases regarding oil theft and illegal oil bunkering are delayed in Nigeria, urging the judiciary to help in fast-tracking the process of hearing the cases to ensure speedy delivery of judgment.

    The jurisdiction to entertain such criminal cases, Atewe said, lies in the higher courts, stressing that JTF’s responsibilities include securing the waterways and oil installations, arresting vandals and thieves, handing them over for prosecution and ensuring that they were charged to court.

    Atewe said: “The goals of the JTF are to secure oil wells and others, and not to try offenders in the court. Only the courts have the jurisdiction to try such people. This is after due process by way of carrying out investigation. Despite this, several cases of oil thefts are pending in courts.”

    The senior partner, Falana & Co, Mr. Femi Falana, blamed those involved in oil theft and bunkering for delaying the process of hearing the cases. He said people that engage in oil theft have huge financial resources with which  they frustrate cases regarding stealing and transporting crude oil outside the country.

    He said: “Bunkering can be problematic when one considers the fact that people involved in it have the economic wherewithal to frustrate their trials. The legal system has been taken over by these people to frustrate their trials. They do this by raising objections and filling interlocutory injunctions. When this happens, they have succeeded in delaying hearing and judgments.”

    According to him, cases can be delayed for years before they were heard. The lawyer said by the time oil theft cases move from one court to another, the judges handling the cases might have been transferred.

    Also, sources close to the National Judicial Council (NJC) said lawyers should be blamed for delaying the process of hearing criminal cases, and not the judges. The sources, who craved anonymity, said lawyers often file interlocutory injunctions to halt proceedings in a case.

    “At times, lawyers file interlocutory injunctions to stop a case for reasons best known to them. In the course of filing injunctions to stop hearing in a case, lawyers look for technical reasons to straighten their defence and get justice for their clients. When this happens, cases are delayed for a year, two or more, “the sources added.

  • Exposing illegal bunkering, oil theft in the Niger Delta

    Exposing illegal bunkering, oil theft in the Niger Delta

    A report on oil theft called “Private Gain, Public Disaster: Social Context of Illegal Oil Bunkering and Artisanal Refining in the Niger Delta,”  details how the economic sabotage could be reduced to the barest minimum, since completely wiping them out would be an impossible task, writes BISI OLANIYI in Port Harcourt

    Crude oil was first discovered in commercial quantity in 1956 at Oloibiri in Ogbia Local Government Area of Bayelsa State, with Nigeria now losing huge revenue through crude oil theft/illegal bunkering, illegal refining and pipeline vandalism, leading to the pollution and degradation of the environment.

    The activities of oil thieves and illegal bunkerers, made the Federal Government of Nigeria to put in place the Joint Military Task Force (JTF), now codenamed Operation Pulo (Oil) Shield, with its operatives combing the creeks of the Niger Delta, but the criminals, backed by powerful persons, are still beating the security personnel, who at times collude with the oil thieves.

    A University of Port Harcourt’s (UNIPORT) Professor of Economic History, Ben Naanen, and Patrick Tolani, who is the Chief Executive of Oxford, United Kingdom-based Redeemers Relief Agency International, in their new book: “Private Gain, Public Disaster: Social Context of Illegal Oil Bunkering and Artisanal Refining in the Niger Delta,” which is the report of three years of research on oil theft in Nigeria, which they conducted, exposed illegal bunkering and refining, especially in the region rich in crude oil and gas and how they could be reduced to the barest minimum, since completely wiping them out would be an impossible task.

    The presentation of the research report, which took place at the Ebitimi Banigo Auditorium of UNIPORT, was chaired by the Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of the Governing Council of the university, Gesi Asamaowei, an engineer.

    The Bayelsa State’s Commissioner for Environment, Iniruo Wills; a member of the House of Representatives from Rivers State, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, who represents Andoni-Opobo/Nkoro constituency was represented by Benebo Alabraba; the Southsouth Zonal Operations Controller of the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), Mrs. Onyebuchi Sibeudu,  and many eminent personalities were also in attendance.

    Asamaowei, in his remarks, urged the Federal Government and the security agencies to frontally tackle illegal bunkering and refining of crude oil in the Niger Delta.

