Tag: Niger-Delta

  • Niger Delta Report causes changes at Benin Musuem

    Niger Delta Report causes changes at Benin Musuem

    A Niger Delta Report cover story on the state of the Benin Musuem has brought about changes in the monument. Governor Adams Oshiomhole visited the edifice after reading the report.

    Permanent Secretary of the Edo State Ministry of Environment and Public Utilities, Major Lawrence Loye, who faulted the report was chided by the governor.

    He was fixated and speechless during the visit of Oshiomhole to the Benin Museum after the Niger Delta Report published a report about the unkempt surroundings of the Benin Museum ground. Fun seekers had in the report lambasted the state government for spending a fortune to beautify the Museum ground only to leave it to rot away.

    The verdict of Oshiomhole to Major Loye was “You have abandoned your duty.”

    Millions of naira was spent to erect a musical water fountain and provide an artificial garden at the Museum which is a located at the heart of Benin City. It was renamed Oba Ovoramen Square.

    The Museum surrounding became an eyesore as the artificial garden was overgrown with weed. Parts of the perimeter fence had fallen due to vehicles crashing into them.

    Oshiomhole did not hide his displeasure as he lampooned Major Loye for allowing infrastructure at the place to rot away.

    The governor was taken aback when Loye informed him that officials of the Oredo Local Government promised to erect the broken fence.

    An angry Oshiomhole said: “Perm Sec, you guys have decided to abandon your work. Is this now a local government territory?”

    Loye replied: “We had problem with the museum people. They are on strike and they said we want to take over their property. We are still in court.”

    “Did the judge tell you not to maintain it and you gave this part to the museum for maintenance?” Oshiomhole quipped.

    “We are in court sir,” Loye said.

    The governor queried again, “But is there any injunction preventing you from cutting the grass?”

    “Those in charge of beautification are supposed to clear it and they have started,” Loye said.

    “Look at this place, the heart of Benin City. You have no policy to deal with those who destroy the fence.”

    Loye explained: “We don’t know where the vehicles are. Nobody has been able to tell us where the vehicles are.”

    Oshiomhole was peeved when he walked inside the museum and saw a bush bar and restaurant erected at a place where some structures were pulled down.

    Oshiomhole said: “Have we not removed illegal structure here? Who gave out the permission? We remove something and you bring them back. Who gave you authority to allow illegal structure here? Why did you return them back? Is this place meant to be a mama put? Remove this thing within 24 hours.

    “This is forest. You are making conflicting statements. You have the powers to give out that place but you don’t have the powers to clean this place. Does that make sense to you. Don’t make excuses. You guys have abandoned this place.”

    Loye replied that the bar was meant for relaxation.

    Some officials of the National Commission for Museums and Monuments, who were overjoyed by the governor’s visit, blamed the state intervention in the affairs of the museum ground as responsible for the unkempt premises.

    The officials, who pleaded anonymity, said Oshiomhole kicked against closing the museum gate at 5pm.

    According to the official, “We used to do green tourism and control when people come in here. Governor Oshiomhole came and asked me to leave the museum gate open. The government would give the place out and we will be cleaning the mess.”

    A visit to the place showed that much of the overgrown weeds have been cleared, and the bush bar removed.

    Before the Oshiomhole administration, the museum mainly attracted tourists, who came to sight the huge collection of archaeological, historical and ethnographical artifacts on display. Much of the place was also used for recreational activities during festive periods and public holidays.

    However, as part of  Oshiomhole’s urban renewal project, the museum was given a facelift – but not without a battle on who owns the land. Oshiomhole demolished some supposed illegal structures erected on the Benin Museum ground to make way for the beautiful garden planted along and built a water fountain, which changed the landscape of not only the museum ground, but the scene around the famous Ring Road. The cost of the resuscitation and fountain is believed to be over N200m. The water fountain was erected at a place where a disused, smelly pond once laid.

    The now beautiful museum ground attracts thousands of visitors weekly. It was reception venue of choice for newly wedded couples, who not only go there for the social activities of after-wedding reception, but to have the scenic beauty of the surrounding engraved in their wedding albums. Families and visitors to the city and residents choose the museum and its expansive ground place for their picnic outings. The sights of gaily dressed children running and playing around, beautiful couple and old holding hands and swaying to the silent music of their company, became a common sight.

