Tag: Niger-Delta

  • Our grouse against Orubebe, by Niger Delta groups

    Our grouse against Orubebe, by Niger Delta groups

    Orubebe must go! Orubebe must go!” This was the slogan of two groups from the Niger Delta region that met recently in Patani, a Delta State local government area bordering Bayelsa State.

    The Niger Delta Peacekeeping Volunteer Force (NDPVF) and the Niger Delta Believers Group (NDBG) were unanimous in their agitation for the Minister of Niger Delta Affairs, Chief Godsday Orubebe to vacate his office.

    The National President, NDPVF, Chief Lokiri Lawrence, and his counterpart in the NDBV, Mr. Engema Lambo, blamed lack of development in the region on what they described as Orubebe’s incompetence.

    According to them development will only come to the region if President Goodluck Jonathan musters courage, sacks Orubebe and replaces him with a selfless, passionate and capable person from the region.

    Lawrence said: “The President has appointed Niger Delta people to mount sensitive offices to see how they can bring in development in the Niger Delta. This tasks falls on the Ministry of the Niger Delta which was handed over to Orubebe.

    “This ministry was created out of the struggle of the Ijaw people to ameliorate the suffering of the Niger Delta people. But this man has failed woefully with regards to performance.

    “He is incompetent and we call on Mr. President to sack Orubebe without any delay. Sacking him will promote the agenda of transparency and corruption-free governance. He does not mean well for the Niger Delta and should be sacked”.

    He further lamented the deplorable state of the roads in the region especially the East-West Road. He said the most important road that traverses the region has remained in bad shape despite huge amount of money so far spent for its dualisation.

    He regretted that the road had become a death trap for travelers and recalled series of accidents that claimed lives of innocent Nigerians on it. According to him the mother of Patience, the wife of President Jonathan died from an accident that occurred in a failed section of the road.

    Lawrence alleged that the East-West road had become a drain pipe on resources earmarked by the government for the development of the region.

    “Every day people are dying on the road. In fact, Mr. President’s in-law got an accident on the same road and died. All these lives have been lost because of the negligence and non-performance of this minister”, he said.

    He also kicked against the speculated governorship ambition of Orubebe in Delta State and said he lacked the qualities required to govern the state. He said any attempt to allow the minister govern Delta State would be to the detriment of the region’s development.

    “We are making strong appeal to the President not to support any ambition of Orubebe to rule Delta State.

    “Instead, we are calling on the President who is a product of zoning to support a credible person from Anioma, Delta North, which has never ruled the state from its creation to produce the next governor”, he said.

    Jombo further listed the alleged sins of Orubebe to include his inability to articulate the development of the region. He said the canalisation of some communities in the region, a project awarded by the ministry, was marred by fraud.

    He said: “There was nothing like canalisation. Within a short period, billions of Naira was siphoned in the name of canalisation. But we have a road less than 2km from Bomadi to Torogbene lying fallow for many years. If you can do canalisation quickly why don’t you approach the construction of that road with the same effort?

    “Orubebe cannot make any difference in Delta State. If the Presidency doesn’t want the development of Niger Delta, it should bring Orubebe as the governor of Delta.

    “He will be a failure. We are appealing to the a President to remove Orubebe because he has not done well. The problem of the East-West road is not of funding. It is a deliberate attempt to divert money and stockpile it for an election.”

    He called on the Independent Corrupt Practices Commission (ICPC) and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) to commence an investigation into the activities of the minister.

    “We are not happy with the state of our roads. There is no improvement at all in the roads that lead to communities in the Niger Delta region, the Hausa people became presidents and opened up their roads.

    “Every other projects in the region are suffering. Where are the coastal roads? President should protect his name by sacking Orubebe otherwise people will blame the underdevelopment in the region on him.”

    But Orubebe reiterated government’s determination to complete the East/West road next year. He said N140 billion was needed to fight the infrastructure battle in the region adding that the East-West road had reached 65 per cent completion.

    He decried the misconception of his ministry’s performance by the public, despite concerted efforts by his team to live up to expectation. Orubebe said N209 billion had been spent on the road project, adding that N140 billion was required to complete the project.

    He said: “People have misconceptions about the slow pace of service delivery by the ministry. We have moved from 10 per cent to 65 per cent in terms of completion. Before, there were no drawings and designs. Within a year, we had drawings and designs.”

    He said besides fostering peace in the oil-rich zone, the ministry has empowered the ex-militants, who have acquired skills through vocational trainings to become self-reliant.

    The minister dismissed insinuations that his attention may have been diverted from his ministerial job by his speculated governorship ambition in Delta State.

    He said: “I am a politician. But I have not gathered people to say that I want to be governor. May be, because I have been a minister for five years this is why there is speculation.

    “If I will run for the governorship, I will call you to tell you. My attention is not diverted. I am focused. I work with my team. If you don’t see me in Abuja, you will see me on the East/West road or in any of the Southsouth states.”

     

  • Community partners Chevron to develop Ilaje

    In a clear departure from the constant conflicts between oil communities in the Niger Delta and the oil producing companies, one of the oil majors and its host community in the riverside area of Ondo State are working to develop the area.

    Chevron Nigeria Limited and Ilaje Regional Development Committee,(IRDC) in partnership with the state government have entered into a Global Memorandum of Understanding (GMoU) to bring development to the coastal communities in the state.

    Following the need to cater for people in the coastal area of the state, the IRDC  was established in 2005.

    The GMoU is a new concept that allows the oil communities the opportunity for a pride of ownership and management of various projects in the area with Chevron providing the funds.

    At its fourth Annual General meeting (AGM), the Chairman of IRDC, Prince Jackson Nomiye, said about N91 million had been expended on the construction of a 4,500-metre wooden walkways, which link many of the communities in line with cardinal objective to stimulate development in Ilaje land.

    He said over 30 projects have been executed and most of them have been handed over to the communities.

    Among the projects are Housing Units at Ode-Ugbo and Jirinwo, multipurpose  town halls at Molutehin and Awoye, and a science laboratory at Molutehin.

    Nomiye said Reverse Osmo project equipment worth several millions of naira were also brought to site for installation for the provision of potable water to the mandate areas.

    On skill acquisition, the IRDC chairman said: “Several of our youths and women groups are sent to learn new skills at vocational training centres while many are employed at the end of their training.

    “In line with our commitment to the empowerment of all Ilajes covered by the RDC, each year almost N12million is awarded as scholarship to our students both in secondary and higher institutions beside call scholarship.