    The UNIPORT’s Pro-Chancellor also stressed that more attention should be focused on agriculture, rather that wholly depending on crude oil, which is non-renewable, describing the 122-page book as well-researched.

    Naanen, who is also a Trustee of the Port Harcourt, Rivers State-based Niger Delta Environment and Relief Foundation (NIDEREF), while speaking on the occasion, disclosed that the project started in 2011 and was almost abandoned, in view of the cost implication, while the research resumed in 2013.

    He noted that the research focused on Rivers, Bayelsa and Delta States, notorious for illegal bunkering and refining of crude oil, with Akwa Ibom State not considered, in spite of currently having the highest production of crude oil, but offshore, while the illegal activities take place onshore.

    Naanen, the pioneer General Secretary of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) and the former Chairman of the MOSOP Provisional Council, also stated that the research was risky, in view of the involvement of militants and cultists in the theft of crude oil and illegally refining it or sold to international buyers.

    The UNIPORT don (Naanen) said: “Nigeria loses more crude oil than any other country in the world – more than seven per cent of daily production. The Federal Government of Nigeria and the oil companies suffer huge financial losses, an estimated $6 billion per annum. Oil theft especially victimises the poor.

    “To reduce illegal bunkering and illegal refining, the socio-economic origin of oil theft must be addressed through a decisive attack on poverty, particularly through job creation, targeted at the youths, who are involved in oil theft.

    “The pipelines should be protected through community-based surveillance. A special judicial mechanism should be established to expedite prosecution of oil theft cases.”

    Naanen, an indigene of Bodo-Ogoni in Gokana Local Government Area of Rivers State, also lamented that Nigeria’s economy is dangerously dependent on crude oil, while stating that the consequences of oil theft are grave and widespread.

    Nigeria has total length of crude oil pipelines of 4,350 kilometres, which must be protected against oil theft and vandalism.

    The first Port Harcourt refinery, with capacity of 60,000 barrels per day (bpd), was inaugurated in 1965, while the second refinery in Port Harcourt has the capacity of 150,000 bpd.

    The Warri refinery in Delta state, inaugurated in 1978, has capacity of 125,000 bpd, while the refinery in Kaduna, which was put in place in 1980, has capacity of 110,000 bpd and it is linked to Niger Delta oil fields by 600 kilometres of pipelines, but designed to process imported heavy crude oil.

    Only 20 per cent of the total crude oil allocated to the four refineries for domestic consumption is utilised, making Nigeria to depend on imported petroleum products and artisanal refining to fill the gap.

    In 2012, according to the report, crude oil contributed 96.8 per cent of Nigeria’s total export earnings, 60.5 per cent of gross government receipts and 37 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), yet the country loses to crude oil theft, more than $6 billion worth of its crude oil production or 6.25 per cent of its total export value.

    Crude oil, the strategic backbone of the Nigerian economy, is what large scale oil thieves target at disconnecting, with the nation bleeding painfully and tragically from the pipelines, with the country appearing helpless and unable to curtail the danger.There does not seem to be adequate appreciation of the danger, not even among the top oil bureaucrats at the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), among other stakeholders.

    Crude oil theft has international dimension, while artisanal refining locally also calls for concern.

    The theft of crude oil or illegal bunkering in national parlance and its corollary – artisanal refining – are fundamentally social problems.

    An artisanal refining unit is a simplified petroleum distillation unit, which is conceptualised like a crude school science project. It can also be likened to the production of the local dry gin, commonly called “Ogogoro.”

    The aim of artisanal refining is to boil barrels of stolen crude oil with naked fire in a metal constructed sealed tank. The crude evaporates and passes through two parallel pipes, connected to the tank through a wooden constructed cooling water bath. The refined product then drips out slowly into a container at the other end, with different products emerging at different intervals.

    Delta State has the highest number of artisanal refining sites, according to the researchers, and they can be easily seen in creeks, forests and villages.

    It was also revealed that it takes about three days to get up to five drums of refined petroleum products. After the refining processes, the products are filled into rubber and metal drums for transloading and storage, from where they are transported to their final destinations.