    But things fell apart after some time. Hard times fell upon the museum ground once again. The sordid sights around the once beautiful ground were reminiscent of the pre-Oshiomhole. Although the beauty remains, the museum ground was like a pretty woman aging ungracefully. Our check revealed a place badly in need of repair and maintenance. Large part of the lawn where visitors used to sit for relaxation was overgrown with weed. The artificial rocky garden constructed around the water fountain was also badly in need. The  sparklingly blue water spurting from tiny needles  became algae-ridden pool.

    The report on this sad state of the facilities around the musuem in this pullout was what led Oshiomhole to visit and caused changes there.

  • How to achieve peace in Niger Delta

    How to achieve peace in Niger Delta

    The Niger Delta Students’ Union Government (NDSUG) has held a symposium on how militancy could be stopped in the oil-producing region. The event featured inauguration of the union’s leaders. EMMANUEL AHANONU (NYSC Enugu) reports.  

    How can the government ensure a lasting peace in the Niger Delta? It is through quality education for the youth. The answer was given at the one-day seminar organised by the Niger Delta Students’ Union Government (NDSUG) with the theme: Education as panacea for peace building in the Niger Delta.

    The event, held on Saturday at Omasi Hall in Bellwood Hotel in Asaba Delta State, also marked the end of tenure of Tonbara Yalah-led administration of the union and inauguration for new executive.

    Dignitaries at the event include Comrade Edward Odum, the coordinator of Nigerian Youth and Community Development Association, who was the guest speaker.

    In his lecture, Odum noted that quality education was key to building a sustainable Niger Delta. He explained how discovery of oil in Olorbiri in 1958 turned “blessing to the region” to “story of murder and restiveness”, which he said led to the unjust killing of Ken Saro Wiwa and others activists in the Niger Delta.

    He said: “Certain lines in the national anthem should guide our activities to bring back peace in the Niger Delta. This means that youths are to commit totally their energies and education to bring about the desired peace, which would bring about togetherness. If the youths speak in one voice and in unity, there would be nothing we cannot achieve. But quality education remains the challenge to achieve this aim.

    Odum said students’ union should be a pressure group that would help the government to respond to the people’s wishes through populist policies that would bring peace and development to the society. He said students must rise up to educate the government on policies that would attract development because of their voting strength.

    He urged the students to acquire good education to make them prepare for the future, adding: “It is important to state that ignorance is a disease and every disease needs cure. The cure of ignorance is education, which would make you to study issues rather than resorting to self-help. Therefore, quality education is key for peace building in Niger Delta because an ignorant man only knows how to destroy everything.”

    The highpoint of the event was the inauguration of the leaders of the union, which was conducted amidst excitement.

    In his acceptance speech, Obada Akpomiemie, the new NDSUG president, pledged to use the union as a platform to bring educational opportunities to Niger Delta students. He said: “We pledge to transform the union to be a development partner in the country. This transformation will be achieved by harnessing the creative energies of students of Niger Delta origin and make available to them lofty educational opportunities. It is also a great responsibility on our head to achieve these objectives to make our region free of violence.

    “We will introduce programmes and policies that will benefit students and improve their standards of living on campuses. Attention will be focused on liaising with all necessary organisation and government bodies to creating greater access to quality education.”

    Obada promised to step up efforts to reach out to governors in Niger Delta to pay students’ bursary and scholarship.

    The pioneer president, Genesis Idikibiebuma, advised the executive members to maintain unity within the union and urged them to improve on the programmes of their predecessors.

    The outgoing President, Tonbara, rendered account of his stewardship, noting that his administration created job opportunities for graduates from the region. He handed over the union’s bus and other property in his care to the president.

    The union legal adviser, Mr Kalada Nonju, noted that the constitution of union was not properly written, urging the new leaders to amend it. He urged Obada to carefully set his priorities and avoid pitfalls that marred the tenure of the last administration.

    Before the event came to an end, a drama played out when Tonbara prostrated before Obada to pledge his loyalty to his successor. Obada reciprocated, rolling on the floor.

    The drama happened before dignitaries at event, including Commissioner for Ijaw Affair, Dr. Felix Tuodolo, who chaired the occasion, Cross River State Secretary of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP), Hon Godwin Ettah, and Hon. Emmanuel Oruebo, Special Assistant to Minister of Sports, among others.

  • Peace retreat for stakeholders in Niger Delta

    Partners for Peace in Niger Delta (P4P), a network of civil society groups that are in the forefront of peace-building activities, in conjunction with Foundation for Partnership Initiatives in Niger Delta (PIND), has evolved a new strategy aimed at mainstreaming peace and conflict resolution as core values during the forthcoming general elections.

