Tag: IPOB

  • Anglican Primate begs MASSOB, IPOB to shift protest

    Anglican Primate begs MASSOB, IPOB to shift protest

    PRIMATE of the Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion), Rev. Nicholas Okoh, yesterday, begged the Movement for the Actualisation of Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) and the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) in Anambra State to allow the church complete its programme before their sit-at-home order.

    The two groups, last Sunday, issued a statement that markets, banks, motorists and others should close on Friday (tomorrow) for a protest againt the continued detention of IPOB leader, Nnamdi Kanu.

    But the order coincided with the church’s Standing Committees’ five-day meeting in Awka, the state capital.

    Okoh said the groups should shelve their plan until the end of its programmes at St. Faith Cathedral Church tomorrow.

    The cleric noted that there will be no other exit root from Anambra, except the head bridge in Onitsha.

    He urged Governor Willie Obiano to beg IPOB and MASSOB to shift their order.

    Okoh hailed Obiano for prompt payment of workers’ salaries, and ensuring religious harmony in the state.

    The cleric noted that the governor had stemmed religious uprising, which he said hitherto caused tension across the state.

    He said: “IPOB and MASSOB threaten to shut down markets and other institutions as well as restrict movement in the Southeast, as we read in newspapers.

    “We are not against whatever their agitation is, but we ask them to wait until we leave Awka on Friday. If they carry out that order, we may be trapped in Anambra, as the Niger Bridge is the only entrance to Anambra State. So, help us beg them to allow us to go.”

    Okoh congratulated Obiano on the state’s 25th anniversary.

    The primate expressed satisfaction that the bond between the church and the government will be stronger.

    He said: “On behalf of the Church of Nigeria, I thank you because you always identify with us. The religious climate in Anambra is now tension–free.

    “On appointments, you don’t discriminate, and we are grateful to you. We heard you are the only governor that pays salaries. Please, don’t relent. Continue to pay salaries. The church depends on the generosity of members for execution of its projects.”

  • Police commissioner warns IPOB on proposed rally

    Imo State Commissioner of Police, Taiwo Lakanu, on Wednesday warned members of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) against breaching public peace.

    Lakanu gave the warning in a chat with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on the IPOB “sit at home protest” slated for Friday.

    The group planned to protest the continued detention of its Leader, Mr. Nnamdi Kanu, on that day.

    The commissioner said the police would resist any attempt by the group to breach public peace or carry out activities contrary to the law.

    He said the group has no right to forcefully order members of the public to sit at home or switch off their phones.

    “We will arrest and prosecute any IPOB member if any of their actions leads to breach of security and public peace.

    “Agitators must find a legal ways of making their grievances known to the authorities and not to create panic in the society.

    “Police is in charge of any situation in the state, and we are ever ready to ensure a violence-free state,’’ he said.

    The commissioner urged members of the public not to entertain any fear over the planned protest, but to go about their lawful businesses.

  • IPOB fires Kanu’s lawyers over anti-Avengers comments

    IPOB fires Kanu’s lawyers over anti-Avengers comments

    •And ‘misleading’ public on negotiations with government •Gives conditions for negotiation

    The Nnamdi Kanu-led Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) has dropped his defence lawyers for disowning the Niger Delta Avengers (NDA).

    IPOB said in a statement late on Friday in Abuja that the utterances of the defence lawyers on negotiation between Kanu and the Federal Government as well as on the Avengers were “made without consultation.”

    “As a result of these unsolicited and unguarded utterances, the defence team has been sacked and will be replaced,” the group said in the statement by Emma Nmezu and  Dr. Clifford Chukwuemeka Iroanya.

    It added: “The IPOB leader wishes to state categorically that the only thing we are open to is negotiation that will lead to modalities and processes to restore Biafra and avert further hardships on the people of Nigeria who have been under bondage since his kidnapping and illegal detention.