    He said because of the council relationship with Chevron, many contractors got contracts worth several millions of naira, while many job seekers got short and long term appointments with the oil giant and contractors working for the oil company.

    Nomiye, however, appealed for increase in funding as the seed money provided by Chevron was not enough for the execution of projects.

    Besides, he called for contributions from other stakeholders such as the state and local governments, agencies and parastatals, Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), Niger Delta Ministry and OSOPADEC.

    The General Manager Public Affairs of Chevron, Mr. Deji Haastrup, praised the IRDC leaders for their good management skills, which informed the tremendous achievements the body had achieved.

    According to him, the council has expended N800million in implementing both infrastructure and non-infrastructure projects most of which have been completed and inaugurated.

    Haastrup called for renewal of the GMoU to keep up with stakeholders’ expectations and emerging developments.

    He commended the state government for providing the leadership that has continued to create the enabling environment for the implementation of the GMoU.

    The Olugbo of Ugboland, Oba Frederick Akinruntan, who was represented by the Ajagajigi of Ugboland, Chief Adesola Fagbeye, urged Chevron to bridge the communication gap between him and the organisation to facilitate robust dialogue, especially on siting of projects in the area.

  • How states are  fighting kidnappers

    How states are fighting kidnappers

    IT began like child’s play but soon spread like Harmattan fire, tearing communities apart and striking fear in the hearts of the well-heeled across the land.

    When reports of kidnapping in the Niger Delta began some years ago, it was essentially orchestrated by aggrieved youths who formed themselves into militant groups. Their aim was to settle scores with the government and multinational oil firm who they blamed for exploiting their natural resources and despoiling their environment without compensation.

    For many observers it was inevitable that the massive contradictions inherent in a situation where a land that produced the nation’s wealth being also home to extreme poverty, would trigger a violent response sooner than later.

    Unfortunately, kidnapping which the militants used initially as a tool in their struggle, soon snowballed into a bigger industry where all-comers jumping in for a quick payday.

    The lucrative criminal venture then spread to other parts of the country – primarily the South-East where all sorts of methods were deployed daily to capture victims. As a result, many indigenes of those states abandoned their annual practice of going home in times of festivities. Those who chose to brave it employed the services of heavily-armed security agents as escorts whenever they were travelling.

    As the problem festered it was soon obvious that it wasn’t something that conventional policing could contain. Individual states began taking steps to tackle the problem. One of the earliest to make a move in the face of a near crisis situation was Governor Peter Obi of Anambra State.

    In 2010 he presented a bill to the State House of Assembly asking that stringent measures be put in place to checkmate the monsters. The bill was eventually passed into law stipulating that government had the right to confiscate, destroy or turn properties belonging to kidnappers and their sponsors to some other use. This was in addition to blocking their sources of income.

    Today, Obi’s example has spread to some other states with Edo being the latest to institute the death sentence as penalty for anyone caught kidnapping or aiding the crime.

    The nation’s waits to see whether the rash of new measures are having any effect, or whether state governments are fighting a losing battle against a criminal enterprise that that offers unbelievable returns for so little risk and investment. What follows is a status report of the actions of different states across the country.

     

    ANAMBRA

    Since the law against kidnapping was passed in 2010, Obi has demolished dozens of property belonging to kidnappers. He brought down two buildings at Oraifite in Ekwusigo Local Government Area where a large cache of arms was uncovered by the police after they arrested one Olisa Ifedike

    Obi was quoted as saying then: “No kidnapper or criminal would be allowed to enjoy the proceeds of his illegal activities. The game is up for other criminals still lurking in any part of the state as government will not stop until the set objective is achieved.

    “We can no longer continue this kind of life. People must live purposeful lives; we are going to start looking for his business associates also. And that is why I am here today to supervise the demolition of these buildings.”

    However, Anambra’s anti-kidnapping law has elicited some criticisms from a number of observers. Significantly, the International Society for Civil Liberties and the Rule of Law (Intersociety) condemned the idea of inflicting death penalty on convicted kidnappers. The practice of destroying the properties of suspected kidnappers without subjecting them to trial in the court of law has also been disparaged by a good number of critics.

    Chairman of the Civil Liberties Organisation (CLO), Comrade Aloysius Attah stated: “Death sentence is out of tune with existential realities. It is anachronistic and against all known international laws, treaties, and conventions.”

    A human rights lawyer, Chief S.O Abuchi, says the law is inconsistent with international covenant on civil and political rights which Nigeria is a signatory to.

    Underlining the difficulties which the new legislation throw up, Public Relations Officer of the state police command, ASP Emeka Chukwuemeka, says that “death sentence is difficult to execute because of lack of evidence in court.”

    Significantly, it has been noted that despite the death sentence threat to kidnappers in Anambra, the business still thrives in the state. President, Anambra State Youth Council, Comrade Chibuzor Ekwegha, declared: “Death penalty has not stopped kidnapping, but kidnapping should carry death penalty even though it is seriously not the solution to it.”

    The South-East Coordinator for Campaign for Democracy, Dede Uzor A Uzor, is decidedly against it. “Our position is very clear. It has not in any way reduced crime at all,” he said.

     

    BAYELSA

    Bayelsa State was notorious for kidnapping before and after the inauguration of Seriake Dickson as governor of the state. Kidnappers even from neighbouring states converted many of the creeks and mangroves forest to their bases and hideouts. Most of the abandoned militant camps that dotted the waterways of the state became havens for the booming abduction business. In fact, different gangs of gunmen welcomed the governor to office with a kidnapping spree.

    Earlier in the year, the state was caught up in the web of resolving wanton cases of abduction. Among the numerous cases of the incidents that occurred in January, the government was jolted by an uncommon trend of snatching relations of government officials – especially their parents.

    On January 13, Betinah, the 78-year old mother of the Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Mr. Kombowei Benson, was seized and whisked away.

    Before the dust raised by Betinah’s abduction could settle, Mr. Festus Ebegu, 65 years old, and his 53-year old wife, Mrs. Ebiye, parents of the Chairman of Ogbia Local Government Area, Richard Ebegu, were abducted from their country home on January 28, 2013.

    It later became the turn of the Majority Leader of the State House of Assembly, Mr. Peter Akpe. Gunmen stormed his country home in Ededebiri, Sagbama Local Government Area and seized his mother, Esther, on January 30.