    To this effect, a five-day peace retreat has been organised in Akure, the Ondo State capital, for stakeholders in the nine states of the Niger Delta ahead of next year’s general elections.

    Participants were drawn from Abia, Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, Cross River, Delta, Edo, Imo, Ondo and Rivers states where resource persons, including the Partners for Peace Technical Advisors from the Fund For Peace, United States of America (USA), Nate Haken and Patricia Taft, Team Leader of Partners for Peace, Mr. Michael Gonzalez, Network Coordinator, Peace Ambassador (Chief) Africas Lawal and Dr Austin Onuorah who spoke on issues of peace-building, conflict management and resolution.

    Declaring the peace retreat open, the Speaker of the Ondo State House of Assembly, Princess Jumoke Akindele said the choice of Ondo State as the host state for the peace retreat is commendable as the state is reputed as most peaceful in the Niger Delta region.

    The Speaker further said the state government has placed priority on peace, security and development by promoting means of livelihoods to all categories of people and working with security agencies to secure lives and property in cities, towns and villages.

    Princess Akindele said the forthcoming general elections will be peaceful, even as she described the people in the Niger Delta as law-abiding, lovers of democracy and supporters of good governance which is openly demonstrated by their active participations in the political process and activities.

    She, however, warned against political violence, hooliganism and intimidation of law-abiding citizens during the coming elections.

    The Team Leader of Partners for Peace, Mr. Michael Gonzalez of the Fund for Peace, Washington D.C., said the aim of the peace retreat was to share experiences and capture the success stories and challenges on peace-building activities, as well as mapping election conflict assessment scenario and make the youth shun violence during election processes.

    He noted that the peace retreat is also aimed at examining the achievements of Partners for Peace and ratify the Charter of Partners for Peace in Niger Delta. While highlighting the background of the project, Mr. Gonzalez said Partners for Peace began its activities with engagement of some people already involved in peace-building across the states in the Niger Delta region last year, during the Peace Camp in Port Harcourt, Rivers State.

    The Partner for Peace Network Coordinator, Peace Ambassador (Chief) Africas Lawal revealed that state chapters of P4P are now working on peace initiatives based on the lessons from conflict assessment training. He said the P4P has constituted a central working committee (CWC) to drive the initiative.

    The Field Project Manager of the Foundation for Partnership Initiatives in the Niger Delta (PIND), Mr. Sylvester Okoh said the initiative’s goal is for the Niger Delta area in Nigeria to continue to prosper as a peaceful place for economic growth.

    He said the strategy is to identify and strengthen conflict resolution initiatives within the Niger Delta region and to enhance a more en

  • Toward the future of Nigeria

    Toward the future of Nigeria

     The current system (bequeathed to the country by military dictators and sustained by civilian rulers for the past 16 years) of dependence on oil at local, state, and central levels is not sustainable in the long run.

    Northern states cannot continue to survive on Niger Delta’s oil money. Our states are bereft of ideas that will generate revenue to run our affairs. There is no state in the North that can pay one month salary without federal allocation, and federal allocation is derived from the sale of the Niger Delta’s oil. This is dangerous and spells disaster in the future….If Nigeria splits today, the North is in danger…We must resist money politics and elect credible people. We must protect our votes. – Shehu Sani

     

    The extract from the campaign  material of one of the country’s leading human rights activists, Shehu Sani, reminds me of the Yoruba saying: Ibitiiyati n baomo re wi, niomoalainiyati n koogbon (where and when a mother counsels her child, a motherless child within earshot pays rapt attention and thereby learns wisdom). Campaigning for votes for the senate in Kaduna Central Senatorial District recently, Sani used the occasion to canvass for votes and at the same time persuade the electorate in his constituency about the need for a rethink or new vision of and for Nigeria, if citizens at large are to benefit from the union.

    Nigeria has for too long depended on the oil money from the Niger Delta. When successions of military dictators changed the revenue allocation formula of 50% for derivation to zero to the model of bottle-feeding each state from the breast milk of the Niger Delta, they based the sudden change of policy on the imperative of national unity and cohesion. The school of thought then was that a policy of even development through donation of oil money to states would make Nigerians feel a sense of belonging to one country and see themselves as brothers and sisters eating from the same pot or bowl. Similarly, the policy to balkanise the regions into mini states and create about 800 local governments to receive milk from the national feeding bottle was also supported by the theory that to keep Nigeria united after the civil war, the more oil money that is taken to the grassroots, the higher the chances of national integration.