    Since most of the artisanal refining sites are located near the creeks, the refined products are usually transported through the waterways to the neighbouring towns and villages, while transportation of large volume of crude oil to mother ships offshore is done by the use of barges.

    The barges and Cotonou boats are usually anchored within the creeks, where they are filled with the required volume of crude oil, before they are transported and transferred into the mother ship, which can be in the coastal waters of Ghana or Benin Republic.

    It is unlikely to visit jetties within any of the communities involved in illegal bunkering, without seeing piles of drums and rubber containers used for transporting the petroleum products.

    Most of the locally-produced petroleum products (through artisanal refining) are transported to the cities, where they are probably mixed with the regular products and sold in conventional filling stations. The dominant product is diesel.

    Since the tolerance of diesel engines in high, it is usually not easy to detect locally-refined diesel from the regular product.

    In Port Harcourt, the researchers observed that the main point of entry for the locally-refined products is the Akpajo Sandfill Jetty, stressing that most of the refined products coming from Bodo-Ogoni in Gokana LGA and the neighbouring communities are brought to the Akpajo Sandfill jetty, where buyers from the Port Harcourt city and other parts of Nigeria assemble to buy and resell to members of the public.

    A major driving force of the thriving illegal bunkering business in Nigeria is market demand. There is a huge local and international market for the crude oil stolen from Nigeria.

    While the stolen crude oil is sold in countries within the West African sub-region and Europe, the locally-refined petroleum products are mostly sold in the local villages and towns, but now getting to Onitsha in Anambra State and Lagos.

    The researchers disclosed that the weekly boat that sails from Ekeremor in Bayelsa State to Onitsha, usually carries illegally-refined petroleum products, while a drum of locally-refined diesel goes for N7,000 in the creeks and as much as N12,000 to N15,000 in the cities.

    The involvement of women in the whole process of illegal bunkering and artisanal refining is more or less secondary, because they are generally not involved in obtaining crude oil or in the refining process.

    Women, however, play pivotal roles in the transportation and marketing of the refined products, as well as cooking and provision of sexual services for the predominantly male operators.

    Children, mostly orphans and aged between 10 and 13, also work in the illegal bunkering sites and run errands at the camps, while absentee owners of illegal refining sites always appoint managers to run the operations.

    The JTF estimated in 2010 that there were 1,500 illegal refining operations in the region, with Bodo Creeks in Gokana LGA harbouring over 1,000 youths, who were directly involved in illegal refining, which might have been higher now.

    The JTF claimed that in 2012, it destroyed 4,349 illegal refining units.  Illegal bunkering business represents a substantial informal economy, whose value has never been captured, since it is regarded as illegal.

    The study reveals that there are three main sets of actors involved in illegal bunkering: those who compromise the pipelines by breaking and installing taps on them to procure crude oil for sale; those who buy the crude oil for export and the local operators who process stolen crude oil into low quality fuels for the domestic market, with the three sets of actors referred to as oil thieves or illegal bunkerers.

    Rivers, Bayelsa and Delta States account for 80 per cent of Nigeria’s onshore oil production and a predominant proportion of crude oil theft.

    The researchers held consultations with the people and leaders of Niger Delta communities, while over 200 persons directly connected to the illegal siphoning of crude oil and artisanal were interviewed, while top officials of the leading International Oil Companies (IOCs), NNPC, the regulatory agencies, the JTF, police, navy and other security agencies in the Niger Delta and Abuja were also spoken with.

    Naanen and Tolani also interviewed oil dealers in Europe, especially in Rotterdam, Aberdeen and London, as well as the people involved in the transportation and marketing of illegally-refined petroleum products in the Niger Delta and end users of the products, while direct observations of the refining processes were also made at many sites.

    Urine samples were taken by the researchers from the youths directly involved in refining and copies of questionnaire were also given to them to assess their health status, while fish samples were collected from two heavily-impacted sites in Rivers and Bayelsa states and one less impacted site, to test the level of contamination of sea food and the potential effects on human consumers.