    “The Niger Delta Avengers arose because of the inherent injustice in Nigeria as manifested in the disregard to the rule of law when Buhari refused to obey court order to unconditionally release our leader, Nnamdi Kanu.

    “We spoke the mind of our leader when we stated for record purposes that IPOB and Niger Delta Avengers share the same ideology of freedom for Biafra.

    “Anybody publicly dissociating IPOB from Niger Delta Avengers is a mortal enemy of IPOB family worldwide under the leadership of Nnamdi Kanu.

    “Let it be known that as long as Buhari and Daura continue to tamper with Nnamdi Kanu’s defence team through bribery, inducements and intimidation, IPOB will keep on changing the team.

    “For the records, the press conference by the now-sacked legal team was about bringing to public knowledge the foolishness of the Department of State Services (DSS) in bringing treasonable felony charges against our leader and the lack of evidence thereof.

    “The press conference was NEVER about negotiations because should negotiations start, IPOB will notify the world about it. Right now, we are not negotiating and will not negotiate until existing court orders ordering the release of Nnamdi Kanu are obeyed.

    “In the interim, Ifeanyi Ejiofor will continue to act as lead counsel until other counsels are appointed who will not sell their souls to the devil. Biafra or death!!!”

    Kanu’s lawyers had disowned MEND and NDA for linking their own agitations to Kanu’s incarceration.

    They said Kanu and IPOB had “no connection, contact, ties or any kind of relationship” with their members whatsoever.

    The lawyers, Ifeanyi Ejiofor and Amoebi Nzelu expressed Kanu’s willingness to negotiate with the Federal Government, saying he was prepared to accept a political solution in line with his belief that he is a political prisoner of conscience.

    Kanu and two of his associates – Benjamin Madubugwu and David Nwawuisi (a Field Maintenance engineer with MTN) – are currently being held in Kuje prison, Abuja, following their arraignment before a Federal High Court in Abuja.

    The Federal Government recently directed the release of some members of the group arrested in February this year during a protest rally.

    On the claims that MEND was negotiating on behalf of Kanu and IPOB, the lawyer said: “Nnamdi Kanu has no connection, contact, ties or any kind of relationship with members of the MEND. As such, MEND has no implied, direct or express authority of Nnamdi Kanu to represent him or IPOB in any purported negotiation going on between MEND and the Federal Government.”

    Responding to a question on whether Kanu would abandon his campaign for an independent state of Biafra in exchange for freedom, Nzelu said that his client would not jettison the agitation even if he was released.

    He also said that Kanu has no ties with the Avengers.

  • IPOB rejects MEND deal on Kanu’s release

    IPOB rejects MEND deal on Kanu’s release

    The Joint Task Force (JTF), Operation Delta Safe (ODS), yesterday flashed agitators for Niger Delta Republic the red card, saying there is no room for their plan in the country.

    ODS Commander Rear Admiral Joseph Okogie told the Adaka Boro Avengers (ABA), which is pushing for the republic, that the JTF would crush any separatist tendency.

    Also yesterday, the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB) distanced itself from the talks between the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) and some Federal Government agents to end militancy in the Niger Delta and agitations for a separate country in the Southeast.

    The group declared that its detained leader, Nnamdi Kanu would not renounce the agitation for Biafra for his freedom.

    Okogie spoke after a five-hour meeting with component commanders of the ODS at the outfit’s headquarters in Igbogene in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital.

    ABA caused a stir in the region, following its threat to declare Niger Delta Republic at the Kaiama home of the late Ijaw icon Isaac Adaka Boro, in Kolokuma-Opokuma area of the state last Monday.

    IPOB, in a statement, by its spokesman, Emma Nmezu, and another official, Dr. Clifford Chukwuemeka Iroanya, said: “It is understandable that MEND and the federal government are scavenging for relevance from their moribund status but they should not use the sacred name of IPOB or its leader as a means of survival.

