Tag: MOSOP

  • MOSOP accuses  Wike of planned  mayhem in Ogoni

    MOSOP accuses Wike of planned mayhem in Ogoni

    The Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) yesterday alleged plan by the Minister of State for Education, Chief Nyesom Wike, and his supporters in the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to unleash mayhem in the four Ogoni Local Government Areas of Khana, Gokana, Eleme and Tai in Rivers State, today.

    The alleged mayhem ,according to MOSOP ,will be preceded by a protest against the agigation by the Ogoni to produce the next governor of the state.

    Wike,an Ikwerre ,is believed to be interested in the 2015 governorship race.

    MOSOP President , Legborsi Saro Pyagbara, said the Minister was ‘desperate’ to cause trouble in Ogoni which he considers as the only obstacle to his governorship ambition.

    Pyagbara said the alleged planned protest was “ to divide and destabilise, adversely affect cohesion and jeopardise the opportunity for the Ogoni to work with unity of purpose and concertedly to actualise the project 2015, as it relates to adequate political representation in the state.”

    MOSOP warned that the approach “would only serve to hurt the cause of the aspirant (Wike) and deepen Ogoni resolve against political subservience.”

    It added: “ We are also warning the mastermind (Wike) and his internal collaborators to immediately desist from implementing the plan, as the Ogoni people will not fold their arms, while their communities are thrown into turmoil.

    “MOSOP is concerned that this man (Wike) is attempting to export violence into Ogoni, just to scuttle the Ogoni’s ambition, while he is busy organising his community to achieve electoral success.”

    It asked those mobilised for the protest to “rise above parochial and partisan sentiments,” adding: “ What we understand is that the love of the governorship aspirant for Ogoni is hate. Hence, we are warning that Ogoni people will resist every attempt to squeeze us into political oblivion. We also vow that we will act against any cancerous stand against our collective interest, be it internal or external.”

    Chief Wike could not be reached yesterday for his reaction.

    Wike’s spokesman, Simeon Nwakaudu,did not respond to several calls to his line .

  • MOSOP warns politicians, supporters on bitterness, intolerance

    MOSOP warns politicians, supporters on bitterness, intolerance

    The Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) has warned Ogoni politicians and their supporters against politics of hatred, bitterness, intolerance and acrimony.

    It urged them to unite and work for the people’s interest.

    The group described as needless and insensitive, the current debacle on resource control and derivation.

    MOSOP yesterday issued a 13-point communique at the end of a congress of Ogoni people, held at the Peace and Freedom Centre, Bori, the traditional headquarters of the Ogoni and the seat of Khana Local Government Area of Rivers State.

    It was signed by its President, Legborsi Saro Pyagbara.

    The congress was attended by over 3,000 participants, including MOSOP leaders and representatives of its constituent organisations, chiefs, farmers, traders, professionals, politicians, youths, women and other constitutionally-eligible participants.

    Reports were received at the congress from the MOSOP president. The recent developments affecting Ogoniland were reviewed.

    The communiqué reads: “The congress reiterated that it stands by MOSOP’s position that communities should be given 100 per cent control over their resources and pay the necessary taxes to the Federal Government

    “Congress hailed MOSOP and its supporters for the steps taken so far in the actualisation of the desires of the Ogoni people to produce the next governor, to enhance adequate political representation and fairness in the country.

    “Congress decried in the strongest terms, the purported radio jingle emanating from a fake ‘Ogoni Ethnic Nationality’ and stressed that it is the handiwork of desperate Ogoni politicians, whose stock has already fallen on the Ogoni Market, working in alliance with their outside collaborators to confuse and derail the Ogoni dream.”

    MOSOP lauded Ogoni people and their friends for their support for the movement, resulting in the near total agreement recorded on most issues being championed by the organisation, on behalf of Ogoni people.

    It enjoined them to sustain the zeal and commitment, stressing that the tasks ahead would be enormous and challenging, requiring concerted efforts, anchored on unity of purpose.