    The samples were analysed at accredited laboratories in Nigeria and the results interpreted by an independent expert.

    The researchers said: “Illegal bunkering and artisanal refining are rooted in the grim economic and social circumstances of the Niger Delta. Poverty is endemic and unemployment is high. Nigeria loses $6 billion to oil theft annually. 28,000 people receive incomes directly or directly from illegal bunkering.

    “The illegal bunkering economy has an annual value of $9 billion. Those who export 80 per cent of the stolen crude oil are not poor people. They are connected to the political and military establishments, as well as the oil bureaucracy.

    “Concerted international action to check the Nigerian crude oil theft is not feasible, because the stolen crude oil represents a minor fraction of international crude oil traffic and does not present any credible threat to the world’s economy and international security.”

    The researchers said: “The notion that individuals and the people of local communities can engage in self help, by tampering with strategic national assets, such as the oil facilities, simply because they are located on their land, is fundamentally flawed.

    “There are also those who tend to believe that coming from the Niger Delta is all it takes to live a comfortable life, because the region produces crude oil. What the youths need is the opportunity to develop their potential and grow, not pampering. The state and the oil companies have to make a creative use of the resources of the region to create the opportunity.”

    While giving further insight into the menace of crude oil theft, Naanen and Tolani pointed out that some people have probably not thought about, in respect of the relationship between illegal bunkering and poverty is that persons who steal the larger volume of the crude oil for export, are not poor people.

    They said: “They are driven primarily by the imperative of capital accumulation. These are operators who can muster the financial capital necessary for a high risk illegal international business, as well as the political capital to protect the business. These are not ordinary men.

    “They are connected to the apex of Nigerian political, military and business establishment. They are known to the people who should know them, as they are not ghosts. Yet, there has been a systematic official refusal to reveal the identities of these supposedly mysterious oil barons and make them face the law.

    “This refusal speaks loud about the official identities of most of these illegal bunkering kingpins. Nigeria loses about 145,000 barrels of crude oil per day to oil theft-related incidents, which is more than the production of many individual oil exporting nations.”

    The researchers also noted that politically, the capture of oil revenues had become the driving force for political contestations in Nigeria, with illegal bunkering aiding the process, while Nigeria is passing under the control of persons with varying measures of legal and illegal interest in the oil and gas industry, a political trend they described as “petrocracy.”

    In combating illegal bunkering, they stressed that the Federal Government and the IOCs had tried many measures, ranging from criminalisation, advocacy and pipeline surveillance to the deployment of JTF personnel, which they said had not yielded the tangible results, in view of lack of implementation.

    On the high level political and military structures, three categories of operators were identified in the illegal bunkering and artisanal refining business: the tapping or bunkering point owners, who drill holes in the pipes and siphon crude oil for sale; the big players who buy the stolen crude oil from the bunkering point owners and export it and the artisanal refiners who purchase the stolen crude oil or occasionally steal it directly and process it into low quality fuels for the local market in the Niger Delta region and beyond.

    Artisanal refining is now undergoing structural changes, featuring concentration and centralisation, making possible oil theft on an industrial scale. The huge storage steel tanks being constructed  and other requirements, including security insurance in case of arrest, require considerable starter capital of about N1 million.

    A major implication of this change is that many of the small operators of the past now work for the powerful “big boys” and financiers, who can muster the capital requirement and necessary law enforcement contacts for the protection of the business.

    Workers and other people with legitimate livelihoods are investing in the illegal businesses of artisanal refining and bunkering, in order to provide for themselves an additional and more rewarding income stream.

    The industry is also undergoing technical innovations, while expanding its commodity chain. Well paid specialists now drill the holes and install valves on them for siphoning crude oil from pipelines.

    In Bodo-Ogoni, the researchers gathered that the fee for drilling a tapping point is between N250,000 and N300,000, part of which goes to the operatives of the JTF, with the changes giving the illegal bunkering and refining business the grounding for sustainability.

    It was also confirmed that the nationals who are mostly involved in moving stolen Nigerian crude oil are mainly non-English speaking, while it is common to sight Lebanese, Cameroonians, Pilipino, Romanians, Thais and Ghanaians, with the recipient refineries of crude oil stolen from Nigeria being in the United States of America, Brazil and the Gulf of Guinea.