    Nigerians from all parts of the country have grown to see oil money as the source of life for the nation-state. In the north, bogus theories about oil as national resource were propagated to counter calls for return to federalism and the pre-1966 revenue allocation system. The most prominent of such theories from public intellectuals from the north were two. The first one is that there would have been no petroleum in the Niger Delta if solid and liquid wastes had not over centuries come through Benue and Niger rivers in the north to the delta and the basin that produces oil in the Niger Delta. The second claim is that it was federal resources that were used in the 1950s to intensify exploration and later develop technology for exploitation. In the western part of the country, many politicians argued (and still do) in the day for resource sovereignty for the Niger Delta while using the night to canvass for continuation of the revenue allocation system that dished out money to states and local governments, saying in whispers that post-military governors would not be able to sustain free education without such soft funds from the Niger Delta. Such thinkers could not be bothered by the interjection that there was no trace of petroleum in the country when Obafemi Awolowo’s government introduced free education in the Western Region in 1955.

    It is on record that the issue of dependence on oil money was a major factor in the failure of the recent national conference to go beyond recommendations for cosmetic or symbolic changes to the current unitary constitution, designed to support easy flow of funds to states and local governments. Even those who argued at the conference for additional 19 states (to move from 36 to 55 states) did so on the strength that the oil money would flow to the new 19 mini states. Even when the conference agreed that local government creation and development should be the sole responsibility of each state, the conference still kept intact the policy of direct allocation of funds from the federation account (made possible by petroleum) to the 774 or more local governments.

    Sani’s assessment that there is no state in the north that can pay one month salary without federal allocation applies to over 30 of the current 36 states. Only Lagos State in the west can pay one month salary without federal allocation and without floating bonds. There is no state in the Southeast and outside the oil-producing states (which now receive 13% percent for derivation) that can sustain its secretariat without direct allocation from the federation account. Most of the governors in the south have confessed publicly that they have no money for development and even to pay salaries if the Accountant-General in Abuja fails to send quarterly or monthly allocations down to the states.

    One does not have to have a stake in Sani’s chances to become a senator for Kaduna before acknowledging that the human rights activist in his recent campaign speech was addressing all of Nigeria on the right way to go, if the entire country is not to become endangered. The current system (bequeathed to the country by military dictators and sustained by civilian rulers for the past 16 years) of dependence on oil at local, state, and central levels is not sustainable in the long run. The price of petroleum is more likely to go down than to rise from now on. Technological innovations to produce new forms of renewable energy are yielding good results in many other parts of the globe; new sources of petroleum are coming from fracking; new technologies to save energy and thus reduce consumption are also coming to the global market.

    All of these indicate that any country that defines reality largely in terms of the oil it produces is virtually living in the past. The north is not likely to be more endangered than the west or the east, should Nigeria break. Having depended on manna for decades at the instance of military theory of political unity, no section of the country is likely to be immune from danger when oil prices head south. There used to be a time when each of the regions made good and respectable living from productive as distinct from the extractive activities that currently drive the economy: cotton, groundnut, cocoa rubber, palm oil production. There was a time when Ivory Coast, currently the world’s largest producer of cocoa, used to be behind Nigeria and Ghana in cocoa production. There used to be a time when Indonesia and Malaysia needed the assistance of Nigeria with respect to palm oil production. Today, Nigeria even imports palm oil in bleached form from Malaysia and Indonesia, with money made from petroleum.

    What needs to change radically is the mindset that Nigeria turned Nigerian political leaders into prayer warriors for manna from the Niger Delta. It is citizens that can drive such change. As voters, they need, as Sani has recommended to the people of Kaduna senatorial district, to identify candidates who want to serve and produce, in contrast to the hordes that ask for votes to enable them sleep and consume from the soft funding made possible by petroleum. The reason citizens have lost the courage or energy to resist corruption and impunity that hold the entire by the jugular at present is that the money being used to keep the country as it is and to intimidate citizens does not come from citizens’ efforts and taxes. Voters all over the country need to consider the future of their children and grandchildren by voting for candidates who are capable of going beyond the Sisyphean effort to do the same thing over and over, without noticeable benefits to citizens.

  • Niger Delta youths seek agric devt, power shift to new generation

    Niger Delta youths seek agric devt, power shift to new generation

    For two days last week, thousands of youths from across the nine Niger Delta states converged on the PTI Conference Centre, Effurun, Delta State for the ‘IYC World Summit’, organised by the Ijaw Youth Council, led by Comrade Udengs Eradiri.

