Tag: MOSOP

  • MOSOP to Buhari: address our injustice, neglect

    GOVEMENT for Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP) has urged President Muhammadu Buhari to address injustice and neglect in Ogoniland.

    MOSOP spoke yesterday in Port Harcourt through its Publicity Secretary, Fegalo Nsuke.

    It decried the Federal Government’s inability to clean-up Ogoniland by implementing recommendations of United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) report on the environmental assessment of Ogoniland.

    MOSOP said with the August 4, 2011, submission of the UNEP report to ex-President Goodluck Jonathan in Abuja, it’s a shame that almost seven years after, the clean-up of Ogoniland was  yet to begin.

    Ogoni people in the four councils of Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme, through MOSOP, said: “At the inception of the administration of President Buhari, we (Ogoni people) had anticipated some relief for the Ogoni people, not only because the new President had during his campaign in 2015 pledged to ensure the clean-up of Ogoniland and fully implement the recommendations contained in the UNEP report, but we expected that the clean-up would open discussions on crucial issues affecting the Ogoni people, especially the political right to self determination.

    “We had hope that President Buhari’s integrity, based on what we had heard about him and his uprightness, would not be compromised. We were actually optimistic of a renewed commitment to resolving the Ogoni problems.

    “We were sure that President Buhari was aware that in over 30 years of oil exploration in Ogoniland, an estimated $81 billion had been generated from the area, excluding the huge gas potential of Ogoniland, the revenue from the two seaports, two refineries, a petrochemical complex and two power stations in the area, but Ogoniland has no water, electricity, roads and other social amenities.

    “The Ogoni experience clearly shows the injustice in Nigeria. The shame is that rather than address the injustice, the Federal Government of Nigeria is attempting to deceive the world about the true situation in Ogoniland. Today in Ogoniland, some villages bury as many as 13 persons in a week, because of pollution caused by exploration and exploitation of crude oil and gas since 1958.

    “The Federal Government of Nigeria is not bothered about the pathetic situation in Ogoniland, but still pushing for resumption of oil production in Ogoniland, over 25 years after Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC) was sent packing from the area. Nigeria government’s primary interest is the Ogoni oil and not the safety and future of the people.”

    It noted that its demand for justice, fairness and equity through non-violent means is taken for granted, saying governments had pushed Ogoni to the wall.

    The umbrella organisation maintained that Ogoni State was not negotiable, stressing that the new state will deliver social equality and justice for the people.

    Renowned environmentalist Ken Saro-Wiwa, and eight other activists were hanged at the Port Harcourt Prisons on November 10, 1995, during the regime of the late Gen. Sani Abacha.

     

     

  • MOSOP to world leaders: avert genocide in Ogoni

    The Movement for Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) has called on world leaders and people of conscience to avert an impending genocide in Ogoniland.

    It urged them to pressure Nigeria and Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) to implement recommendations of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) report on  the environmental assessment of Ogoniland, submitted to ex-President Goodluck Jonathan in 2011.

    MOSOP, yesterday, through its Publicity Secretary, Fegalo Nsuke, noted that between March 2 and 17, Bodo-Ogoni in Gokana Local Government Area buried 33 persons; 29 died in K-Dere, also in Gokana council, with similar reports from other Ogoni villages.

    It said: “MOSOP wants to use this opportunity to alert the world of what is clearly a Shell/state-sponsored genocide in Ogoniland. We are concerned that Shell and the Federal Government of Nigeria are doing little or nothing about the restoration of Ogoni environment and the immediate provision of water for the people,  even as communities record increasing death rate.

    “MOSOP flays the inhuman attitude of the Nigerian government and Shell. We urge the world not to allow this happen in the 21st century.

    “We take exception to the fact that just in December 2017, the Nigerian government approved $1 billion to purchase arms to fight insurgents in the Northeast, but the same government has failed to provide an agreed sum of $200 million annually for five years to save the lives of over one million people in Ogoniland.