    “MEND and the federal government can conveniently carry out their operation without dragging the name of IPOB and Nnamdi Kanu into that shenanigan, as we are not interested in their devilish acts.

    “IPOB and their leader Mazi Kanu are in full support of any group of dedicated and hardcore freedom fighters such as the Niger Delta Avengers [NDA], as we share the same aspiration which is the liberation of our people.

    “We have stated unequivocally and without any fear of contradiction that we are fully in support of the NDA as they embark on freeing themselves from the British criminality called Nigeria, a contraption led by a man that committed treason on December 31, 1983.

    “What MEND and federal government must know is that Biafra is a spirit because Nnamdi Kanu, by the grace of God, brought spirituality into the agitation for Biafra independence.

    “The fact that many people claiming to be fighting for the interest of the people has sold out in the past or that the so called elites engaged in the mortgaging of their soul to the devil does not mean the emergence of clean, conscientious and patriotic Biafrans is no longer possible.”

    ”A lot of people thought the agitation for Biafra was dead before the emergence of Nnamdi Kanu and IPOB, one thing remains certain things can never be the same after this. We assert that IPOB is not in the business of betrayal and we would die rather than renounce Biafra.

    “The restoration of the nation of Biafra is not subject to negotiation, if there should be any form of negotiation at all, it must be centered on asset sharing between Nigeria and Biafra and on the payment of reparations for money stolen from Biafrans by Nigeria through the 1970 twenty pounds deal and other subsequent acts of thievery by Nigeria against Biafrans.

    “We want to make it categorically clear that MEND and the federal government are strictly on their own and do not in any way, shape or form represents IPOB or the leader of IPOB, Mazi Kanu, when we say

    “Biafra or Death”, and we meant every syllable of that phrase.

    “Again, we reiterate that Nnamdi Kanu is not Ralph Uwazuruike and IPOB is not MASSOB. Therefore, anybody thinking that our leader will renounce Biafra is certifiably mad. For both IPOB and their leader, Nnamdi Kanu, it is either we get Biafra or we die getting Biafra.

    There is no middle ground”.

    ”MEND and the federal government team of fake negotiators are hereby warned to desist from deceiving the public with their misinformation and betrayal of the Biafran cause”

     

     

  • Buhari to IPOB, militants: Nigeria must remain one

    Buhari to IPOB, militants: Nigeria must remain one

    President promises justice for all

    President Muhammadu Buhari yesterday sent a message to some restive groups – they should forget about Nigeria breaking up.

    The Niger Delta Avengers (NDA)have been attacking oil facilities. The Indigenous People of Biafra and the Movement for the Emancipation of Biafra (MASSOB) have been pushing for a Biafra State, independent of Nigeria.

    But, Buhari insists that Nigeria’s unity is not negotiable.

    IPOB leader Nnamdi Kanu, who is also the director of the separatist and illegal Radio Biafra, is on trial for alleged treason, among other charges

    The president was emphatic yesterday that anybody seeking the break-up of the country should perish the thought.

    He spoke at the Presidential Villa in Abuja when Federal Capital Territory (FCT) residents paid him an Eid-el-Fitri homage.

    The President said the slogan in the 1970s, “Go On With One Nigeria” (GOWON), is very apt now as keeping Nigeria one is a task that must be done”.

    He urged the militants to give peace a chance.

    Noting that there is a lot of improvement on security in the Northeast, Buhari said the attention has now shifted to the Niger Delta.

    He said: “On security, we have made a lot of improvement. There is improvement in the battle against Boko Haram. We are now concentrating on the militants to know how many of them in terms of groupings, leadership and plead with them to try and give Nigeria a chance.

    “I assure them that the saying by Gen. Yakubu Gowon (a former Head of State) that ‘to keep Nigeria one is a task that must be done is still relevant.  In those days, we never thought of oil, all we were concerned about was one Nigeria. So, please pass this on to the militants – that one Nigeria is not for negotiation and they had better accept it.