    The communiqué said: “The congress urged the Federal Government and delegates attending the National Conference to review the current list of states being proposed and ensure that Bori State is included in the list of recommended states to be created. Anything short of Bori State inclusion will force the Ogoni people to seek other ways of expressing their right to self determination and political autonomy.

    “Congress condemned the stunning and continuing failure of the Federal Government to set up a proper process for the implementation of the recommendations of the environmental study of Ogoniland and called on Ogoni people to join the non-violent protest being organised by MOSOP to demonstrate the anger of the Ogoni people against the Federal Government’s stance.

    “Congress mandated MOSOP to intensify its internationalisation of the campaign for the clean-up and restoration of the Ogoni environment, including invoking the provisions of international environmental and human rights laws, to hold Nigeria accountable to her misdeeds against the Ogoni people.”

    The people also expressed regret at the recent cult crisis in some communities in Ogoni, while admonishing the people, especially the youths, not to mortgage their future by submitting to cult violence and manipulations by external mastermind to create conflicts in the area.

    The congress urged the people to be committed to ensuring that such disturbance did not reoccur anywhere in Ogoni land, describing the area as globally recognised for non-violent and peaceful advocacy, noting that they could not afford at this time to renege on the position.

    Ogoni people called on monarchs in the area to redouble their efforts in ensuring and promoting peaceful engagements in their domains.

    The congress lauded MOSOP for the steps being taken to promote the development of the Ogoni languages and enjoined members of the Ogoni language committee to be committed to the task that had been given to them.

  • Ogoni leaders give conditions for oil exploitation

    Ogoni leaders give conditions for oil exploitation

    Some leaders of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) have insisted the federal government must clean the community of pollution before the resumption of crude oil exploitation in Ogoniland.

    They lamented that Ogoni people are dying from cancer-induced Benzene in the area.

    The Secretary-General of MOSOP in the United States of America, Michael Akoka; the spokesman of the Ogoni umbrella organisation, Bari-ara Kpalap and the National Coordinator of the Ogoni Solidarity Front (OSF), Celestine AkpoBari, stated these yesterday in Port Harcourt, Rivers State.

    They appeared as guests on a phone-in programme, viewpoint of Rhythm 93.7 FM radio.

    The Ogoni leaders also noted that to ensure fairness, justice and equity, the next Rivers governor should be from Ogoni.

    They pointed out that Ogoniland has not produced a governor, deputy governor, chief judge or speaker since the creation of Rivers State on May 27, 1967.

    MOSOP’s President, Legborsi Pyagbara, had declared that the Ogoni people would have nothing to do with the Hydrocarbon Pollution Restoration Project (HYPREP) while insisting on full implementation of the recommendations contained in the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) report on Ogoniland through the environmental assessment.

    Pyagbara reiterated that the refusal of the federal government to implement the UNEP report would make Ogoni people and their friends to protest in Abuja soonest.

    Kpalap said: “Ogoni people never embraced HYPREP. We want the establishment of Ogoniland Environmental Restoration Authority as recommended by UNEP.

    “We are also calling for the creation of an Environmental Restoration Fund for Ogoniland with initial capital of $1 billion, which will be used only for activities dealing specifically with the environmental restoration of Ogoniland, as clearly stated in the UNEP report.

    Akpobari accused the federal government and the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC) of insincerity on Ogoni clean up and environmental restoration.

    He reiterated that SPDC had indicated that releasing the $1 billion would not be a problem, but there must be legal framework and a body to manage the fund judiciously.

    Ogoni people in the four Rivers State local government areas of Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme sent SPDC packing from their land in 1993.

    Shell is yet to return to Ogoniland.

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo initiated the UNEP’s environmental assessment of Ogoniland in 2006 to address years of pollution, neglect, marginalisation and environmental degradation.