    “In the midst of these terrible conditions, the Federal Government has remained silent on the threats posed by Belema Oil Producing Limited and Robo-Michael Limited, both Nigerian oil firms, which are currently sponsoring rival groups in the hope to force a resumption of oil production in Ogoniland, despite our repeated notification and firm position expressing our disapproval to oil production, without the implementation of the UNEP report and other conditions.

    “It is disturbing that while Ogoni people and their environment are increasingly threatened by the effects of years of pollution from Shell’s reckless business practices, the Nigerian government is doing nothing as Belema Oil and Robo-Michael continue to sponsor divisions and rivalry, thereby increasing the potential for conflicts that can worsen the condition of people who are already faced with death from environmental pollution.”

    MOSOP admonished the world leaders to stand up for humanity and save the Ogoni from extinction, stressing that the world must not be silent on the danger faced by the Ogoni.

    SPDC was sent packing in 1993 from Ogoniland’s four councils of Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme.

    Renowned environmentalist Ken Saro-Wiwa, and eight Ogoni activists were hanged in Port Harcourt on November 10, 1995, by the late Gen. Sani Abacha.

     

  • MOSOP rejects proposed maximum prison, cemetery in Ogoniland

    MOSOP rejects proposed maximum prison, cemetery in Ogoniland

    The President of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP), Chief Legborsi Pyagbara, has kicked against the Federal Government’s plan to build a maximum security prison and modern cemetery in Ogoniland.

    He alleged that the plan had been concluded by the Federal Ministry of Interior and would involve seizure of over forty-one hectares of land in Bori, the traditional headquarters of Ogoniland where he said arable land had been conspicuously difficult to find.

    Pyagbara declared Ogoni people in the four Local Government Areas of Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme of Rivers State in the Niger Delta would resist with the last drop of their blood the plan to build a maximum security prison and modern cemetery in peaceful Ogoniland.

    He spoke yesterday in Port Harcourt, urging the federal government to jettison the plan at a time clean-up of the polluted Ogoni environment had not been done despite presentation of the report of the United Nations Environment Programme’s (UNEP’s) on the environmental assessment of Ogoniland to the then President Goodluck Jonathan in Abuja on August 4, 2011.

    He lamented the project had not kicked off despite promises by President Muhammadu Buhari to fully implement the far-reaching recommendations.

    Pyagbara said: “ Ogoni people are opposed to this plan being hatched by the Federal Government against the Ogoni people.

    “This action is a demonstration of crass insensitivity and a total disdain for the Ogoni people by the Buhari-led administration.

    “We want to stress that this plan to build a maximum security prison facility and modern cemetery in Ogoni will never be acceptable to our people because we see this as a broader attempt to suppress Ogoni people and forcefully begin oil and gas exploration in the area, without any constructive engagement and discussion with the Ogoni people.”

    The MOSOP president insisted what Ogoni people wants from the federal government is appropriate/fast-paced clean-up and restoration of Ogoniland, not the building of maximum security prison facility.

  • Planned resumption of oil exploration: FG is creating crisis in Ogoniland –MOSOP President

    Planned resumption of oil exploration: FG is creating crisis in Ogoniland –MOSOP President

    THE President of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP), Chief Legborsi Saro Pyagbara, has stated that the Federal Government was creating crisis in Ogoniland over the planned resumption of oil exploration by not bringing all the stakeholders together to discuss the way forward. He noted that endorsement of another oil company in Ogoni without clean-up of the polluted environment and stakeholders’ engagement, over 25 years after Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC) was sent packing, would amount to hanging again the renowned environmentalist, Ken Saro-Wiwa. Pyagbara spoke yesterday at a news conference at MOSOP secretariat, off Ken Saro-Wiwa (formerly Stadium) Road, Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital.