    Among the many initiatives recommended by the researchers to mitigate illegal bunkering and refining, three specific areas that require immediate action were emphasised, including addressing the socio-economic foundation of illegal bunkering, through the attack on poverty and job creation targeted at the youths, who must be made to come out of the creeks.

    Also imperative is pipeline protection, through community-based surveillance programme, which will replace the present private contractor surveillance system, since the ineffectiveness of private contractors, according to the researchers, is glaring, with some of them implicated in the theft of crude oil.

    They noted that with community-based surveillance, the people of the various Niger Delta communities would take over the protection of the pipelines, while in exchange for the role, they would receive development support from the IOCs, through the Global Memoranda of Understanding (GMoU).

    The third approach is to ensure speedy prosecution of oil theft cases, by setting up a special judicial mechanism, exemplified by special courts.

    Naanen and Tolani said: “Nigeria has no excuse importing refined petroleum products. The country should control the petroleum products’ market in the ECOWAS (Economic Community of West African States) sub-region, as a way of diversifying the economy, creating quality jobs and earning foreign exchange.

    “There should be policy reform to promote cottage/modular refineries that will contribute to addressing the local supply disequilibrium, build local capacity in the downstream sector and empower the local communities through job creation. Emphasis must also be placed on good governance.

    “The ten per cent community equity, recommended in the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), will create a sense of belonging in the Niger Delta. However, the management of the fund will be problematic. Effective and agreeable management mechanism should be designed. Otherwise, the fund will fuel crisis in the communities.”

    The Federal Government of Nigeria must show strong political will to tackle the menace of illegal bunkering and artisanal refining, in order to move the nation forward.

  • Navy blames foreigners for sea crimes

    The Nigerian Navy (NN) has blamed foreigners for piracy, illegal bunkering and other sea crimes.

    Speaking while receiving crew members of a visiting British ship, HMS Iron Duke in Lagos, the Flag Officer Commanding (FOC), Western Naval Command (WNC), Rear Admiral Sanmi Alade, said NN would take control of the waterways and rid the place of criminals.

    “Given the occurrences at our waters, the NN is set to take complete ownership. A lot of people and nations have interest in our waters for obvious reasons.

    “With the decline of piracy in the Golf of Eden, it would not be wrong to say that most of the elements have left that area and found their way in the Gulf of Guinea, including our waters.

    “Some foreigners have been arrested in our waters for perpetrating illegalities.

    “Most of criminality in our waters is carried out by foreigners and not Nigerians. The era when the navy had challenges of platforms will soon be over because we will take delivery of some ships before the end of the year and command our waterways.

    “We will take full command once again and there will be no need for private security here and there because our water is not private.

    “We have some private security companies registered with the NN, they have a memorandum of understanding with us like the Ocean Marine Company, we allow them operate with their vessels but normally attach our personnel to such vessels.”

    On allegations that multi-national oil firms engage in illegal oil bunkering, Alade said illegal bunkering had not been treated with kid gloves, adding that anyone arrested is being  prosecuted.

    “Piracy and illegality at sea are not beyond us. The responsibility of ensuring the security of the Nigerian maritime domain is that of the Nigerian Navy and we are poised to take total control of the Nigerian waters and rid it of any form of illegalities,” he said.

    Speaking, Commanding Officer, Her Royal Majesty Ship (HMS) Iron Duke, Commander Tom Tredery said the ship came to Nigeria to work and train with the NN.

    His words: “We are looking forward to training and exercising together. The roles of the Navy are to work together and ensure that that freedom and safety is in place.

    “Our range of training includes navigation, engineering, damage control and fire fighting, boarding party and security operations.

    “The security challenges in the Gulf of Guinea are primarily piracy and maritime crime, which is clearly a threat to all countries and not just Nigeria. When there is a crime at sea, it affects every nation because so much of the world’s trade flows by sea.”