    “The Nigerian Constitution is clear as to what they should get and I assure them there will be justice.”

    Buhari urged those with plenty of money which does not belong to them to negotiate and return it in peace.

    “So that both they and us will be in peace; otherwise, we will continue to look for it,” the President added

    To solve some of the problems of agriculture, he said Minister of Agriculture Audu Ogbeh was working very hard with Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Godwin Emefiele to ensure that 13 states start rice production..

    According to him, the programme is good and giving the country confidence while many farmers are already going back to the field.

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, said the past one year had been tough, adding that  the administration was busy clearing the mess it met.

    He stressed the administration’s commitment  to placing the country on a sound footing, acknowledging that things were already looking up.

    Minister of FCT Mohammed Bello, who led the delegation, prayed for God’s wisdom, good health and success for the President.

    The President was presented with Sallah greeting cards and a mirror.

    At the ceremony were Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) Babachir David Lawal; Primate of the Church of Nigerian (Anglican Communion) rev. Nicholas Okoh; Acting Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) Ibrahim Magu; Chief of Air Staff Air Marshal Sadiq Abubakar; National Security Adviser Babagana Mongunu and Acting Inspector-General of Police Ibrahim Idris.

    The Chairman, Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), FCT Chapter, Israel Akanji and Dr. Kabir Adam of the National Mosque, Abuja were also part of the delegation.

  • VON chief to MASSOB, IPOB: forget Biafra agitation

    The Director-General of the Voice of Nigeria (VON), Osita Okechukwu, at the weekend urged separatist groups to forget their self-actualisation agitation and support President Muhammadu Buhari to rid the country of corruption.

    Okechukwu said he supported the President’s position that if Nigerians failed to kill corruption, it would kill the nation.

    The VON chief noted that ethnic merchants and religious bigots hid under such fault lines to corruptly enrich themselves.

    Okechukwu spoke in Enugu at a reception organised for him and the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Geoffrey Onyeama, by their kinsmen, under the aegis of Ekeh Progressives Forum (EPF).

    Among the groups clamouring to breakaway from Nigeria are: the Movement for Actualisation of Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB), the Indigenous Peoples of Biafra (IPOB), Niger Delta Avengers and similar new movements.

    Delivering a speech, titled: True Federalism: Panacea or Placebo to Nigeria’s Paralysis? Eke Town as a Case Study, at a dinner part of the reception, the chieftain of the All Progressives Congress (APC) blamed greed and corruption for the inequality in the country.

    Speaking before an audience, which included former Vice President Alex Ekwueme and former Senate President Ken Nnamani, the VON chief recalled that President Buhari, in his 2015 Chatham House speech, described the inequality in the country as the tiny island of the affluent in the ocean of misery.

    Okechukwu said: “Corruption, in all its ramifications, not just the fleecing of the state fund, includes petty human frailties, like jealousy, hate, stereotypes and prejudice. We shall presently return to these two opaque pages of the same epitaph of greed and corruption and commonly misunderstood theme.

    “These two opaque pages may help us to show that ethnicity and religion play less crucial roles in our dysfunction than greed and its grandson, corruption. Ethnicity and religion are more of the tools of scavengers and predators. It would amaze us to look closely at our communities, local council areas and zones. We are most likely to find that they are the victims of the cankerworm called corruption.

  • Murder: Court remands seven pro-Biafra activists in prison

    A Chief Magistrate Court sitting in Asaba, Delta State, has remanded seven pro-Biafra activists in prison over the alleged murder of three police officers.

    The accused persons are facing trial for allegedly killing three police officers including ASP Genesis Akagha, Sgt. Itoro Thompson and Cpl. Biosu Onyeka of the Delta State Police Command.

    The incident occurred in Asaba on May 30 during a demonstration by pro-Biafra agitators including members of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB).