    The Anglo/Dutch oil giant (Shell) was given quit notice by Ogoni people from the four Local Government Areas of Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme in 1993, while Saro- Wiwa and eight other Ogoni activists were hanged at the Port Harcourt Prisons on November 10, 1995, during the regime of the late Gen. Sani Abacha. Two indigenous oil companies: Belema Oil Producing Limited and Robo-Michael Nigeria Limited, are lobbying to take over from SPDC, whose legal licence will expire in 2019, with Ogoni people yet to agree on the oil firm that will be operating the Oil Mining Lease (OML) 11. Pyagbara said : “We call on the Federal Ministry of Environment to break down the wall of bureaucracy hampering the work of the Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project (HYPREP) to immediately cause the release of necessary funds for the agency to work with.

    The unmitigated delay between approvals and release of funds is killing the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) report implementation process. “There has been an unnecessary, uninformed and highly-funded campaign of calumny against MOSOP and its leadership in recent times, being coordinated by certain self-styled oil companies, led by Belema Oil Producing Limited and Robo-Michael Nigeria Limited. “It is well known that in the last five years, MOSOP has been in the vanguard of the campaign against resumption of oil production in Ogoniland, predicating its resistance on the need for a broad-based discussion among the three critical stakeholders to the Ogoni conflict: the Federal Government of Nigeria, SPDC and the Ogoni community.

    “Robo-Michael Limited has not been granted licence over OML 11. Robo-Michael Lim- Planned resumption of oil exploration: FG is creating crisis in Ogoniland –MOSOP President •Says endorsing another oil company in Ogoni without clean-up amounts to hanging Saro-Wiwa again’ n Bisi OLANIYI, Port Harcourt n ited has interest in OML 11. There had been communication between Robo-Michael Limited and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC). There had been communication between Robo-Michael Limited and NAPIMMS. Let us even take it from the point that preliminary approval was made, subject to the concurrence of the various partners to the NNPC/SPDC Joint Venture.

    Have the various partners concurred now? No. “MOSOP is not opposed to the resumption of oil production in Ogoni, which will take place only after due consultation with the Ogoni people. “Oil companies wanting to do business in Ogoni must await the adoption of the report of the pan-Ogoni, Prof. Ben Naanen (of the University of Port Harcourt) Committee set up to draw a template for oil production in Ogoni, which will give such companies a level-playing ground for their engagement with the Ogoni community. “These are very interesting times in our dear Ogoniland. The oil industry has invaded Ogoniland to corrupt the soul of Ogoni with petrodollars. All the mushroom groups seeking for space in Ogoniland are all funded by the oil industry, particularly Belema Oil Producing Limited and Robo-Michael Limited, to destabilise Ogoni and foist some groups on Ogoni people.

  • Battle for oil splits Ogoni monarchs, MOSOP

    The Movement for Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) has disowned monarchs in Ogoniland, who endorsed an indigenous oil firm, Robo-Michael Limited, to resume oil production in the area.

    It noted that the Supreme Council of Ogoni Traditional Rulers should not have taken sides in the matter.

    MOSOP, yesterday in Port Harcourt, through its Publicity Secretary, Fegalo Nsuke, said: “We wish to state that the endorsement does not in anyway represent the wishes of our (Ogoni) people. We reject and dissociate MOSOP from it.

    “MOSOP reiterates its earlier position that it has not and will not endorse any oil company, be it Robo-Michael Limited, Belema Oil Producing Limited, Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC), Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC) or any other firm, for the purpose of resuming oil production in Ogoniland, until the issues raised by the Ogoni people are addressed through dialogue.

    “No amount of sponsored blackmail will alter our position on the interest of the Ogoni people in the Ogoni oil and on other issues affecting Ogoniland.”

    The organisation said that it was dismayed at the United Kingdom’s appeal court judgment that blocked an attempt to hold Shell accountable for crimes in the Niger Delta.

    It noted that the decision would not exonerate the Anglo/Dutch oil giant from its crimes in the Niger Delta.

    MOSOP said: “We consider the judgment not only as a blow to the aspirations of the Ogoni people and the other people of the Niger Delta, but a bad precedent and a dangerous setback against the hopes of millions of people, who suffer injustice from irresponsible business operations of UK multinationals.

    “The decision is also a call on the people of the Niger Delta to continue to challenge corporate irresponsibility of multinationals like Shell, whose activities threaten the survival of the people, through civil protests.”