  • How military, communities, oil firms aid illegal bunkering

    How military, communities, oil firms aid illegal bunkering

    The effect and cost of illegal bunkering  in the Niger Delta, from the loss of revenue to ecological devastation, have led to national concern. As part of the efforts to find solution to the problem, the Delta State government  organised an Oil and Gas Conference. SHOLA O’NEIL, who covered the ceremony, reported that stakeholders indicted the military, oil multinationals and community leaders in the Niger Delta.

    The Delta State Commissioner for Oil and Gas, Mr Mofe Pirah, in his welcome address at the 2nd Edition of the state oil and gas conference, said the forum was aimed at bringing together relevant stakeholders to exchange ideas on the best practices locally and globally on how to secure and protect the huge investments in the oil and gas industry in the state.

    Pirah said it “will focus on how we can collectively curb crude oil theft, especially within our environment, prepare and address the minds of our esteemed host communities on environment impact of pollution and its attendant long term effects, including the need to domicile surveillance contract in the various oil and gas communities in the state.”

    Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan, who moderated one of the sessions, advised speakers from the oil and gas industry, security operatives and host community leaders to be forthright and outspoken, assuring, “Whatever is said here will not be used against anybody.”

    Chief Ayirimi Emami, an Itsekiri youth leader and Chairman of the Chevron Nigeria Limited-sponsored Itsekiri Regional Development Committee (IRDC),  fired a  damning salvo on those behind the illegal trade. His first shot was aimed at the Nigerian Navy, represented by the Flag Officer Commanding Western Naval Command, Rear Admiral Ilesanmi Alabi, and other members of the Armed Forces, who he accused of cuddling the criminals.

    Clarifying his stance, he said: “When I say the security agencies are involved, it is very simple: Delta State, for instance, has three exit/entry points (into the high sea). They are at Escravos, Forcados and Ogheye (in Warri South West, Burutu and Warri North local government areas ). There is no way a vessel can enter or leave without the military seeing them.”

    Supporting the declaration Uduaghan said whenever he travelled through the waterways of the state – particularly the Warri and Burutu axis – he met one military checkpoint or the other on most junctions.

    He said in all the instances, his and other boats in his entourage were stopped and subjected to military check. He wondered how larger vessels, tugboats and other paraphernalia of the illicit enter and leave the waters without being detected and arrested by the security operatives, who are deployed to the rivers principal to stop rogue vessels.

    “Ayiri made a point about Delta having just three exit points in Delta State. Bayelsa is more difficult to deal with because they have up to 35 points; there are just three in Delta and there are military checkpoints at every junction. They stopped my boat; if my boat can be stopped, why are other boats not being stopped?”

    Speaking in the same vein, Mr Joel Bisina of the Leadership Initiative for Transformation and Empowerment (LITE Africa), also queried the suffocating presence of military men around oil facilities if they are not able to secure pipelines and flow stations.

    In a brief, eloquent presentation that was punctuated with rhetorical questions and quips, Bisina raised posers that not only supported alleged involvement of the lower ranks of the military, but also hinted at the complicity of their high ranking officers.

    For instance, he said: “How does the high end security network around oil facilities fail to provide security to the primary objective (of their deployment)?  To what extent is security (apparatus) providing security?

    “There are (allegation that) some members of the JTF levy illegal bunkerers on a cargo-by-cargo basis. How many of the JTF operators have been arrested and tried for involvement?”

    Oil firms in bunkering

    Ironical, it was the FOC West, Rear Admiral Alade, who flagged-off the game of finger-pointing when he slammed International Oil Companies (IOCs) and their Nigerian counterparts for aiding the illicit deals.

    Speaking on the topic, “Security Oil and Gas Investments: The Role of The Nigerian Armed Forces’, he said:

    “Oil companies cannot claim ignorance (about oil theft)… Oil thefts are mostly perpetrated at the loading point.”

    The navy top brass’ assertion was somewhat buttressed by a revelation in the presentation by Mr Mutiu Sunmonu, Managing Director of Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) and Country Chair of Shell Companies in Nigeria, who disclosed a brazen sabotage of the company’s export line by suspected illegal bunkerers.