    The list of victims increased and the disturbed Dickson viewed it as a desperate situation. Matters were compounded with an uptick in the kidnapping of expatriates along the waterways.

    After consulting with security commanders, the governor mooted the idea of scaring kidnappers with death penalty. He said he would not hesitate to sign warrants of convicted abductors. He immediately sent a bill to the House, which lawmakers swiftly passed into law. Dickson signed the Bayelsa State Kidnapping and Allied Offences Bill 2013 on February 13.

    Addressing potential violators of the new law, he said: “If you are involved in any act of kidnapping, don’t come near Bayelsa. We have put measures in place – whether it is in sea-piracy or kidnapping, we are going to get you. We will make it difficult for you to succeed and whoever you are and wherever you are operating from, we are going to get you.

    “It is morally indefensible for young people, for whatever reason, to go under the cover of darkness, armed with illegal weapons, terrorise villages and old people in their homes and then forcibly abduct and manhandle them and take them as an article of trade.”

    “Most people know that when I say something, I do it. I will not hesitate to sign a certificate (warrant) of execution. Anybody who doesn’t listen and commits any of the offences prohibited by this law, and who is tried and convicted will face the penalty.”

    However, about nine months after talking tough and approving the bill, the governor has yet to sign a death warrant of any convict. Kidnapping has also continued in the state.

     

    ABIA

    By mid-2010, Abia State was under siege as violent crimes, like armed robbery, rape of young and old women, kidnapping of different categories of people were the order of the day.

    The peak was when kidnappers supposedly led by the infamous Osisikankwu, after a heavy shootout with security men seized a busload of pupils of Abayi International School who were on their way to school.

    This prompted the state governor, Chief Theodore Orji, to ask the Presidency to come to the aid of the state by allowing the military to to flush out the criminals.

    The coming of the military in no small way helped as the rate of kidnapping has been reduced to the barest minimum.

    The measures went beyond inviting the military. The governor sponsored an executive bill in the state House of Assembly to make anyone caught in the act of kidnapping pay the supreme price.

    The assembly without delay passed the bill into law making kidnapping a capital offence punishable by death. The law also stipulated that all the property owned by kidnappers would either be demolished or taken over by the state government.

    Since the bill became law, cases of kidnapping and other violent crimes have reduced.

    To strengthen the fight against kidnapping and other violent crimes in the state, soldiers have been quartered at the 14th Brigade military barracks at Ohafia. The state government cooperated with the federal government to rebuild and reopen the barracks which had been abandoned for 20 years.

     

    EDO

    Following the trends in the other states, Edo State Governor, Comrade Adams Oshiomhole, signed into law the Anti-kidnapping Bill. Before then, he had demurred. A number of respondents expressed dismay over his delay in assenting to the bill.

    Defending the governor’s stance then, Special Adviser to the Governor on Media Matters, Prince Kassim Afegbua, said the governor needed to thoroughly study the bill before assenting to it.

    Within that period, the state witnessed a string of high profile abductions. A high court judge was kidnapped. The entire nation was also gripped by the news of the abduction of the legal luminary and human rights activist, Mike Ozekhome, in the state. The local chapter of the Nigeria Bar Association (NBA) issued a threat not to defend the cases of suspected kidnappers standing trials due to the kidnap of their colleagues and other victims in the state.

    The spate of snatchings seemed to prompt the governor to eventually sign into law the Kidnapping Prohibition Bill as amended by the State House of Assembly. Apart from this, the governor announced that his government, in conjunction with security agencies were looking at the option of re-introducing checkpoints in strategic areas of the state.

    Some critics, however, argued the issue is beyond making and enforcing laws. A lawyer, Ben Akhigbe, said “If someone of Ozekhome’s status that has spent most of his life fighting for the oppressed can be kidnapped, it then means that none of us is safe. It is not just enough to buy firearms; the government at federal and state levels must begin to think of tackling the problem by creating employment opportunities.”

    The governor, however, disagreed with those who argue that kidnapping is a result of unemployment. He said: “no one should try to trivialise very complex issues.”

    The jury is still out as to what impact the tough new laws would have.

     

    DELTA

    The Delta State Government has had a running battle with kidnappers. The state has also witnessed many high profile kidnap cases. Legislators, businessmen, sportsmen and top civil servants, medical practitioners, judges are specially targeted. Many of the well-heeled in the society have also resorted to the use of police protection just like in the other states.

    The fourth assembly of the Delta legislature initiated an anti-kidnapping bill which failed following withholding of assent by Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan. The bill was sponsored by the member representing Warri-South-West Constituency, Mr. Daniel Mayuku

    However, in December 2012, the fifth Assembly of the Delta legislature passed into law the state Anti-Kidnapping and Anti-Terrorism Bill. But the law initially ran into hitches after Uduaghan again refused to assent to the bill. The legislators, however, overrode the governor’s veto in April 2013

    The bill which among other provisions prescribed death penalty for suspects found guilty of the offence of kidnapping also stipulated destruction of property of kidnappers.

    In a letter to the House, Uduaghan had argued that the death penalty was no longer fashionable and advocated life imprisonment for kidnappers. He further argued that death sentence would not serve as antidote for kidnapping, stressing that some sections of the anti-kidnapping bill infringed on the fundamental rights of citizens as enshrined in section 36 and 43 of the 1999 Constitution.

    The governor pointed out that some sections prescribed offences in matters contemplated under Item 2 of the Exclusive Legislative List of the 1999 Constitution just as he further picked holes in some sections as violation of section 251 of the 1999 Constitution.

    He declared: “In view of the constitutional points and other fundamental issues I have highlighted above, I am compelled to withhold my assent to the bill and I do hereby convey to this Honourable House my decision to so withhold my assent to the bill.”

    But the House at its plenary vetoed the governor and reconsidered the bill clause by clause before passing it into law. Twenty six members of the 29-member House voted overwhelmingly to veto the governor on the issue.

    In line with the law passed by the assembly, the Delta State Government embarked on the demolition of property belonging to kidnappers. Eight buildings allegedly owned by kidnappers were destroyed by the Delta State Government in 2013.

    The Delta State Police Commissioner, Ikechukwu Aduba, while addressing the mass media after one of the demolition exercises, said some kidnap victims were rescued from the property. He revealed that the government ordered the demolition of some identified operational bases of hoodlums in the state, claiming that the police had destroyed two in Ozoro, Isoko North, two in Kokori, Ethiope East, one in Orogun, Ughelli North, and two others in Warri. Aduba also said other buildings have been earmarked for demolition in Ogwashi-Uku Onicha-Olona.and Ubulu-Uku.