  • MOSOP president cries out over imminent crisis in Ogoniland

    MOSOP president cries out over imminent crisis in Ogoniland

    The President of Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP), Chief Legborsi Saro Pyagbara, has cried out over imminent crisis in Ogoniland, following attempts to resume oil production.

    He said in Port Harcourt, Rivers State, at the weekend that no firm would be allowed to take Ogoni oil through the backdoor, without discussion with stakeholders in the four local governments of Ogoniland, namely Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme, especially at a time when clean-up of the polluted Ogoni environment had not been carried out.

    Pyagbara said: “If there is interest in resuming oil production in Ogoniland, the Federal Government and prospective oil companies should initiate a broad-based discussion with representatives from sectors of the Ogoni community. This process of engagement must ensure that the Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) of the Ogoni people is embedded within the framework of any discussion with the oil sector and the government relating to resumption of oil production in Ogoniland, taking into cognisance benefit sharing arrangements and the understanding of a credible environmental impact assessment of proposed oil operations in Ogoniland, to include social and health dimensions, as well as start public consultation process, as is the present industry standard, as recommended by the UNEP report.

    “MOSOP wants to state that it has not endorsed any oil company to take over oil operations in Ogoniland, as this is a process that requires consultation with stakeholders in Ogoni. It is in this regard that MOSOP recently set up a five-man committee to develop a new template and harmonise existing processes for engagement with the government and oil industry, that will be approved by the Ogoni people and presented to any interested party.

    “We are taking this opportunity to inform the people about the imminent crisis and violence the government of Nigeria and Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Ltd (SPDC)/Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC), the oil production arm of the NNPC, plan to inflict on Ogoni people. We want to stress that no oil production can take place in Ogoni without a process of clean-up achieved and broad public discussion about the future of oil operations in Ogoniland.”

    He said he was aware of the efforts of officials of oil companies to resume oil production in Ogoni, with some of them not following due process.

    Pyagbara said: “In recent months, there have been intense and deliberate attempts by the oil industry to return to the Ogoni oilfields through the backdoor, without any broad-based discussion with the Ogoni, with the potential of igniting a blaze of conflict and violence that will skirt this forceful attempt to return to the area. It is especially disappointing, because we have seen divisive efforts to re-enter Ogoni for oil production over the last decade, all of which have ended in failure. In each case, the lack of transparency and attempts to deal with local actors in isolation was the fundamental failure.

    “MOSOP wants to state that the Ogoni issue had been a conflict involving three main parties: the Federal Government, oil industry led by Shell and Ogoni people. Any attempt to deal with any of the matters that had been raised, as a result of the conflict, must involve the three critical actors as stakeholders in a joint project of finding a solution to the Ogoni crisis.

    “In the present attempt, the Federal Government and SPDC have acted in disdain to the Ogoni and forcefully want to give out the Oil Mining Licence (OML) over the Ogoni oil block to a company, without initiating any consultation with the Ogoni community. The Ogoni will resist this attempt.”

    He said while the Ogoni appreciated the Federal Government’s efforts to implement recommendations contained in the report of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) on the environmental assessment of Ogoniland, the people were concerned about the slow pace of the implementation of the report, occasioned by unnecessary bureaucracy, lack of independence and funding, declaring that it was time to break down the bureaucratic bottlenecks that had been hampering the effective implementation of the UNEP report.

    Pyagbara said: “While MOSOP is open to discussions relating to the resumption of oil production in Ogoniland, it rejects the present approach of the Federal Government, through its oil production wing, NNPC, resorting to the old divide-and-rule tactics, which it had used and failed before, in an attempt to cause a renewed polarisation of the Ogoni community and put them against one another. This approach is condemnable, detestable and will be resisted by the Ogoni.

    “It is instructive to note that while the government of Nigeria commissioned the UNEP to carry out an assessment of Ogoniland, whose report had called for a total clean-up and restoration of Ogoniland, it is disappointing that the same government is going about trying to force its way through the backdoor to begin operations in Ogoniland, without addressing the key concerns that had been raised by the Ogoni over the years.”