    The spokesperson of the IYC Worldwide, Mr Eric Omare, said the summit that has “Partnering for Prosperity and Sustainable Development” as theme, was convened to tackle some of the challenges facing, not just the Ijaw, but all ethnic nationalities.

    He said the initiative of the IYC was informed by the group’s desire to play a leading role in bringing together other ethnic bodies to fight a common cause for the development of the region.

    He said: “In the post-amnesty era, one of the biggest challenges now facing the Niger-Delta Region just like other parts of the Country is lack of engagement for both skilled and unskilled youths despite the acquisition of various skills through the Presidential Amnesty programme and other medium of training.

    “This summit seeks to set a new agenda by redirecting the focus of the youths of the Niger Delta on agriculture, job creation, promoting small and medium scale enterprises (SME), empowering, educating and enlightening the young minds to take advantage of the opportunities available in the agro and allied sector to create better livelihood for themselves and the society,” he added.

    In spite of a no-show by President Goodluck Jonathan and his wife, Dame Patience, who were expected to declare the summit open, as well as the absence of Chief Edwin Clark, Ijaw national leader and leader of the South/south, and some governors of the region, the summit gradually gathered steam and lived up to its billing. Only the host, Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan and his Bayelsa state counterparts sent representatives.

    Uduaghan, who was represented by Mr Frank Omare, Commissioner for Environment, tasked attendees to adopt peaceful means in conflict resolution, revealing that the government had through its 3-Point agenda, bettered the lives of its people.

    Speaking with newsmen at the summit, IYC President, Udengs Eradiri emphasized the need for Niger Delta youths to unite and shun the antics of those who seek to divide them for political gain. He particularly lamented the ten

    He said: “Today we have an EPZ (Export Processing Zone) that is coming to Delta State. There has been so much argument between the Ijaw and Itsekiri that are neighbours. They have a project that will add so much value to this region and the land that has been lying fallow for donkey years without producing any kobo on the table is the cause of strife.”

    He advised the bickering Ijaw and Itsekiri groups to bury their hatchets, remarking that if the projects kicks off there would be jobs for everybody in the region. “Yet, politicians have started deceiving our young people by fighting themselves.”

    He said the summit would set machinery in motion to unite the various interests so that they project could kick off. He advised that a sharing formula should be agreed by both sides to build trust and unity, stressing that the project could hold the key to the region and Nigeria’s industrialization.

    “There is an auto policy and if this project kicks off most of the auto companies like Toyota, Mercedes and MBW will come and set up plants here in Delta state because it is close to the ocean. If they are producing with a cheaper price they can export from Nigeria to other parts of the world. This will create jobs and by that process open our environment. Businesses will spring up, there would be hotels etc. People must see the idea of bringing an EPZ to this environment and forget all our difference,” he added.

    Eradiri also canvassed for a generational change, stressing that young people must rethink their relationship with ‘elders’ whose times have passed.

    He said: “They must step aside and allow us decide our future. All the conflicts are about sustaining political interest of other people.”

    To this end, he urged the president revealed his plans for the youths of the region as it affects their future.  “Much as he has done some things in the Niger Delta, we are not satisfied; we have no jobs, our roads are not completed and things are not happening as they should in the Niger Delta.

    “In as much as we are happy about what the amnesty is doing, there are just about 30,000 captured. We have over 10 million young people in the Niger Delta. Look at the ratio of 10m Niger Delta youths and 30,000 amnesty beneficiaries. The amnesty is just one area, what are they going to do for education, economy, and job creation? Those are the things we expected the president to come here today and highlight,” he said.

    Nevertheless, the IYC president appealed to the opposition All Progressive Congress and other political parties to follow the example of the Peoples Democratic Party and adopt President Goodluck Jonathan for the 2015 election. He said such move would help build unity, peace and avert crisis resulting from protracted electioneering campaign.

    In his goodwill message, the Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta, Hon Kingsley Kuku, thumbed-up the amnesty programme, describing it as a huge success. “This programme has succeeded in ushering unprecedented peace in the Niger Delta as well as astronomical increase in oil production and revenue for our country.

    “With the Amnesty Programme now in its reintegration phase, the challenge that stares us in the face is how to positively and profoundly engaged the thousands of youths that have been trained.”