    “We discovered that a line was welded to our Forcados Terminal export line where export quality crude oil was being stolen.  Such an underwater operation does not come easy to us in the industry, but some criminals were able to install a theft point without detection. Investigations are on-going to understand how this was done. So, who is behind these activities? Unfortunately, SPDC as a corporate organisation is unable to say categorically those behind these crimes.”

    If the SPDC MD was puzzled by the daring operation on the line, other stakeholders at the ceremony offered answers: they urged him and captains of the oil and gas industry to look inward. LITE-Africa’s Bisina hinted that the technical expertise used in such operation as described by Sunmonu could only come from the oil industry and within the oil multinationals.

    Austin Igbuku, who represented Sunmonu, differed. He said none of the company’s staff are involved in the illicit, while also conceding that SHELL could not vouch for indirect workers – 10,000 to 15,000 employed by its contractors.

    But Uduaghan and other guests were not impressed. The governor insisted that oil companies operating in the region could not dodge culpability, even if those found wanting are their indirect staff. He advised internal audit to fish out the bad eggs.

    Communities are also involved Emami, a factional leader of the oil-rich Ugborodo Community in Warri South West Local Government Area, was one of the first to concede the involvement of community members and leaders. He said the situation was not helped by the oppressive underdevelopment of oil bearing communities.

    He said, “Poverty is the origin of oil theft; they (community members) are all suffering. So, everybody is involved actively or passively. Those involved actively are those who break pipeline and steal the oil, while their passive participators are those who do not get involved but are guilty by association and refusal to offer information to security agents because they are benefiting one way or the other.”

    Speaking in the same vein, Jude Ukori, Secretary of the Egbema Gbaramatuu Central Development Committee (EGCDC), the IRDC’s counterpart, said, “Those involved in illegal bunkering are not ghost. But some of them are so poor that they have no alternative to survive while others are just greedy.”

    While not justifying the acts, the two community leaders urged governments at all level and the oil multinationals to do more for the communities. They said the damages from oil exploration and production have left the communities without viable means of livelihood and deprived of commensurate benefit from the oil windfalls.

    Ukori said, “Now we are being told of loses from illegal bunkering; when there was no lose where we made to feel the impact? There should be deliberate programme for oil communities not the prevailing situation where bridges are built where they are not needed while in the riverine areas where they are needed none is built.”

    How it is done

    Explaining the various levels of the corruption, the SPDC MD said the first level involves those engaged in the theft of crude oil, which is inefficiently refined for supply to local markets. Sunmonu said this aspect of the crime is encouraged by inadequate supply of petroleum products through the legitimate channel and peoples desperateness for fuel used for various purposes.

    “At the other level is the larger scale, more organised operation for international export, which we know reaches far across the globe. The latter has fast become a parallel industry with a developed supply chain and growing sophistication.

    “The operations at both levels involve trained engineers who weld valves to high pressure pipelines, allowing the criminals to return at night to siphon crude oil. Boat yards help to construct and supply barges to the thieves to transport crude oil around the creeks,” he said.

    How to tackle illegal bunkering

    Government officials, community leaders, oil industry operators and all stakeholders at the conference were unanimous that the scourge of illegal bunkering needs to be purged out from the region. One industry operator at the conference told our reporter that the effects would linger for decades.

    “Even if we successfully stop illegal bunkering today, the effect will take at least 20 to 30 years to clear. That is when the soil, water and flora and fauna can return to normal. It is a big damage that they are doing to the environment.”

    For Bisina, the damage is not done by the criminals alone. He expressed concern over the means of destroying arrest barges, petroleum tanker trucks and other support items of the trade.

    This concern, which was also raised by Mr. Sheriff Mulade of the Centre for Peace and Environmental Justice (CEPEJ) in a private interview with our reporter, followed the huge emission from the burning of crude oil and destruction of barges in the creeks and waterways.

    Rear Admiral Alade also called for a critical look at the role of the judiciary and those tasked with prosecution of the criminals. He said the navy does not have the power to prosecute, adding that its job is merely to arrest and investigate.

    He lamented that after carrying out its duty faithfully the prosecutions are not done satisfactorily. His position, supported by other participants, questioned the sincerity of those tasked with trying those cases as well as the judge to whom they are assigned.