    Again, it is not clear what impact the new law has had. The recently arrested kidnap kingin, Kelvin, and his gang operated with impunity in Okpara Waterside in the state – well within the jurisdiction of the new act. The fact that members of the fearsome gang are still active in their community is perhaps a pointer to how effective the new legislation has been as a deterrent.

     

    IMO

    Imo State has also been buffeted by rampant cases of kidnapping. During the administration of Chief Ikedi Ohakim, a bill to prohibit kidnapping and hostage taking was sponsored by Hon. Oyibo Nwaneri, representing Oru East Constituency.

    The bill known as Hostage Taking/Kidnapping Prohibition Bill, stipulated death sentence for kidnapping and hostage taking as well as the destruction of properties of convicted kidnappers and any other facility used in facilitating and abetting kidnapping.

    But Ohakim declined signing the bill into law, citing religious reasons for his refusal. The bill was later became law and tagged the Imo State Hostage Taking and Kidnapping Prohibition Law 2010 after the House of Assembly overrode the governor’s veto.

    Although no one had been sentenced to death for kidnapping or hostage taking since the new law came into existence, scores of buildings and other property belonging to suspected kidnappers have been destroyed by the state government over the last two years.

    The Rochas Okorocha administration, for instance, has demolished a number of buildings linked to kidnapping activities in the state. This measure has in no small means helped in the fight against kidnapping and other heinous crimes in the state.

    Currently, kidnapping had dropped drastically, with the police attributing it to proactive measures adopted by the state command in tackling the menace. The State Commissioner of Police, Muhammad Musa Katsina, says kidnap syndicates that were operating in the state had been dislodged after an intensive manhunt for the ring leaders was initiated under his watch.

    He disclosed that some of the kidnap syndicates that were behind high profile kidnapping s in the state, operated from outside the country before they were busted as a result of intelligence networking between the command and Interpol.

  • Waterways armed robbers of the Niger Delta

    English is an interesting language; it is a language built on rules, which intending users either learn and use or be accused of committing murder! It is a language, which most times, does not correctly portray some of our local realities.

    The Yoruba at times find it difficult to find English words that truly describe some of their local words. The same is true for many of the other ethnic groups in the country.

    In most of our local languages, what the English call pirates will be known as waterways armed robbers. That is harsh enough to convey the evil these men have wrought and are still inflicting on mankind. It is baffling that the English chose a word, which gives the impression that they do not want to call a spade a spade.

    Wikipedia describes piracy as “typically an act of robbery or criminal violence at sea. The term can include acts committed on land, in the air, or in other major bodies of water or on a shore. It does not normally include crimes committed against persons traveling on the same vessel as the perpetrator (e.g. one passenger stealing from others on the same vessel). The term has been used throughout history to refer to raids across land borders by non-state agents.”

    Truth is: pirates are armed robbers; that is what they are. The only difference between them and the regular robbers is that they operate on water. Their victims are usually people on ships and big boats. With AK 47 and machine guns, they overpower their victims, dispossess them of their belongings and in a lot of cases, they also hold them hostage to get ransom from either their families or their employers.

    In this dare-devil game, human life means nothing, if it stands in the way of the cash the waterways robbers want. Brains have been blown off when their owners play smart with the pirates as English would have us call them, instead of the more appropriate waterways armed robbers. People who stands in the way of the cash, soldiers or naval officers, have been wasted and fed to the fishes; in this business, all is fair once it leads to enriching the pockets of the waterways robbers.

    It was a business, which started long ago, but with time, it has become sophisticated. And sadly, the Niger Delta, obviously because of its being surrounded by water, takes the lead in this game of blood. In the last few years, while other countries where pirates had leeway have seen a drop in cases, Niger Delta has retained the trophy as the pacesetter.

    The victims are not usually locals. Americans, Britons and other foreign sailors who have cause to pass through our waters have had to do so with their hearts in their mouths.

    They have succeeded in making travel by sea perilous extremely dangerous. Slow-moving vessels servicing oil platforms are more vulnerable to attacks than cargo ships.

    The oil-rich area has increasingly drawn international attention as a piracy hotspot. Between January and September, 40 pirate attacks were reported. Also, it has been the site of the only ship crew kidnappings worldwide this year, with 132 crew members taken hostage.

    At the time of writing this, two American sailors were being held. They were seized in Brass, Bayelsa State. A day before they became unfortunate, some soldiers were killed by pirates in Rivers State.

    When will blood stop being shed all for rat race? When will men see dignity in labour as watchword? When will we stop caressing waterways armed robbers by ceasing to call them pirates which make them feel ‘sexy’?

     

  • ‘Niger Delta gods won’t forgive GEJ if he fails to complete East-West Road’

    Why are SSPA and leaders in the Niger Delta drumming support for Jonathan’s reelection?

    Number one it is his legitimate constitutional right to contest for a second term. Number two, by the indices of his policies and actions for just two years, Jonathan has performed better than some of his predecessors who served a second term. The cost of production in this country with its micro effects on other key sectors of the economy was always on the increase simply because of epileptic power supply to the extent that small scale businesses were affected. The only hope against all odds was to privatise the power sector the way the telecom sector was liberalised and for a president to have the courage to do that means that the economy is set for a multi dimensional growth.

    Then look at the railways, moribund for almost three decades. It is not just that somebody started it and budgeted money. Where is the money he budgeted? Nigeria is a country where people dont account for misapplied moneys. For the first time President Jonathan has put the rail business on track such that passengers travel from Lagos to Kano by train. I travel by road and l have seen that the state of Nigerian roads today is not what it was five years. So in want areas of assessment would you say this man has not done enough to earn a second term slot?

    Number three is that as a minority this is the first time a minority has provided leadership for Nigeria. And if other majorities have the opportunity of ruling for eight and ten years, some constitutionally and others unconstitutionally, a minority must never be denied. He must be given his right to rule for eight years. This country belongs to all of us and nobody is superior to any other person. We are all equal.

    All the professors of constitutional law are in unison that nothing debars Mr. President from contesting for a second term. In terms of performance, for the first time in the history of this country, a sitting President decided to put his performance on a paper giving members of the public the opportunity to assess him. That is transparency in action.

    Don’t you foresee this ambition dividing the country because some leaders have also advised him to bow out in the interest of Nigeria’s unity?