    The initiative was well supported by the late President Umaru Yar’Adua while the 262-page main report was issued on August 4, 2011 and received in Abuja by President Jonathan on August 12, 2011.

    On receiving the UNEP report, Jonathan set up a Presidential Implementation Committee (PIC) headed by the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke.

    In Ogale-Eleme, Eleme LGA of Ogoniland in Rivers State, the UNEP report reveals that the water contains cancer-causing Benzene, which is 900 times the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) standards for water contamination, thereby requiring urgent attention.

    UNEP also states that the sustainable environmental restoration of Ogoniland will take up to 20 years to achieve and will need coordinated efforts on the part of government agencies at all levels.

  • Ogoni must produce governor, MOSOP insists

    Ogoni must produce governor, MOSOP insists

    The Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) and some groups have insisted that Ogoni must produce Rivers governor in 2015. They said allowing somebody from any of the four Ogoni local governments of Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme to emerge as Governor Rotimi Amaechi’s successor would ensure equity, justice and fairness. MOSOP’s President Legborsi Saro Pyagbara, who spoke yesterday in Port Harcourt, insisted that the group had not endorsed any candidate. He said the area producing the next governor was non-negotiable. The groups backing an Ogoni governorship in 2015 include Ikwerre/Etche People’s Forum, Rivers Voice, Niger Delta Renaissance, Council of Orashi Ethnic Nationality, Kalabari Stakeholders Forum, Ijaw Justice Forum, Hausa Community Welfare Association and Opobo Democratic Movement. Others are the Rivers Youths Mandate, Obolo Consultative Forum, Kalabari People’s Assembly and Rivers Democratic Congress.

  • Rivers under siege, say Pro-Amaechi group, APC, MOSOP

    Rivers under siege, say Pro-Amaechi group, APC, MOSOP

    The pro-Governor Rotimi Amaechi’s Save Rivers Movement (SRM), the Rivers chapter of the All Progressives Congress (APC) and the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni Peoples (MOSOP) have described Rivers Commissioner of Police Mbu Joseph Mbu, as a liar.

    According to them, the state is under siege.

    SRM, APC and MOSOP said yesterday that Mbu did not say the truth on Sunday’s police shooting of Senator Magnus Abe.

    The Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Rivers chapter, however, accused Amaechi and his allies of desperation.

    The Chairman of the SRM, Aholu Charles, told reporters in Port Harcourt that there was no official communication to hold the group’s Obio/Akpor Local Government’s inauguration at the Rivers State College of Arts and Science, which was disrupted by the police.

    The SRM said: “What the police did yesterday (on Sunday) was callous, an affront to the lofty guarantees provided by Chapter 4 of the constitution of Nigeria. It is barbaric; it is simply an attempt to replace democracy with autocracy. It is simply an attempt to subvert the rights of Nigerians and an attempt to undermine the Rivers man.

    “Precisely on the 7th of January, 2014, the SRM notified the police authorities and we have a copy of that notification, of our rally in Obio/Akpor and Khana local government areas and it is stamped received.

    “The assertion by the CP that there was no form of communication of our programme is not only false; it is an attempt to stop us from legitimately pursuing our objectives, as provided under the Constitution of the SRM and enjoying our rights as guaranteed by the Constitution of Nigeria.

    “We want to state that the issue of police permit has been settled. It is not an issue that is in dispute. We do not need the permission of the police to hold rallies. What we did was to notify the police of our activities, so that they could provide us with security. We held our rally in Eleme and we notified them. The crime of the notification is such that they (police) did not respond.

    “There is no official letter from the police to say you can hold your rallies, you cannot hold your rallies. All they did was to mobilise their men to the venue of the event and disrupt the rally. So, that assertion cannot hold water.”

    MOSOP, through its President, Legborsi Saro Pyagbara, said: “We condemn, in strong terms, the highhandedness and excessive use of force by the police on members of the SRM, which led to the shooting of the Senator representing Rivers Southeast Senatorial District, Senator Magnus Abe, an Ogoni.