    Other charges leveled against the accused persons include cultism, conspiracy, membership of unlawful society and illegal possession of arms.

    The offenses, according to the charge sheet, are punishable under various sections of the Criminal Code, Cap C.21 Vol.1 Laws of Delta State of Nigeria 2006, and the Anti-Kidnapping and Anti-Cultism/Terrorism Cap C.28 Law No. 8 of Delta State of Nigeria, 2013.

    The accused persons are – Ifeanyi Ani (25), Emehelu Harrison (25), Joseph Iheanacho (45), Izuchukwu Okpara (27), Dickson Anyamene (23), Chisom Obiakonwa (19) and Chigozie Ogbuzuru (31).

    Their plea was not taken by the court presided over by F.I. Dikeh, who ordered that they should be remanded in prison and adjourned the matter to July 11 for mention.

     

  • Amnesty to FG: Probe killing of IPOB supporters

    Amnesty to FG: Probe killing of IPOB supporters

    Amnesty International (AI) on Friday asked the Federal government to probe the army for allegedly gunning down unarmed people ahead of last month’s planned pro-Biafran commemoration events in Onitsha, Anambra State.

    The rights group said in a report that evidence it gathered from eyewitnesses, morgues and hospitals confirmed that between 29-30 May, soldiers opened fire on members of the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB), supporters and bystanders at three locations in the town.

    It said the exact number of deaths was unknown, partly due to the fact that the army took away corpses and the injured.

    The army, in a swift reaction, dismissed the allegation as nothing more than an unverified claim.

    The deputy director of Army Public Relations, Col. H.A.Gambo, said Amnesty was simply out to discredit the force.

    The rights watchdog, in its report, said: “Some of the dead and injured IPOB supporters seen by an Amnesty researcher were shot in the back, an indication that they were fleeing the scene when they were shot.”

    It quoted its Nigeria’s Country Director, M. K. Ibrahim as saying: “Opening fire on peaceful IPOB supporters and bystanders who clearly posed no threat to anyone is an outrageous use of unnecessary and excessive force and resulted in multiple deaths and injuries. In one incident one person was shot dead after the authorities burst in on them while they slept.

    “These shootings, some of which may amount to extra judicial executions, must be urgently and independently investigated and anyone suspected of criminal responsibility must be brought to justice.”

    The leadership of IPOB claimed more than 50 of their members were killed.

    The army had said in a statement that they acted in self-defence and that five IPOB members were killed.

     

  • Nigeria, IPOB inch closer to apocalpse

    Nigeria, IPOB inch closer to apocalpse

    SPURNING the need to find ingenious ways to tackle the demand by the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) for independence, the federal government has spoken of force and used it. It will not negotiate; it will not even discuss; and it sees the two groups’ demand as nothing but treason. To the federal government, the unity of Nigeria is non-negotiable, and those who question this fact are either too young to know the difference or too misguided to be countenanced by the government. It was therefore not surprising that Monday’s pro-Biafra protests in four states turned bloody, with the army saying soldiers shot dead five persons, and protesters asserting that some 30-53 persons were shot dead. And with each bloody protest, the country not only bleeds viciously, it inches towards apocalypse with steady and unflinching resoluteness.

    The pro-Biafra protests were staged to mark the 49th anniversary of the declaration of Biafra and the 17th anniversary of MASSOB. Though the march was symbolic, it nonetheless signposted the protesters’  increasing frustration, if not complete alienation, with Nigeria as a country. There is no incontrovertible evidence that the pro-Biafra sentiment is widespread in the Southeast, considering how apparently limited to its young exponents the idea still is in the region. The more guarded and perhaps economically and ideologically guided older people of the region have watched the unfolding pro-Biafra campaigns with a tentativeness and caution that come with age. Sometimes they whisper their disapproval of the feistiness of the youths, most of whom nurture very romantic ideas of Biafra. At other times, they genuinely wonder whether the youths had taken cognisance of the dense population of the Southeast people, the adventuresomeness of the region’s commerce-inclined people, and their landlocked region.