    On the need to develop the oil bearing communities, Uduaghan told the audience that the communities must be ready to be developed. He said community leaders and their youths make outrageous demands on contractors sent to execute developmental projects through exorbitant wage demand or other patronages.

    The governor also noted that efforts to empower community youths through pipeline surveillance contracts and jobs have also backfired as those employed have been found to be aiding involved directly or aided and abetted illegal bunkerers.

    For his part, Sunmonu suggested: “Concerted action is urgently needed at the local, national, regional and international levels to address the menace of crude oil theft.  Requirements include improved intelligence gathering, stronger policing and the prosecution of suspected criminals.

    “There is now an understanding within the industry and government that the scale and complexity of the problem is beyond the control of any one company, governor, committee or even country. The next step is to galvanise coordinated action. Conferences like this are an important part of that,” he stated.

    He urged the Federal Government to seek international collaboration to track stolen crude as is being done with gold and other precious stones gotten from war-ravaged countries.

    Sunmonu disclosed that SPDC and its Joint Venture partners are continually looking for new ways to make it more difficult for thieves to hijack its pipelines and steal crude oil. To this end, he disclosed that pipelines are being buried deeper beneath earth surface and such pipelines are sometimes covered with concrete to deter criminals.

    Attendees and speakers also agreed that the passage of the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB) and conferring ownership rights on communities would give them sense of belonging and stake to help in policing and protecting the facilities.

  • How military men, oil firms aid illegal bunkering

    How military men, oil firms aid illegal bunkering

    Niger Delta activist and chairman of the Itsekiri Regional Development Council, Chief Ayirimi Emami, has alleged the active involvement of some military men  and oil companies  in illegal crude oil bunkering deals in the region.

     Emami also slammed oil bearing communities in the region for “actively and passively”  aiding the illicit trade, which has resulted in  losses of up to  300,000 barrels of crude oil (or about $30.5m) daily.

     Speaking at the 2nd Delta Oil and Gas Stakeholders Conference, held in Effurun-Delta State, Emami, Governor Uduaghan and other stakeholders said the Joint Task Forces, the International Oil Companies (IOCs) and host communities could not  feign ignorance of the situation.

     Emami said: “Poverty is the origin of oil theft; we (host communities) are all suffering. Everybody is involved actively and passively. The communities, oil multinationals and the armed forces, are all involved.

     “The host communities cannot claim ignorance about those involved because those doing it are not ghosts; they are humans who sometimes live in the community. So, they are either actively involved or passively through their acquiescence.

     “Most members of the host communities benefit through handouts and other forms. So, they keep quiet and would not offer information or report those involved.

     “When I say the security agencies are involved, it is very simple: Delta State for instance has three exit/entry points. They are at Escravos, Forcados and Ogheye (in Warri South West, Burutu and Warri North local government areas respectively). There is no way a vessel can enter or leave without the military seeing them.

      “If they are not involved how do the illegal bunkering vessels  pass?”

     His position was supported by Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan of Delta State  who  said:

    “All boats are stopped at these checkpoints. I have been stopped every time I travel in the area. If I, a governor, can be stopped how does the criminal pass unhindered?”

     On the involvement of oil multinationals, Emami said the technical skills needed to carry out some of the illegal bunkering operation are beyond  a  layman. He advised the IOCs to also look inward in the quest for answer to illegal bunkering.

     “The oil companies are also insincere in reporting illegal bunkering activities and the resultant loses. For instance, in a situation where the crime does occur, they would exaggerate for obvious reason.

     “If one barrel of crude is stolen, they (oil companies) would say it is 10 and the balance goes into their account and through that they are benefiting from the crime.”

     For his part, Mr Joel Bisina of Leadership Initiative For Transformation and Empowerment (LITE) wondered how illegal bunkering  could thrive in the area despite the high end security network around the oil facilities

     ”Where does the technical expertise reside?” he wondered,adding: “Some members of the JTF operatives tasked with preventing crude theft collect levies on cargo by cargo basis (from illegal bunkerers).”