    “We had hoped that politics in this dispensation will be played with civility, decency and devoid of political violence. The current level of political intolerance in the country and in Rivers State, in particular, is deeply troubling and condemnable.

    “Recognising that the Ogoni people made so much sacrifice for democracy, which is being enjoyed in the country today and for which we have not benefited commensurably, we deplore the situation where any Ogoniman would become the first victim to be sacrificed on the altar of political acrimony or political violence in Rivers State.

    “We consider the action of the police as unprofessional, insensitive and an unfortunate demonstration of the growing regime of impunity in the country, which we must all rise up to tame, if democracy must survive. No matter what might have happened, the SRM or Senator Abe did not merit such level of cruelty.

    “Never again shall we allow the blood of any Ogoni person, irrespective of political persuasions, political parties or affiliations, to be spilled needlessly in the name of politics.”

    The umbrella organisation of all Ogoni people also demanded that the Inspector-General of Police (IGP), Mohammed Abubakar, and the Federal Government should urgently probe the shooting, with a view to bringing the perpetrators to justice

    MOSOP called on Ogoni youths to remain calm.

    The APC, through its Interim Rivers Chairman, Chief Davies Ibiamu Ikanya, accused Mbu of lying, “in his desperation to minimize the public outrage that had rightly trailed his unfortunate actions”.

    The main opposition party said: “We find it necessary to correct the wrong account of events given by CP Mbu, including his claim that we applied for police permit for most of our rallies, but failed to do so for the Obio/Akpor rally. This is a blatant lie.

    “We have never applied for police permit for any of our rallies, but for police protection. We applied for police protection for the Obio/Akpor rally, but instead of granting our request, CP Mbu sent his men to disrupt the rally and kill our people, apparently on the orders of his sponsors in Abuja.

    “We are not surprised. Since CP Mbu is a key member of the PDP, which has been behaving like a wounded lion, since losing the strategic state of Rivers. Mbu does not deserve the uniform and rank he is wearing. He has demonstrated his crass ignorance of the relevant sections of the Constitution that give Nigerians the power to associate freely, without any need for police permit. He should hide his face in shame.

    “CP Mbu is a security risk in Rivers State. He is an agent of destabilisation. Since the IGP can no longer call him to order, we hereby plead with the National Security Adviser (NSA), Col. Sambo Dasuki (rtd.), to intervene and ensure CP Mbu’s redeployment. He should leave our State, as his presence in Rivers portends evil.

    “We urge CP Mbu and his sponsors to pray and fast seriously that Senator Magnus Abe gets better, as we cannot predict what will happen, if he loses his life by the misguided stand of CP Mbu, the politician.”

    The APC said if the Sunday’s show of shame by the police was a test run on what to expect during the 2015 general elections, Nigeria is in danger in the hands of politicians so desperate to use the police to intimidate Nigerians.

    The PDP, through the Special Adviser to the Chairman on Media, Pastor Jerry Needam, however, noted that the attack on some sections of the Gokana Local Government (Ogoni) council secretariat yesterday by angry youths, vindicated its earlier position that the shooting of Abe was dramatised and full of fictions.

    It said: “We note with bitterness, the level of desperation on the side of Governor Amaechi and his allies, which led them to hire thugs to cause obstructions to movement and activities along the Ogoni axis of the East-West Road early today (yesterday), in a quest to draw attention to the alleged shooting of the Senator (Abe) yesterday (on Sunday) in Port Harcourt.”

  • Rivers: Ogonis insist on governorship

    Rivers: Ogonis insist on governorship

    •Demand implementation of UNEP Report

    The Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP), an umbrella body for all Ogoni people, is demanding the Governorship of Rivers State in 2015 and insists that the UNEP report must be implemented.