    Whatever the case, the protests, rather than abate, have acquired more force and urgency. Both the force and urgency are a product of the mishandling of the Biafra idea by the federal government. In the foreseeable future, the protests will intensify, the pro-Biafra youths will approach the matter with reckless abandon, and as long as no discussions are countenanced by the federal government, the region will continue to seethe, perhaps uncontrollably. With IPOB”s Nnamdi Kanu still in jail and on trial, and the police and army determined to unleash as much strong-arm tactics as they can muster on the pro-Biafra campaigners, the country should invariably prepare for more tension. This column had warned that the federal approach to the Biafra idea was wrong-headed and inflexible. The scale of destruction witnessed early this week, not to say the absence of wisdom and restraint, is an indication that the tension and violence can only get worse.

    Predictably, the Inspector General of Police, Solomon Arase, has spoken forcefully about the matter. He has ordered the police to disarm the pro-Biafra agitators and warned of dire consequences of testing the resolve of the government. Such firmness as he has displayed is expected of a law officer, though the protesters insist they have never been armed. But the protesters themselves have noted that Mr Arase is showing the kind of resolve he could not muster when the country was inundated by herdsmen attacks, where nomads bore arms openly and used them without challenge. The protesters have also noticed that the president has repeatedly spoken of Biafra with incalculable scornfulness, promising to crush any attempt to balkanise the country. And so, whether the country is contemplating the order to disarm or threat to crush, the problem is continuing and even heightening. Apparently, strong words and harsh tactics have not availed much. It may therefore be time to try something else if the problem is not to spiral out of control.

    Indeed, with so much violence and many deaths, the problem may already be beyond President Buhari’s initiative. Given his testiness over the matter, his mind seems to have been made up, perhaps in the wrong direction. With such inexplicable inflexibility, what other options could he be contemplating? He sees it as a law and order problem rather than a manifestation of stress in the polity and economy. Such mindset is unhelpful. For now, Biafra has not appeared to have the unalloyed support of the region’s elders. That leaves a window of opportunity for the country to address the matter in a structured and constructive way to find a sensible solution. If the president can modify his mindset and recognise that too much has happened in the past few decades since the end of the civil war thus rendering old ideas and perspectives anachronistic, he may become more amenable to finding an exit out of the cul-de-sac.

    The president has repeatedly harped on the fact that the pro-Biafra agitators were young or not born when the civil war raged, and so may be unaware of the consequences of another fratricidal conflict. The problem with that assumption is that the president believes that the rest of the country may be averse to dissolution, or that he would find wholehearted support from all corners of the country should he attempt to forcefully bar the Southeast from pulling out, assuming of course the region could find the plurality to do so. Instead of advancing what may turn out to be false assumptions, the president should, as an elected politician, meet minds with his party to find a way out of the crisis. He has tried unsuccessfully to walk alone. Let him join hands with others to find a solution. This week, his party men from the Southeast paid him a visit. He should exploit that opportunity to make peace rather than prepare for war.

    It is also time the president recognised that the pro-Biafra sentiment is probably a call for the holistic restructuring of the country. That panacea can no longer be waved aside or even moderated by the presidency. The call for restructuring is taking a life of its own, as the former vice president Atiku Abubakar explained early this week at a book launch. President Buhari can only ignore the call at his peril. If he is not to lose the initiative, the time to act may be now. In addition, President Buhari keeps making the shocking mistake of assuming that Biafra is a physical concept that can be crushed. It is not. It is an idea planted deep in the subconscious of the people of the Southeast. Both because there was no closure to the civil war, as this column has maintained, and because the country has been spectacularly misgoverned, the Southeast finds it irresistible contemplating the idea of isolation or independence.