    The MOSOP president said the Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project (HYPREP) must put in place a process that would address the implementation of emergency measures needed to deal with the critical issues of water, health and infrastructure, as a matter of priority, insisting that Ogoni people could no longer continue to drink the poisoned water that was threatening their lives and those of the future generations.

    He noted that the umbrella organisation of Ogoni people was concerned about reports about the approval for release of $1 billion from the Excess Crude Account (ECA) to fight insurgency in Northeast, saying MOSOP condemned the flagrant display of unabashed discrimination, demonstration of crass insensitivity and neglect of sections of the country.

    Pyagbara said the environmental terrorism going on in Niger Delta was more serious than the Boko Haram insurgency in Northeast, adding that in environmental terrorism, no blood would be spilled and no bone would be broken, yet thousands of human beings, animals, trees and herbs would be dying daily as a result of pollution of the environment.

  • Shell is interested in causing trouble in Ogoni, says MOSOP

    Shell is interested in causing trouble in Ogoni, says MOSOP

    The Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) has accused the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC) of being interested in causing trouble in Ogoniland.

    The umbrella organisation of the Ogoni people called on the Federal Government to hold the Anglo/Dutch oil giant (Shell) responsible for whatever crisis that might occur in Ogoniland and other parts of the crude oil and gas-rich Niger Delta region.

    MOSOP, yesterday in Port Harcourt, in a statement by its Media/Public Affairs Advisor, Bari-ara Kpalap, also condemned the remarks by the Caretaker Chairman of Tai-Ogoni Local Government Council of Rivers State, Mr. Silver Ngba.

    MOSOP said: “That the Tai LG Council Chairman could publicly tell the world how he took part in actions that violated the fundamental human rights of the Ogoni people, including inflicting bodily injuries on innocent, harmless and peaceful Ogoni protesters and giving pecuniary reason for his involvement, is enough for the Rivers State government to remove him (Ngba) from office. We thus call on the Rivers government to sack him forthwith, having dented the image of the Nyesom Wike’s administration. The actions of Ngba no doubt impose a moral burden on the Rivers government.”

  • MOSOP: contaminated drinking water threatening health in Ogoni

    The President of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP), Chief Legborsi Saro Pyagbara, has disclosed that contaminated drinking water is seriously threatening public health in Ogoni in Rivers State.

    He also described the deliberately allowing poisoning and pollution of drinking water in Ogoniland’s four Local Government Areas of Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme, as genocide, while insisting that the polluted water had made the lives of the surviving Ogoni people to be in distress.

    Pyagbara stated these yesterday in Port Harcourt at MOSOP’s public policy dialogue, with the theme: “Situating Ogoni Water Provision and Access: Implications for Improvements in the Post-UNEP Ogoni Environmental Assessment Report Era.”

    The event was attended by Prof. Johnson Nna of the University of Port Harcourt (UNIPORT); the Executive Director of the Institute of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law (IHRHL), Anyakwee Nsirimovu; monarchs and many Ogoni leaders.

    The lead presenter, Dr. Batam Ndegwe, declared that Ogoni people needed water now, while urging government and other stakeholders to take the issue very seriously.

    MOSOP president further stated that Ogoni people had not seen the sense of national emergency to address the water problem in Ogoni, since the August 4, 2011 submission to the then President Goodluck Jonathan in Abuja of the report of the environmental assessment of Ogoniland by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).

    Pyagbara said: “The findings of UNEP on the environmental situation in Ogoniland were indeed humbling and troubling, but its revelation on the extent of water pollution was indeed mind-boggling. It showed hydrocarbon pollution in surface waters throughout the creeks of Ogoniland and up to 8 cm in groundwater that feed drinking wells.

    “Soils were found to have been polluted with hydrocarbons, up to a depth of five metres in 49 observed sites, while Benzene, a known carcinogen (cancer causing), was found in drinking water at a level 900 times above World Health Organisation’s (WHO’s) acceptable standards.