    The people made the demand yesterday in an address presented by MOSOP President Legborsi Pyagbara, during the 21st anniversary celebration of Ogoni Day at Bori, the Headquarters of Khana LGA and ancestral home of the Ogoni.

    The day, first marked in 1993, is commemorated annually in line with the Ogoni’s quest for justice, socio-economic and political emancipation.

    Pyagbara explained that UNEP submitted its report on the 4th of August, 2011 with far reaching observations but lamented that over two years after, the Federal Government under President Jonathan has failed to implement it.

    He described the non-implementation of the report as genocide against Ogoni people insisting that the series of non-violent actions by Ogonis to push for its implementation will continue.

    He protested a situation whereby the people continue to suffer exclusion, and pleaded with the country’s political class to provide the needed platform for an Ogoni to rule Rivers from 2015.

    “The lesson from struggles for freedom globally, is that as you show signs of victory in your cause, opponents and wicked authorities will intensify efforts to divide you. As we march towards 2015, let us not allow anybody to use us to inflict violence on one another in the name of any party,” he said.

    Also speaking, Governor Chibuike Amaechi praised the unity and peace in Ogoniland and urged them to resist the pull down syndrome.

    Represented by Senator Magnus Abe, he decried the non-implementation of UNEP report by the PDP government under President Jonathan.

    He pledged that the APC will implement the report if allowed to govern the country.

    President Supreme Council of Ogoni traditional rulers, King Godwin Gininwa represented by the Mene Bua-Bagha, Mene Suanu Baridam urged the Ogonis not to relent in their quest for freedom irrespective of political affiliation and sued for the implementation of UNEP report.

  • MOSOP orders mass action over UNEP Report

    The Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) has commenced peaceful and non-violent direct mass actions to protest the “callous” refusal of the Federal Government to implement the recommendations contained in the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) report on Ogoni land.

    The MOSOP President, Legborsi Saro Pyagbara, in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital, expressed shock over the attitude of the officials of the Federal Government on the UNEP report, which he said was essential to transform Ogoni land.

    The UNEP’s environmental assessment in Ogoni land was initiated by the ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo in 2006 and supported by the late President Umaru Yar’Adua, with the report submitted to President Goodluck Jonathan in Abuja in August, 2011. The far-reaching recommendations are yet to be implemented.

    Anglo/Dutch oil giant, the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC) was sent packing from Ogoni land in 1993, while the renowned environmentalist, Ken 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. The oil firm is yet to return to Ogoni land, 20 years after.

    MOSOP said: “The non-implementation of the recommendations contained in the UNEP report has made Ogoni an environmental wasteland and a dead zone.

    “We will like to re-affirm our position that the implementation of the UNEP report, in strict conformity to its recommendations, is non-negotiable.

    “Tying restoration of our environment to commencement of oil production in Ogoni, as being touted, is not only infantile, but also insensitive, most unfortunate and will be greatly resisted.”

     

     

     

     

  • MOSOP urged to suspend protest

    The President of the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP), Mr. Legborsi Pyagbara, yesterday urged members to suspend the peaceful protest and the blockage of the Port Harcourt Refinery and Eleme Petrochemical.

    He said this was to allow the Federal Government look at the effect of Tuesday’s protest on the economy.

    Pyagbara said the protest became necessary because the Ogoni would no longer fold their arms and allow the Federal Government to play politics with the UNEP report.

    Said he: “Tuesday’s protest sent the refinery workers out of work, including other company’s workers. We are suspending the action now to enable the Federal Government consider the effect of Tuesday’s protest.

    “We will resume if we discover that government is adamant. We just pray that the Federal Government will act fast before the situation gets out of hand.”

  • MOSOP begins rallies to force Fed Govt to implement UNEP Report

    MOSOP begins rallies to force Fed Govt to implement UNEP Report

    THE Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP) is commencing non-violent actions, with Saturday’s expiration of the ultimatum given to the administration of President Goodluck Jonathan to fully implement the recommendations contained in the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) report on Ogoniland.