    If his ambition will divide Nigeria, let it be so because Nigeria belongs to all of us. Nobody can claim a greater right to Nigeria than the other. So, if what is good for you is not good for me, then let it be. If Hausa/Fulani man can provide leadership for this country for 38 years and a Southsouth man is just there for two years and they said he should not continue; Who is a slave to who now? We are all born equal. The whole craze of Jonathan must not rule is all about the oil economy. Where is the oil coming from? After all Jonathan is from an area where oil was struck in commercial quantity. The OgbIan territory where oil was first struck is where Jonathan is from. You that came from far away Savannah that do not have single drop of oil and you could rule this country for 38 years but you are now saying that a man beneath whose soil is oil which you used in building skyscrapers in your country must not continue after one tenure. Then you do not want Nigeria to continue. Who cares? Nigeria is not the first country that is disintegrating if that is the ultimate, but that is not agenda of any Southsouth man and that is not the agenda of any progressive Nigerian.

    What has Jonathan done for the Niger Delta to deserve the support of the region?

    But that is the irony of life. Yet those who don’t know claim that the man is favouring only his people. What special things has he brought to Bayelsamsince he became the President? But the issue is not peculiar to the Niger Delta. Ordinarily, it is our expectation. But a patriotic ruler will look less unto himself to avoid being accused of bias and that is what the President is doing. That is why his own people are not happy with him, he is demonstrating that patriotism to a fault. Nobody will believe that the only East-West Road traversing from Warri to Calabar is impassable.

    I hear the minister crying everyday that the project is underfunded. But Jonathan as a patriotic Nigerian believes more in equity to the extent that he had even forgotten himself. It is the reason why after two years the Eastwest road remained impassable, l have no doubts that he has between this year and next year to correct this mistake because the gods of the Southsouth will not forgive Jonathan if he does not complete the project. We are not asking for too many but make this dualisation work so that we can leave Yenagoa and go to Calabar without headache. Make it work because after leaving the office as the President he won’t be flying to his village in Ogbia with chopper. He won’t.

    Once you leave office, you will become ordinary like us and you will be traveling from Port Harcourt to Otuoke by road. The only way he can shake his head and beat his chest in pride is when he completes the project. Otherwise the gods of the Southsouth will not forgive him.

    Now Jonathan has proposed a national dialogue. How will the proposed conference benefit the region?

    Simple. What has been our primary concern is resource ownership and resource control. That has been our concern. So, we can tell them that oil belongs to us. In the emerging constitution, it can be clearly stated that anybody beneath whose soil a resource is found, he owns it and he has an unfettered access to control the resource found beneath its soil. As a partner of the union called Nigeria, l will agree to contribute whatever; we will sit and agree that federating units will contribute. That is the only way we can use what God has given us to develop our creeks, our rivulets and our rivers.

    But this conference has been criticised; with some referring to it as a Greek gift?

    How is it a Greek gift? NADECO of old called for a national conference. Under late Chief Anthony Enahoro’s National Reformation Movement, the principal issue that body agitated for was the convocation of a Sovereign National Conference. The people of the Southeast have been agitating for a national conference. The people of the Southsouth, at least the South South Peooples Assembly where you rightly acknowledged me as its national secretary, even in our last conference at Warri on 6th of September 2012, we called for a national conference. When the South South People’s Assembly formed a body in conjunction with the Southwest, principally led by the Yoruba Unity Forum and leaders of the southeast under the aegis of Southern People’s Assembly where l am also privileged to serve as one of the coordinating secretaries; in our first national conference at Uyo, in the second conference at Enugu and in the third conference at Lagos, we all called for a national conference.

    The bodies led by Prof. Ben Nwabueze, both The Patriots as well as Project Nigeria, were all agitating for a national conference. Another body l am privileged to also be a member, the Nigerian National Summit Group is a movement for the convocation of a national conference. So if Mr. President has listened to all these several calls to give Nigerians an opportunity to talk, how does that act of a listening President translate to a Greek gift?

    So, with all due respect, the former Governor of Lagos State is totally misplaced in this matter. The truth is that Nigeria is fundamentally at a crossroad as it is today. There are so many things that are wrong with this country and there is the growing need ever for Nigerians to sit and talk for the future of this country. The position we have maintained in all these bodies l belong to is that the only way Nigeria can meaningfully celebrate our centenary is a platform for Nigerians to sit and discuss the future of this country.

    It is well known that my ethnic nationality, the Ijaw did not give consent to be part of a union called Nigeria. The Efik, the Igbo, the Hausa/ Fulani, the Kanuri, the Tiv never gave such consent, yet we were brought together in a forced union called Nigeria. Since we managed this marriage for 100 years, it is only important, it is only necessary, it is only germane that we come together to discuss the tenets of staying together after 100 years. So, it is not a Greek gift. Mr. President has demonstrated that he is a listening President, that he is ever prepared to follow the yearnings of Nigeria.

    Leaders who are against the conference are questioning the motives and the timing. Is it not ill-timed considering that the 2015 election is around the corner?

    What time is ripe? When did Jonathan become the President of Nigeria? The man has just stayed two years in office. And these agitations had been there long before now. Number two, the crisis Nigeria is faced with today where some group of people said they don’t like education and for many holding unto that disposition, they kept killing innocent lives, threatening the corporate existence of this country. Some, people feel that their resources are being shortchanged, you’re using my resources to feed everybody in this country. Give me what is genuinely due me and the fact that 13 per cent derivation in the eyes of others is too much and they are even threatening that if you are complaining of ecological damage, we can relocate you.

    Every little thing will ignite crisis. That a minority for the first time became the President of the Federal Republic in 2011 and somebody who lost election because he refused to accept defeat went public to claim that we will make this country ungovernable. Arising from that statement innocent lives were killed. Subsequent to that massacre, a body in the name of Boko Haram threatened the survival of this country.

    Who says Nigeria doesn’t have issues? Why do we have the MASSOB that is agitating for Biafra Republic? Why do we have the OPC whose primary objective is to create Oduduwa Republic and you say Nigerians don’t have issues that are challenging our corporate existence? What time is ripe? In any case, who attributed political undertone to Obasanjo’s Political Reform Conference which later turned into a third term agenda? But Jonathan has not even finished his second term, so the issue of wanting to transmute a national dialogue to a third term project does not arise. There is no intention behind Jonathan’s quest for national dialogue that will contradict and conflict with the provisions of the constitution as Obasanjo attempted to do with the conference of 2005. So, no timing is right and no timing is wrong. Whatever that happened now is when God says it should be.