    Kuku expressed the expectation that the summit would provide opportunity for stakeholders to proffer practical steps towards engaging majority of the youths, especially those who have acquired vocational skills.”

    The summit attracted youth leaders from the Ikwerre, Itsekiri, Urhobo, Ogoni, Isoko and Yorubas, among others.  The highpoint was the release of a communiqye on Friday, October 10, by IYC spokesperson, Mr Eric Omare, a lawyer.

    The document expressed concern about the growing unemployment in the region. It noted that the development was more worrisome considering that substantial number of the unemployed youths had acquired various skills.

    Therefore, he disclosed that “It was resolved that there should be massive development  of the agriculture and allied industries sector in the Niger Delta to provide jobs for the teeming unemployed youths and make them self-reliant.  Henceforth, government efforts towards the economic empowerment of the youths of the Niger Delta should be geared towards making them self-reliant,” the document added.

    The communique lamented that although the President Good luck Jonathan administration has recorded remarkable strides in agricultural sector, the benefits are not felt in the Niger Delta because such monies were spent in the northern parts of the country.It urged the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and the National Assembly to take conscious steps to address the perceived imbalance in the nation’s agricultural policy.

    Similarly, the youths expressed concern over the perceived nonchalant attitude of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission and the Independent Corrupt Practice Commission towards discharge of their duties.

     

  • Exposing illegal bunkering, oil theft in the Niger Delta

    Exposing illegal bunkering, oil theft in the Niger Delta

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

  • Arogbo and Niger Delta

    Arogbo and Niger Delta

    Violated. Left to bleed. And now at the mercy of a son. These are my take aways from Arogbo-Ibe, the headquarters of the Ijaw in Ondo State.

    Until my visit to this community last weekend, I had always resisted the classification of any part of the Southwest as Niger Delta. For me, oil should not be a criteria for defining where is Niger Delta and where is not. I just refused to see Ondo as Niger Delta. Arogbo changed my mind. The vegatation, the aura, the language, the food, the mannerism, the dress code and the difficult terrain in Arogbo bear no semblance to other parts of Ondo State. Once you enter Agadagba, which is the upland part of the Ijaw-speaking area of Ondo State, you just have this feeling that you are in the Niger Delta.

    The people eat a lot of fresh fishes they get from the water after dipping their hooks. They swim like feral beings and have mastered the art of dodging crocodiles and other dangerous beings in the water. They love their shrimps, tilapias and croaker.

    Like their kinsmen in the Southsouth, the people of Arogbo led simple life. Comfort simply meant having a roof, good fishes and the very basic necesities of life. They did not want too much. Living on water was comfort to them.

    The story of Arogbo and other Ijaw enclaves scattered in the Southsouth geopolitical zones changed when Europeans mistakenly stumbled on many coastal communities. They came with guns and the Bible. The people had to choose between the two. Despite all the gods they were worshipping, they had no antidote that could suppress the powers of the long guns and pistles of the whiteman. So, they chose the Bible. Somehow they also did not forget their gods, even though they could not help them get rid of the whiteman.

    In no time, the whiteman established companies. First they were just interested in trading. Trade by barter was very common then. Slaves were exchanged for ephemeral things, such as mirror. The story got messsier when oil was discovered. The drillers were moved in and happiness was moved out. The people first smiled thinking oil meant blessing. It did not take time before they knew it was a curse. Waterways became polluted; farms became barren; and in no time, they had water, water everywhere but none to drink. They landlords became slaves.

    Independence soon came for Nigeria in which the Ijaw nation occupies the fourth position in terms of population. It did not improve their lot. Enter  the late Isaac Jasper Adaka Boro, who lived between September 10, 1938  and May 9, 1968. He was fondly called Boro and was a celebrated Niger Delta nationalist. He later became a Nigerian civil war hero. He was the pioneer of minority rights activism in Nigeria. He led a twelve-day revolution (through his Niger Delta Volunteer Force, an armed militia with members mainly Ijaw men) seeking better life for the people of the Niger Delta and earned a jail term from the Gen. Yakubu Gowon administration. He was freed on the eve of the civil war and made a Major in the Army. I met a classmate of his in Arogbo and he had nice things to say about him. Like this classmate, he would have been alive had death not come in mysterious circumstances in 1968 at Ogu (near Okrika) in Rivers State. The late Ken Saro-Wiwa saw him as an inspiration. Unlike Boro, Saro-Wiwa’s agitation was all about intellectual militiasm.