    The umbrella organisation of Ogoni people also accused the Federal Government of practising genocide against the peace-loving people.

    The President of MOSOP, Legborsi Saro Pyagbara, spoke in Bori, the traditional headquarters of Ogoni people and seat of Khana LGA of Rivers State, at the 18th anniversary of the hanging of a renowned environmentalist, Ken Saro-Wiwa, and other Ogoni activists.

    Saro-Wiwa and eight other Ogoni activists were hanged at Port Harcourt Prisons on November 10, 1995, during the regime of the late Gen. Sani Abacha, while the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC) was sent packing from Ogoniland in 1993 and yet to return.

    The UNEP report was released on August 4, 2011 and submitted to President Jonathan in Abuja on August 11 of the same year, but yet to be implemented.

    Pyagbara stated that the 18th anniversary was to honour the heroes of Ogoni struggle: Saro-Wiwa, John Kpuinen, Chief Edward Kobani, Chief Albert Badey, Chief S.N. Orage, Dr. Barinem Kiobel, Chief T.B.Orage, Nordu Eawo, Paul Levura, Saturday Dobee, Felix Nuate, Baribor Bera, Daniel Gbokoo and Dr. Garrick B. Leton.

    MOSOP said: “On August 4, 2011, UNEP released the report of its multi-year study of the Ogoni environment, which had presented in some scientific detail, the destruction of the Ogoni environment and the unprecedented pollution of the Ogoni water system.

    “The stunning silence of the Nigerian government two years and some months after the release of the report had confirmed to us that the government, as alleged by our heroes some years ago, had been practising the crime of genocide against the Ogoni people.

    “This government wants us to continue to drink the poisoned water and die. This government wants us to continue to breathe the poisoned air and die and this government wants us to continue to live on the polluted lands and die.

    “The Dr. Goodluck Jonathan administration is presiding over the final liquidation of the Ogoni nationality and we would not accept it. As the ultimatum we issued to the Nigerian government expired yesterday (Saturday), in the coming days ahead, we invite you to join us as we embark on series of non-violent actions to demonstrate our total disapproval of the government’s handling of the implementation of the report of the environmental study of Ogoniland.

    “We wish to also inform you that we would be invoking the provisions of the Genocide Convention against the Nigerian government. We must all be ready to challenge those who are daily erecting barriers to our sense of common humanity and equality and this is the time.”

    The Ogoni umbrella organisation also reiterated that a few months ago, it launched the Ogoni Project 2015, which it said called on the political parties and other sympathetic groups in the country to give the Ogoni people the opportunity to produce the next governor of Rivers State.

    After a thorough analysis of the current situation in Rivers state, particularly on the issue of political marginalisation, which it described as one of the issues for which their leaders paid the supreme price, MOSOP stated that it decided to launch this campaign to reduce the level of Ogoni marginalisation in Rivers state, pending when the people would have their own state.

    MOSOP said: “The occasion of this anniversary is also an opportunity to remind our politicians and political office holders that during this period, regardless of political affiliations, we must do everything within our powers to ensure that we strive for unity and peace among our people.

    “The bickering and divisions among the political class must end for the common good of the Ogoni people. The spirit of Ogoni, the entire Ogoni people and our heroes that we remember today (yesterday) expect the political leaders to demonstrate that they stand for the overriding interest of the Ogoni people, by speaking up for them and joining them in their campaigns.

    “This remembrance provides us with yet another unique opportunity to unite in ways that we have never before. We may disagree sometimes over strategies and views, but there is no question that we should be able to unite on the most crucial points that drove our fallen colleagues to draw up the Ogoni Bill of Rights.”

    The Ogoni umbrella organisation also urged the marginalised people in the four Rivers LGAs of Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme, to identify and recommit themselves to the core values for which their heroes laid down their lives.