    More importantly, it is time the president was made aware of the virtue of peacemaking than warmongering. There is a limit to the things that can be crushed. In the case of Biafra, the problem is not beyond peaceful resolution. Let the president use his men in the region, and all other men of goodwill, to broker a solution. He has opened too many fronts in his war in various parts of the country, and has spoken rather unwisely and sanguinarily over some of them. Yet, he has neither the resources nor the personnel to tackle the problems if and when they become full-blown. The pro-Biafra agitators may romanticise a jaded idea. But much worse is the fact that the president has himself seemed to be an incurable romantic of war and an exponent of strong-arm tactics, one who tolerates and excuses overzealous military actions. He should be reminded he is now a politician and an elected president.

    He mishandled the Shiite protest in Zaria last December; he is mishandling the pro-Biafra protest in the Southeast; he is misspeaking on the herdsmen attacks; and he is appallingly stoking the flames of the Niger Delta revolt. If he cannot see the futility of the measures he is embracing, his advisers should lean on him to help him see more clearly in order to move in the right direction.

  • IPOB, NDA, killer herdsmen and troops’ many battles

    IPOB, NDA, killer herdsmen and troops’ many battles

    Lately, Nigerians have started heaving sighs of relief with signs of apparent capitulation from the camp of the blighted Boko Haram insurgents. But another group of Frankenstein monsters called the Niger Delta Avengers has crept in from the creeks. The militants have been blowing up critical oil installations and petroleum product pipelines in the oil producing areas. Assistant Editor, GBADE OGUNWALE, reports that the violent uprising may pose fresh challenges to the already overstretched capabilities of the Nigerian Armed Forces, even as the nation continues to feel pangs of the multiple aftereffects.

    Hobbled by a six-year counter-insurgency operations against the dreaded Boko Haram insurgents in the North East, the country’s armed forces are again confronted by yet another armed insurrection in the oil rich Niger Delta region. The ongoing attacks on oil installations and petroleum product pipelines by the Niger Delta Avengers in the nation’s oil rich enclave are already taking a heavy toll on the nation’s economy. Worst affected are revenue from oil earnings, investments and purity of the environment.

    A number of multi billion-dollar installations and facilities belonging to multinational oil companies operating largely in the Niger Delta are being targeted by the militants in the last two weeks. Agip oil, Shell and Chevron have had their facilities blown up by the rampaging militants within this short period. Commenting on the devastation brought about by recent attacks, Shell’s Country chair in Nigeria, Osagie Okunbor, lamented the significant decline in production levels. “These illegal acts also have severe environmental consequences. In addition, security threats mean both our development and operating costs are higher than in many other operating environments globally.

    “Ultimately, it means that available funds for the industry don’t stretch as far as they would, if we had a safer operating environment. It is clear that security of our assets and people is key to our operations and the federal government has rightly said it will work to ensure a safe and secure working environment for everyone, not just international oil companies,” Okunbor added.

    The oil chief said Shell lost about 25, 000 barrels of crude oil per day to oil theft in 2015, with 37,000 barrels per day similarly lost in 2014. According to him, the number of sabotage-related spills declined to 93 incidents compared with 139 in 2014, adding that decrease in theft and spill recorded in 2015 was partly due the company’s divestments in the Niger Delta. Okunbor observed that oil theft and sabotage were still the cause of about 85 per cent of spills from Shell’s pipelines in the region.

    It is said that crude oil output by OPEC member countries reduced by 120, 000 barrels per day in May, owing partly to the destructive activities of the militants. The latest attacks on Chevron facilities were also carried out during the week, with RMP23 and RMP24, operated company at the Opia/Ikia axis of the Dibi/ Olero oil fields in Egbema Kingdom of Warri North council area mortally destroyed.

    Claiming responsibility for the attacks, the militant group, in a tweet shortly after the dastardly act, went bragging about its exploits and mocking the deployment of military equipment and personnel.