    Some states are still nursing some fears about the proposed conference…

    I can tell you very clearly that people fear that the conference may bring many things on the table. And indeed so. A system where states have become apron strings of the Federal Government; a system where states don’t have independence, they must look at the Federal Government to survive is not federalism. Nigeria is not running federalism. You can never succeed in running a unitary system of government in a heterogeneous society like Nigeria. This is a country of 418 nationalities.

    Nigeria needs to go back to the fundamentals of a Federal Government. Nigeria needs to go back to true federalism.

     

  • 2015: Jonathan’ll value the support of any Niger Deltan

    2015: Jonathan’ll value the support of any Niger Deltan

    The chairman of Centenary Exhibition Committee, Apostle Romel Eric Emenike, has said President Goodluck Jonathan, will value the support of every Niger Deltan for his re-election bid.

    Emenike, who spoke at his residence in Port Harcourt, the River State capital, urged politicians in the Niger Delta to stop playing politics with 2015 and focus on how to bring about change and development in the region.

    He said the need to focus on development has made Jonathan not to consider 2015 election a priority now.

    He said as the Chairman of Centenary Exhibition Committee his focus is on the growth of the economy.

    He said: “ Jonathan loves the people of Niger Delta and he values every support that comes from this region. Though, he has not started talking about 2015 but about the economy. Recently, my committee met with Bill Gate, the American billionaire, to discuss how his organisations could support Nigeria in the area of agriculture. The committee has taken the responsibility of contacting great men all over the world to participate in next year’s centenary celebration.”

    He said the committee was also working hard to ensure that many foreign investors would participate in the centenary celebration to meet with their Nigeria counterparts and discuss the way forward for the economy.

    He said the need to transform agricultural sector made his committee to place more emphasis on investors who could partner Nigeria’s vision to make agriculture the biggest source of Nigeria’s revenue.

    He said: “Our task as the Centenary Exhibition Committee is to focus on the economy; so, there is positive response from efforts made so far. But the most important thing is to showcase Nigeria’s ingenuity and greatness.”

    He urged those who want to take the job of the President when his tenure was not over to thread carefully. He said many people have tried it in the past but they did not succeed instead their political careers were brought down.

    He said the Niger Delta for many years clamoured to become the President of this country, adding that it would be wrong for any other Niger Delta man to become a stumbling block in the wheel of progress in the region.

    “It is a shame that desperate politicians in the region are raising their head and fighting against the president all in the name of 2015. Where were they when this region was crying to taste the seat of Presidency? Where were they when the North retained power for many years? I think they should learn more about history; those who challenged the president in the past never ended well in their political careers. The job of Mr. President in this country is a naked wire; it has consumed many people.”

    On oil theft, Emenike, who is also a stakeholder in the oil and gas sector,

    said the stealing of crude oil at the creek is not significant compared to the rebranded oil stealing called ‘topping’ at Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC).

    He argued that the illegal ‘topping’ formula, which only benefits those at the top in NNPC and security personnel, cannot cause the shortfall incurred in oil theft.

    “Topping is an indirect way of stealing, if somebody has a contract with NNPC to lift one million barrel of oil, he or she will now enter into illegal arrangement with NPPC and the security men to lift more than it was agreed. If they can end this stealing, even the stealing at the creek will be insignificant.”

  • Why oil bunkering may not end in the Niger Delta

    Why oil bunkering may not end in the Niger Delta

    A new study on oil bunkering in the Niger Delta has identified why the illicit trade may not end soon.

    The study was carried out by the National Coalition of Gas Flaring and Oil Spill.

    The group accused oil-bearing communities of complicity in the illegal business.

    The Coordinator of the group, Mr. Inemo Samiama, who is also the Leader of Stakeholders Democracy Network, a non-governmental organisation which commissioned the study, revealed that community people and not criminals are behind the huge cases of illegal oil theft and refining in the Niger Delta.

    Samiama said investigations showed that there is a high-level of connivance between the personnel of multi-national oil companies and those involved in illegal oil bunkering and refining, pointing out that the business has become well-structured and highly sophisticated.

    He said: “Initially, it started with individuals or groups of individuals doing this thing but now it is getting highly organised and well-structured.”

    Continuing, he said during the study, investigation showed that in most places where illegal refining and oil stealing are taking place, there is no government presence and nothing to encourage the people of the communities to engage in legitimate means of livelihood.

    He added: “Government’s presence is not felt in the creeks of some Niger Delta communities. I am not talking about Port Harcourt. Go deep into the creeks, you don’t feel any government presence there. They are basically absent and that vacuum is being occupied by some Robbinhood characters that come in there and provide certain things that are needed. Look at this example again, where oil or kerosene or fuel purchased for generators in the Niger Delta in some of these creeks is like twice or even three times the price of what you buy the same products in Abuja.”

    The study urged the Federal Government to address the issues of poverty and infrastructural decay in the Niger Delta if the fight against stealing and illegal oil refining is to be won.

    He said: “The Niger Delta is being ignored. Still some people think that because you have President Goodluck Jonathan there, people here should keep quiet and be contented. That is not the case. It doesn’t follow that way. You have this example of the East-West Road. Excuse me! It is time the Federal Government realised that even though there is on-going peace in the Niger Delta, even though there is relative calm in the Niger Delta, don’t take the Niger people for granted.”

    In addition, he stated that there is still a lot of frustrations and anger manifesting in the mood of the people when the group visited the different camps.

    “They look at you like ‘what do you want us to do? We have to survive.’ And it is a game of survival and the federal government must pay attention still to the Niger Delta,” he said.

    He also expressed regrets that people thought that amnesty programme, would resolve all the problems in the Niger Delta.

    While the study group is accusing oil bearing communities of complicity in oil theft, some leaders of Oloma and Okoloma communities in Bonny Local Government Area of Rivers state have alleged that the Joint Military Task Force (JTF) members are engaged in incessant illegal bunkering activities around Shell Well 11 and Well 2 in the area.

    The communities accused the JTF security operatives of colluding with some big unnamed big shots in the country to extract and sell stolen crude to large vessels under the supervision of security operatives deployed to the area to prevent oil theft and illegal oil bunkering.

    The Presidency in its own reaction fingered multinational oil companies of complicity in the increased rate of crude oil theft in the Niger Delta.