    While also speaking, the representative of the Rivers Southeast Senatorial District, Magnus Ngei Abe, described the non-implementation of the recommendations contained in the UNEP report, as an act of wickedness against the people of Ogoni by the Jonathan’s administration.

    Abe revealed that all the efforts made by the elected representatives of the people of Ogoni to get the Federal Government to implement the UNEP report had not been successful.

    The Senator said: “I have said it before and I want to repeat it here that the non-implementation of UNEP report is nothing other than wickedness on the part of the Federal Government. I want to acknowledge the contributions of all our heroes, those that marched, those that were killed, those that shouted, those that wept, those that carried placards.

    “Before now, when I talked, I was saying it was the Rivers state government that made the UNEP report possible, but I have come to realise that that is not entirely correct. We worked the physical work as at the time when the UNEP report was being put together, but without the struggle of all our heroes past, the Federal Government would not have even called UNEP to come and do anything in Ogoniland. So, every Ogoni person has contributed to the realisation of the UNEP report.

    “What has happened to the report? Before UNEP began its assignment, the late President Umaru Yar’Adua called us to a meeting in Government House, Port Harcourt and we agreed and gave a condition that we would not allow the Federal Government to come and do a study for the sake of a study, that we would write an undertaking that once the report was out, it would be implemented.

    “President Yar’Adua directed the then Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF) to write the letter. One week after the meeting, the Federal Government wrote to promise Ogoni people that the report would be implemented once it was ready.”

    Abe also lamented that when the UNEP report was eventually released, Yar’Adua had died, but it was submitted to Jonathan, without any action taken on it for over two years, which he described as very unfortunate.

    a peaceful way of prodding the government into dialogue and action. The Bill noted that although crude oil had been extracted from Ogoniland from 1958 they had received nothing in return.

    “A total clean up of Ogoni land will take a life time or about thirty years at the least. That is the length of time UNEP estimates it would require to clean up the water bodies in the territory. And it would require an additional five (5) years to clean up the land. How is that a lifetime? Well, life expectancy in the Niger Delta stands at approximately forty-one years.

    “At the eve of the first anniversary of the presentation of the UNEP report, the Federal Government hurriedly cobbled up an outfit incongruously named Hydrocarbons Pollution Restoration Project (HYPREP). The project was set up basically to hoodwink the Ogoni people into thinking that action was being taken to implement the UNEP report. A year after the setting up of HYPREP under the Ministry of Petroleum Resources – a major polluter of Ogoni land – the only visible acts of implementation of the UNEP report has been the planting of sign posts at some places informing the people that their environment is contaminated and that they should keep off. You could almost laugh, but this is sad and serious. Keep off your environment! No options given. The people still drink the polluted waters and farm the polluted lands. Seafood is still being scrounged from the polluted waters and community people still process their foods in the crude-coated creeks.”

    On October 4, the people vowed to compel the Federal Government to implement the report . At a sensitisation rally in Baen, Khana Local Government Area of the State, the President of KAGOTE, made up of Khana, Gokana Tai and Eleme Local Government Areas, Dr. Peter Medee, said: “Whether the Federal Government likes it or not, we will force them through legal means to implement the recommendations of UNEP on Ogoni environment, ” adding “What is the Federal Government doing, two years after the report was submitted? Federal Government ignored the report so that Ogoni people will all die.

    “We will not support any government that is wishing the people of Ogoni death. The minister of Petroleum, Deizani Alison-Madueke, has decided to torment the people of Ogoni. Tell her that if UNEP report is not implemented, she will fail.”

    He said the Ogoni people would continue to support the administration of Governor Rotimi Amaechi and everything that will lift Ogoniland higher. “We are ready to fight for Amaechi because he is fighting the cause of the Ogoni 2015 project and bringing development to us,” he said. . The Public Relations Officer, Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP), Legborsi Esaen, declared that no amount of threat would stop the people of Ogoni ethnic nationality from producing the next governor of the state.