    Boro gave an insight into his life in his autobiography, The Twelve-Day Revolution. He wrote: “I am reliably informed that I was born at the zero hour of twelve midnight on 10 September 1938, in the oil town of Oloibiri along humid creeks of the Niger Delta. My father was the headmaster of the only mission school there. Before I was old enough to know my surroundings, I was already in a city called Port Harcourt where my father was again the headmaster of another mission school. This was in the early forties. The next environment where I found myself was in my home town, Kaiama. My father had been sent there to head a school yet again.”

    Arogbo’s most influential son, Kingsley Kuku who deserves the credit for the few good things in the town, such as concrete-slab roads, drainages and solar-powered street lights, adores Boro and has been involved in keeping his memory alive. Early this year, Kuku, in his capacity as the Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta Affairs and Chairman of the Amnesty Programme, inaugurated  the Isaac Boro Energy Training College in Grenoble, France. It is a collaboration between the Federal Government and Schneider Electric. It has trained many ex-militants.

    This is what Kuku said about Boro at the inauguration of the centre: “While he was alive, Major Isaac Adaka Boro showed direction to our people. He remains a legend who showed light to the people. Boro fought for a unified Nigeria during the very unfortunate Nigerian civil war and died in the process and it is only fitting that he is duly immortalised with a befitting edifice that will aid all efforts to bring light, development and progress to not just his beloved Niger Delta but Nigeria as a whole. Wherever he may be today, I know, Major Isaac Adaka Boro will be very happy with us all.”

    Boro may be happy, but certainly not fully happy. There are still many holes unplugged in Arogbo and many Ijaw communities. There are still gaps begging to be filled in the Niger Delta. Show me anyone in the Niger Delta who believes the region has got its due and I don’t need to search further for a liar.

    If only the Willink Commmission report had been implemented, if only the Oil Mineral Producing Area Development Commission (OMPADEC) and other intervention efforts had been implemented sincerely, the story could have been different. I dare say the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) has not done much. It has also not got all it is entitled to from government and other stakeholders. But the token it has got has also been wasted. Largely. We all remeber the millions an ex-chairman of the board wasted on a juju priest. How can we forget the insider abuses in which contractors were encouraged by people within to sue the commision just for the purpose of extorting money through out-of-court settlement? As at the last time I checked, the commission had over 400 court cases pending. Or have we forgotten instances where money was spent on projects with no direct bearing on the lives of the people?  What on earth was NDDC doing renovating Port Harcourt Club and commissioning a study on the generation of electric power from gully erosion sites? How can we forget that the quality of some of the infrastructure projects fall below acceptable standards?

    In the commission, contracts, we are told, were awarded with no design and no specific location but with the sole purpose of collecting advance payments. I will rest my case with my final take: Arogbo and other parts of the Niger Delta will be better for it if all play their roles with the fear of God. All those with obligations to the NDDC, such as the Federal Government, Southsouth state governments, Southsouth local government areas and the oil giants, should fulfil them. Before that is done, the little the commission has should be used for deprived communities, such as Arogbo. Then, life can begin to be better for all.

  • New dawn for Niger Delta students

    New dawn for Niger Delta students

    Members of the Niger Delta Students’ Union Government (NIDSUG) converged on Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital for the union’s second national convention, where they elected leaders to pilot their affairs for another year. EMMANUEL AHANONU (Corps member, NYSC Enugu) reports.

    The election of officers after the onbaraYalah-led executive of the Niger Delta Students’ Union Government (NIDSUG) completed its tenure was a Herculean task. For five hours, officials of the Department of State Security (DSS) screened candidates vying for offices to ascertain the authenticity of their studentship.

    The screening took place at the Port Harcourt office where the candidates were asked to swear to an affidavit to maintain peace during the election. After the oath, the electoral process began with a national convention chaired by Dr Henry Akpan, Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Youth Development.

    The event was attended: Minister of State, for Niger Delta Affairs, Dairus Dickson Ishaku; Secretary of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Cross River State, Hon. Godwin Etah; the guest speaker, Isaac Osuoka, Bayelsa State Commissioner for Ijaw Affairs, Dr Felix Tuodolo and Special Assistant to Rivers State Governor on Students Matters,  Tamuno Osika, among others.

    Tonbara said the convention with the theme: Re-awakening the Niger Delta youths for effectiveness in the emerging Nigerian state, was to guide the Niger Delta youths for the journey ahead through re-orientation and campaign against restiveness.