    “In at least ten Ogoni communities where drinking water is contaminated with high level of hydrocarbons, public health is seriously threatened. This is the real crisis. This is the water crisis. In other climes, this would have evoked a sense of national emergency and the government encouraged to take urgent and decisive actions to remedy the situation. But this is Nigeria.”

    MOSOP president also stated that if the integrity of water was desecrated and destroyed, then the people’s lives would equally be destroyed, describing water as the most valuable natural resource of the Ogoni people.

    Pyagbara noted that safety and proper management of water was the most pressing natural resource challenge confronting Ogoni people at the moment.

    He said: “The water situation for Ogoni people is that of a daily struggle, involving pollution, poison, disease, death, hardship and social injustice, with women and children being the most affected.”

  • MOSOP to Fed Govt, Shell: cease talks on resuming oil production in Ogoni

    The Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) has given the Federal Government and the Anglo/Dutch oil giant, Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC), a seven-day ultimatum to cease engagements on resuming oil production in Ogoni.

    It vowed to resist the divide-and-rule tactics of SPDC and the Federal Government, through the Nigeria Petroleum Development Company (NPDC), the oil production arm of the Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

    MOSOP, through its President, Legborsi Saro Pyagbara, yesterday at a news conference at its secretariat, off Ken Saro-Wiwa (formerly Stadium) Road, Port Harcourt, declared that their actions could ignite  conflict and violence that would skirt the forceful attempt to return to in Ogoniland’s four local governments of Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme.

    Shell was sent packing from Ogoniland in 1993. A renowned environmentalist, Ken Saro-Wiwa, and eight activists were hanged at Port Harcourt Prisons on November 10, 1995, during the regime of the late Gen. Sani Abacha.

    Shell’s spokesman Joe Ollor Obari said: “SPDC stopped oil production in Ogoni in1993 and has no plan to return to oil production there.”

    The umbrella organisation of Ogoni people said: “In the course of the Ogoni struggle, over 2,000 were killed by the invading military, 14 Ogoni communities were decimated and destroyed, and many Ogoni people fled into exile. Ogoni refugees are still held up in Benin Republic and seek sanctuaries in other parts of the world.

    “In recent months, there had been intense and deliberate attempts by the oil industry to return to Ogoni oilfields through the back door.”

     

     

  • MOSOP: why Ogoni’ ll not allow resumption of oil production

    The Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) has declared that the people of Khana,  Gokana, Tai and Eleme will not allow resumption of oil production in their areas without broad-based discussion with the masses.

    It called on the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC) to stop attempts to re-enter Ogoniland, through the back door.

    A communiqué  yesterday by the MOSOP President, Legborsi Saro Pyagbara issued at the end of the Ogoni special congress at the Peace and Freedom Centre, Bori-Ogoni, MOSOP said: “To consolidate and stabilise the peace in the area (Ogoni), the Rivers State government is called upon to initiate, as soon as possible, a process for the rehabilitation and reintegration of the repentant cultists.

    “Congress calls on the Rivers State and Federal Governments to increase security facilities in the area (Ogoni), including personnel and equipment for intelligence gathering and immediate response to crimes.

    “Congress charges all sons and daughters of Ogoni, particularly traditional rulers, politicians and the youths, to work assiduously and collaboratively with security agencies to stamp out criminal gangs from our (Ogoni) communities.”

    The umbrella organisation of Ogoni people expressed its appreciation to Rivers Governor Nyesom Wike for extending the amnesty programme to repentant cultists in Ogoni.

    It lauded the roles played by different individuals, organisations, churches and the immediate chairmen of the four Ogoni LGAs in restoring peace in the troubled land.

    MOSOP said: “Congress urges HYPREP (Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project) to make public its work programme, to enable people of Ogoni communities and other stakeholders to follow up on the implementation of the UNEP (United Nations Environment Programme) report.

    “Congress calls on HYPREP to immediately embark on the implementation of emergency measures, particularly as they relate to provision of water, health evaluation of Ogoni people and the training of the youths and women.”