    The tweet read: “With the heavy presence of 100 gunboats, four warships and jet bombers, NDA blew up Chevron oil well RMP23 and RMP24 at 3:44 am this morning. This is to show the whole world that Nigerian military is good in harassing innocent civilians. RMP23 and RMP24 are Chevron’s swamp highest producing wells.”

    A similar attack by the militants at Efe-Ugbokodo area in Warri South Local Government area of Delta State on Wednesday was targeted at military personnel. At least two soldiers were reported killed in an unprovoked attack by the militants on a military houseboat which the soldiers were deployed to guard. Details of the actual casualty figures were still being awaited from the military authorities.

    The Federal Government has responded to the onslaught with military might. President had repeatedly vowed to give the militants the Boko Haram treatment. Armed forces personnel and equipment have been deployed in the region, with the Chief of Army Staff, Lt. Gen. Tukur Buratai ruling out negotiations with the militants. Rebuffing calls in certain quarters for dialogue with the group, Buratai vowed that the militants would be smoked out of hiding with military force.

    He said: “I quite agree that dialogue is very important. But where it is not too obvious that the adversary is ready to come out and talk, you can also force such a person. I think that is what the Nigerian Army is trying to do.

    “Yes, we don’t know the group’s leaders for now. That is the only option. Possibly, we have to bring the people out to know who you can dialogue with.”

    According to him, the activities of the militants in the last few days have forced the nation’s oil production from 2.2 million barrels down to 1.1 million barrels per day. But industry watchers are quick to point out that the actual production has gone down to about 900, 000 barrels per day.

    And in the light of other military operations at hand, the military appears to be over-stretching its capabilities. The ongoing secessionist agitation by the Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and incessant bloody attacks on agrarian communities by rampaging cattle grazing irredentists have conspired to task the military to the limits. For instance, the army is presently executing three operations: Lafiya Dole against the Boko Haram; Operation Sharandaj, against nomadic cattle rustlers and now Operation Pulo Shield against the Niger Delta Avengers.

    The Army Chief admitted that the military and other security agencies are already overwhelmed by the series of armed conflicts in many states across the federation. He observed that the Armed Forces, which ordinarily are supposed to be the last line of defence, are now engaged as the first line of defence. In an apparent bid to enlist the support or co-opt the pro-Biafra agitators in their destructive enterprise, the Niger Delta Avengers have thrown their weight behind the secessionist group. The militants have demanded the release of bodies of pro-Biafra agitators that were killed during demonstration in parts of the South East during the week. They have also added security personnel to their list of targets and have vowed to go after military men in sight on sea and on land.

    Going by one of their threat messages, the militants said they would be carrying out attacks across the six states in the South-South geo-political zone. “It is now war between the militants and security men. Since innocent and helpless citizens, especially from the South-South and South-East have been marked for extinction, we will defend our people,” one of them was quoted as saying.

    As controversy continued to trail the deployment of the military to quell the armed insurrection, a group of elders in the Niger Delta has backed the action. The elders, under the aegis of the Concerned Niger Delta Leaders (CNDL) at a media briefing in Abuja on Wednesday, flayed the destructive actions of the militants. According to them, the militants were sabotaging sincere efforts by President Muhammadu Buhari’s to bring speedy growth and development to the region.

    In an address read by the coordinator of the group, Chief Mike Loyibo, it accused the militants of criminality against the Nigerian state and humanity in general. Loyibo said: “We have for some time now watched with utmost dismay the manner in which the Niger Delta Avengers, a group with an aimless agenda, has been destroying our common heritage and the economic mainstay of the country through vandalisation of critical government infrastructure and oil installations. To us, the agenda of these people still remain unclear.

    “At best, their actions are clear acts of sabotage and criminality, both against the state and humanity. It is also a direct threat to the collective existence of us all. The activities of the Niger Delta Avengers also threaten the non-negotiable unity of Nigeria to its very foundation and this must be roundly condemned by all well-meaning stakeholders.”