    “We believe Niger Delta youths must prepare for the challenges ahead of them. This is the basis for holding this event, which is to tell our colleagues to embrace entrepreneurship and not hooliganism,” Tonbara said.

    Dairus said he was elated by the resolve of the students to take their destiny into their own hands, stressing that they were building socio-cultural bridges to foster peace and economic development.

    He said: “The ugly attributes of militancy, indolence, kidnapping and brigandage associated with  youths of this area are now things of the past.”

    The election followed the next day, where 23 candidates, who passed the DSS screening, contested for the offices. Each state in the Niger Delta region had five delegates, while Niger Delta students in the North and Southeast sent 15 and 10 delegates respectively. More than 500 students across the country witnessed the election held in Ijaw House, Bayelsa State.

    There was tension as the aspirants sought support with their manifesto.  The two presidential contenders, who are from Delta State, canvassed support from delegates. For several minutes, there was commotion in the hall, making the electoral officers to cancel the manifesto.

    At the end of the election, the Chief Returning Officer, Gospel Tanam, announced Obada Akpomiemie as the president-elect, having polled 71 votes to beat his rival Stanley Ekwuememe, who had seven votes. Also Bariture Ngbee defeated Ijeoma Belema with 44 votes to become the Vice President (Administration); Chinaobi Ojukwu became the Vice President (Project).

    Other officers elected include Alemichi Kwubi, General Secretary, Juliet Mauyu, Treasurer, Joy Ekadi, Public Relations Officer, Ibi Tonye, Provost, Christy Eka, Director of Gender and Women Empowerment, Janet Slyvanus, Welfare Director and Daniel Ifon, Director of Transport.

    Chimdindu Obiarandu was elected the Senate President, while Amabebe Inekirumu became the Deputy Senate President.

    Jackson Sunju, a member of the electoral committee, said the DSS was called to ensure thugs were not elected into the union’s leadership.

    Obada said his administration would focus on empowerment and intellectual capacity building for members. He urged members to resist move by politicians to use them as political thugs.

  • Niger Delta Exploration plans $450m stock sale for fields

    Niger Delta Exploration plans $450m stock sale for fields

    Niger Delta Exploration & Production Plc plans to raise $450 million to acquire and develop crude fields in the country.

    The Lagos based firm is planning a “public offer, or special placement of shares. The first tranche of $200 million will be raised before the end of 2014,” Chief Executive Officer, Layi Fatona told Bloomberg.

    Smaller Nigerian oil producers are expanding operations as international companies, including Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Chevron Corporation scale back operations amid unrest, violence and crude theft in the Niger River Delta.

    Exxon Mobil Corporation, Shell, Chevron, Total and Eni SpA, pump about 90 per cent of Nigeria’s oil through ventures with state-owned Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation.

    FBN Capital Plc and Chapel Hill Denham, have been appointed financial advisers for the fundraising, which will happen on local or international markets, Fatona said.

    He didn’t say when the rest of the cash will be sought, but said NDEP also plans to expand in South Sudan and Zambia.

  • Osun: COSEG warns against ‘importation’ of Niger Delta militants

    Osun: COSEG warns against ‘importation’ of Niger Delta militants

    The Coalition of Oodua Self-Determination Group (COSEG), has on Monday raised the alarm over plans by Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) chieftains to import hundreds of Niger Delta boys for the Osun election.

    In statement COSEG Chairman and Secretary, Ifedayo Ogunlana and Rasaq Olookoba, the pan Yoruba Organisation said it had it on good authority that the plans were concluded at the weekend.

    COSEG said the plan was the brainchild PDP chiefs.

    The organisation said a top government officials deeply involved in the Niger Delta struggle and who knows the militants inside out, was said to have volunteered to hire the militants.

    COSEG condemned the plan which it described as “double jeopardy” in view of the “heavy policing and militarisation of the state by the Federal Government”.

    The statement added: “We heard from sources that the PDP has enlisted the help of NIGER Delta militants to come to Osun for the election.

    “We in COSEG know the antecedent those linked with this plan and so do not take lightly the sinister plan to storm Osun with militants.

    “We are sending caution to President Goodluck Jonathan to counsel his party chiefs to desist from such obnoxious plan as the people of Osun will resist with all their might any attempt to destabilise the state.”

    The organisation advised Osun people not be intimidated by the presence of the security men saying it had become clear to the security agents that Osun’s election “cannot be rigged because of the massive support of the people enjoyed by Aregbesola”.