    The Special Assistant to the President on Amnesty Programme, Mr Kingsley Kuku, said the oil companies were aware that their Nigerian employees were engaged in oil theft in the Niger Delta and have failed to take genuine and urgent steps to curb it.

    Kuku said highly-placed individuals and groups are sponsors of those stealing the nation’s crude oil, adding that unless those big shots are arrested and prosecuted, oil theft and illegal bunkering would continue unabated.

    He said: “The process of illegally extracting crude oil from the pipelines in the coastal areas require highly technical and mechanical expertise which ordinary Nigerians or residents of the oil producing communities do not have.”

     

     

  • Will East-West Road be ready next year?

    Will East-West Road be ready next year?

    The Federal Government believes the East-West Road will be ready next year. The joint National Assembly Committee on Niger Delta, led by Senator James Manager and Hon. Warman Gorima, had cause to doubt this after a tour of the project.

    Niger Delta Affairs Minister Godsday Orubebe was also on the tour of the project which spans Delta, Bayelsa, Rivers and Akwa Ibom states.

    The tour began from the dualisation of the Warri section, a 102km stretch road, where work is said to be in the region of 73 per cent.

    The next stop was the Patani bridge, crossing river Facados. It is the longest of the bridges on the road. This bridge is said to have reached 69 per cent completion stage and would be ready by December next year. Work at the Okoso bridge was also inspected and here members of the committee raised alarm over the pace of work. Though the contractor allayed their fears, adding that the set back observed was as a result of security challenges and the recent flooding.

    Senator Manager asked the contractor how the National Assembly could assist to ensure that they meet the deadline without compromising standard. Besides, he wanted the supervising ministry and contractor on site to be factual on the completion period.

    But, Orubebe assured members of National Assembly that if there was any difficulty along the line, he would not hesitate to let Nigerians know.

    At the end of the tour, which lasted a whole day, both parties agreed to the fact that the project might be hampered by lack of fund. Also, there was an indication that there might be variation in the cost of the Niger Delta road projects as a result of the impact of last year’s flood.

    Orubebe said the variation would be included in the next budgeting year.

    The project, which has consumed billions of naira, still needs over N100 billion.

    Though it is assured of a N50 billion African Development Bank loan and another N40 billion from the 2014 budgetary allocation, about N48 billion is still needed to be sourced to complete the work.

    Speaking shortly after completion of the tour, Manager said: “Talking about the East-West Road, you know you have the topographic challenge, you also have these seasonal challenges that are there because you know construction of road projects in the Niger Delta takes about three or four months out of the twelve calendar months for you to do an effective job. So, that huge challenge is there and you have the challenge of funding of the project. Even if you have all the finding for the project, which is not there right now, it is impossible. You also saw that water has taken over some major parts of the road, particularly from the end of Delta to the beginning of Port Harcourt. So, construction work cannot take place right now and from what we are seeing, realistically speaking to deliver that road on December 2014, I want to feel that it is not very realistic with what is on ground. So, for them to do an effective job, I think we talk about 2015, the end of 2015. I am not a civil engineer anyway, but from what I saw on ground, 2015 December is far realistic than December 2014, which is about one year from now. So, we just have to be realistic that is what is on ground and it is not just the fault of anybody. The road itself is a massive one. The stretch is from Delta to Akwa Ibom, it is not a small one. I think the contractors are also doing their job.”

    Gorima said: “What we have experienced is the oversight function basically on the East-West Road… We also did oversight function on section 1,II, III and IV of the East West Road. Section I is from Delta to part of Bayelsa.

    “The contractors are on sight and they are doing very well. The only problem we observed as a committee is the issue of funding, and I think at this stage, we will appeal to the Federal Government to look for alternative source of funding. We have come to the conclusion that the budgetary allocation for the East-West Road is not enough if we must finish that road. We subscribe to the fact that the East-West Road is very important to the people of the Niger Delta and indeed Nigerians as a whole because all Nigerians pass that road.

    “The minister has promised that they are going to hand over the road in 2014, but we still have our doubt as a committee. Because he said that with the fact that all things being equal, in terms of funding and weather conditions and so many other factors, but as a committee we still have our doubt.

    “Now that we have seen the whole stretch of the road, we will go back as a committee to look at the issues and we will also invite the contractors and minister to discuss.

    “The minister is sure that by next year they will receive N50 billion from ADB and if we receive N50 billion from ADB, the SURE-P funding in 2014 and the budgetary allocation for 2014, we will still have a shortfall of N50-60 billion in 2014 and that means we will still have a carry over to 2015.

    “If you look at the structure of the road, specifically Section II, which is between Bayelsa and River states, you find out that nothing has been done there and nothing will be done there this season and when it is filled with sand, you need the rain to fall and solidify the sand before you can now put the asphalts and this is the issue.”

    But the Orubebe would not agree with the two members of the National Assembly. He said: “What is required to complete the road is about N141 billion. That is what is expected of us to inject to complete East-West Road. It is a road of over N339 billion. We are looking at N141 billion. Once we have that one we will be able to complete the road very well.

    “Now, because of funding constraints in government resources, we have also look outward for external funding. We are expecting N50billion from ADB. I can tell you that we have gone very far and any time from now, that loan will be ready and when we inject that one into the financial plan, we will be working towards delivering that road.

    “This is a government that believes in what it says and if there are challenges along the line, this government will not hesitate to tell Nigerians that because of this challenge or the other, we have this kind of constraint. For us, you know the last time I told Nigerians, particularly the people of Niger Delta, explaining the situation of things and how this project was awarded, and I said first we were looking at 2013 when we took over this project in 2009. And somewhere along the line, we realised that because of funding, the challenges of the terrain, it was shifted to 2013 and I said lots of things have been put in place and I said it would be completed in 2014.

    “When we toured the road, we all saw what was happening. This is a peculiar area. A lot of the areas are already flooded now and that makes it difficult for work to go on; we also have security challenges. You will see that every expatriate is being protected by six soldiers. That was not an expenditure that was expected to eat into the budget of the project. So many things have happened. The desire of the ministry is to deliver this road by December 2014 and we are working towards that.

    “Financial arrangements are being put in pace. And as we go along, because we want to be transparent and upright with the people of this country, if there are issues, we should be able to tell them that we now have this issue, but we are working towards 2014 December.”