    “We have spoken; it is project 2015 and no going back on that. We are used to security intimidation but we are not going back on 2015,” he said.

    The Deputy National President, Nigeria Civil Service Union (NCSU), Menele Nzidee, said those opposed to the administration of Governor Rotimi Amaechi were doing so because of the governor’s resolve to have an Ogoni as a successor come 2015.

    Rivers State Commissioner for Works, Chief Victor Giadom, said construction work would soon commence on the Saakpenwa-Bori-Kono road project, which was recently awarded by the Amaechi-led administration. He added that the present administration in the state was committed to ensuring that development gets to the nooks and crannies of Ogoni land.

    Chairman of Khana Local Government Area, Gregory Nwidam, in an earlier remarks, said the rally was to sensitise the people of Khana on government programmes, insisting that elected officers from Ogoniland have not failed the people as he assured that they will continue to stand by the administration of Amaechi in the state.

     

     

     

  • MOSOP writes Jonathan on UNEP report

    The Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) has written President Goodluck Jonathan, urging him to ensure the implementation of the recommendations contained in the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) report on Ogoni land.

    It also enjoined the scrapping of the Hydrocarbon Pollution Restoration Project (HYPREP).

    MOSOP said a proper statutory mechanism to oversee the Ogoni clean-up and the establishment of the Ogoni Environmental Restoration Fund, as recommended by UNEP, should be put in place.

    The MOSOP President, Legborsi Saro Pyagbara, yesterday made copies of the letter available to reporters in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State capital.

    He said Ogoni people had faced instalment death, occasioned by the ongoing pollution.

    The UNEP report was submitted to President Jonathan in Abuja in August 2011, but the recommendations are yet to be implemented.

    The umbrella organisation of the Ogoni reiterated that it started a struggle in 1990, aimed at rescuing the Ogoni from the vagaries of political marginalisation, economic strangulation and environmental degradation, which it said had reduced the Ogoni to the lowest rung of the society.

    In the course of the struggle, the Ogoni, according to MOSOP, lost some of their best human and material resources, including the renowned environmentalist, the late Ken Saro-Wiwa, hanged with eight other Ogoni activists on November 10, 1995 at the Port Harcourt Prisons, during the regime of the late Gen. Sani Abacha.

    The Anglo/Dutch oil giant, the Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Ltd (SPDC), was sent packing from Ogoni land in 1993 and yet to return to the area comprising Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme Local Government Councils.

    MOSOP said: “It was with great relief and appreciation that the Ogoni received the news of the invitation extended by the Federal Government to UNEP in 2006, to do a study of the Ogoni environment, after decades of unsustainable oil exploration.

    “The environmental issue is one of the tripods of core issues in the ongoing Ogoni struggle for justice. The UNEP report released on August 4, 2011 validated earlier claims of ecological disaster by the Ogoni against Shell.

    “It (UNEP report) showed hydrocarbon pollution in surface waters throughout the creeks of Ogoni land and up to 8 cm in groundwater that feeds drinking wells. Soils were found to have been polluted with hydrocarbons, up to a depth of five metres in 49 observed sites.

    “Benzene, a known carcinogen, was found in drinking water at a level 900 times above World Health Organisation (WHO) acceptable standards. In at least 10 Ogoni communities, where drinking water is contaminated with high levels of hydrocarbons, public health is threatened.

    “The UNEP report was a confirmation of the death sentence that had been imposed on generations of Ogoni people since the beginning of oil exploitation in the area that needed to be upturned with political will and a sense of justice on the part of the President.

    “In climes, where lives are treated equally and people entitled to the same respect, the situation in Ogoni would have imposed a sense of national emergency on the part of government, in terms of its response to the environmental crisis.

    “We had expected a type of national mobilisation, akin to what the President Barack Obama administration coordinated in the wake of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill incident in the USA. Unfortunately, this has not been our portion in Ogoni land.