     

  • Rivers communities decry ‘killer’ waste dumpsites

    Rivers communities decry ‘killer’ waste dumpsites

    He said: “Look at this place; we are no longer doing business here, because no customer will spend his money in this stinking environment. Not only here, many people have packed out of this area. I hope you saw those shops at the front; they are all locked because those who were doing business there relocated. The situation has seriously affected the landlords who now beg house agent to get tenants, even the landlords are relocating to another environment.”

    Mr. Victor Wanor, a roadside Mechanic, whose workshop is behind the dumpsite said he and his apprentice fall sick regularly, due to the odour they inhale from the waste dump. He said he stayed on because he had no money to relocate.

    Mr. Wenneka Chidah, one of the landlords in the area, had just been discharged from the hospital when our reporter met him. He suffered from bleeding nose and anus.

    He said, “I inhaled the toxic from the waste during the fumigation of the dumpsite. When I got to home, blood was discharging out of my nose and anus. I think it is time for government to listen to our cry; it is getting out of hand.”

    A senior lecturer on Public/Environmental Health at the Rivers State School of Health and Technology, Mr. Nahikpo Nyiedah, confirmed that there are diseases associated with bad waste disposal.

    “Improper disposal of wastes, such as solid waste, human excreta and sewage, is one of the major risk factors that affect the health and comfort of individuals. Poor waste handling and disposal can lead to environmental pollution. It encourages the breeding of disease-vector insects, animal scavengers and rodents. It results in a range of diseases through different routes of exposure such as lymphocytic choriomeningitis, etc.

    Nyiedah said the prevailing situations at Oyigbo and Rumuolumini could lead to “Hepatitis E, which could result to infection and inflammation of the liver. The illness starts with an abrupt onset of fever, body weakness, appetite loss, nausea and abdominal discomfort, followed by jaundice within a few days.”

    Our reporter’s effort to get the views of staff of the RSESA on site at Rumuolumini was violent rebuffed. He was even prevented from taking photograph of the scene by menacing men who accused him of being a nosy journalist who wanted to spoil their means of livelihood.

    It was later learnt that they were ‘levy’ collectors from the waste contractors. An elderly source in the community said “each of the youths represent some strong men in the community who make a lot of money from the landfill. It is these strong men in the community who make it impossible for government to listen to the cry of the people over relocation of the dumpsite.”

    Our source said the waste contractors, called service providers, pay heavily to the men at the dumpsite before their trucks are allowed to dispose waste. He said as the louder the people complained of odour, the more the levy imposed on the contractors.

    If the people of Rumuolumini are cowed by the antics of the beneficiaries, the people of Oyigbo are not. Residents of the area have protested severally of the health implication of the stinking dumpsite located in their area. During a recent protest, they gave the government, which they accused of planning to poison them, two weeks ultimatum to relocate the dumpsite.

    It was gathered that from the beginning of the construction of Oyigbo landfill, the residents had resisted the choice of the site because of its proximity to living area. But they were reportedly deceived that the government was constructing a fish pond that would employ them.

    A resident, Chief Odinaka Umezie, accused the state government of insensitivity to the plights of the people. “This odour has sent many people to early grave. Every day people get ill, infected with all kinds of skin diseases because of the odour. We are calling on the government to relocate this dumpsite to where people are not living. We will continue to protest until the dumpsite is relocated.”

    Like in Rumuolumini, the malodorous stench from the Oyigbo site is affecting the business of the area. The Headmistress of AA International School Mrs. Nkem Onu whose school is directly opposite the site lamented the effect of the site on the school. She said many parents withdrew their children because of health concern.

    “We have severally written to the authority who promised to do something but till date they have refused to do anything. The odour is very offensive; the dump is made up of both animal and human waste. I am calling on the government to do something to save the lives of the people around the area.”

    Our findings at Eliozu and Igwuruta revealed that the RSESA got it right with there. Eliozu’s is located far from the major road and residential areas. But for a few abandoned buildings near the dumpsite, human presence is minimal.

    However, the sanity in the area may not be for long as it was gathered that congestion in Port Harcourt and other parts of the metropolis are forcing desperate residents to move into Eliozu and Igwuruta. A source said almost all surrounding lands have been sold to developers, raising concerns of building springing up around the dumps.

    Conversely, it was a mountain of waste that crept in on residents of Njemanze and other areas of Mile One, Diobu. The land bordering Njemanze and the water was opened up by the state government in 2009 as part of the waterfront demolition exercise to chase away criminal.

    Since that demolition, the area has been turned into a dump site, much to the consternation of residents and business owners in the area. Worst hit is the premises of Vintage Press Limited, publishers of The Nation newspapers. Staff of the company said they have been forced to contend with revolting odour and thick plumes of smoke resulting from incineration of waste on a daily basis.

    The company’s Assistant General Manager, Mr. Olatunde Olasoga was forced to call in fire-fighters on a wet August morning when fire from burning tyres and other waste materials threatened to engulf the company’s building and ultramodern press.

    Residents said they are perplexed by the variegated forms of waste poured into the huge gulf on a daily basis. “There was one time a dead child was found among the wastes dumped there,” a resident of Nsukka Street said.

    Mr. Godwill Otenga, the youth leader in the area said, “We have severally complained to the appropriate authority to save us from dying early but nobody is listening to us. Most of the waste dumped at Njemanze water-front is rotten waste and that is what we are inhaling. Sometime if you want to pass Njemanze Street, whether driving or walking, you have to close your nostril because it (smell) could be terrible.”

    Our checks revealed that the Njemanze site was not designated as dumpsite, but was converted by the government, which now uses waste to fill the wasteland there.

    Meanwhile, there are about 35 receptacles (waste receiving point) from Mile 1 to Igwuruta. Most of them are cited in front of residential buildings, markets and schools. They create problems for those living around, especially when they are not evacuated early. When it rains it washes into compounds and contaminates sources of water.

    The Sole Administrator of RSESA, Mr. Ade Adeogun, conceded to our reporter that the landfills and receptacles may have caused harms to residents. He assured that the government was willing to relocate some of those sites to other areas.

    Speaking through his media officer, Mr. Olalekan Ige, he said: “The government has increased the deodorising of the dumpsite to reduce the offensive odour. RSESA fumigates the place weekly to eradicate the presence of any form of dangerous reptiles. I am pleading for patience from the people as it takes some time to complete the construction of landfill.”

    Ige said the state government spends over N500 million monthly to remove about 60,000 metric tons of waste generated by four local government areas in the state. He said the sum includes waste collection, disposal, sorting and fumigation.

    Ige said the RSESA covers only five Local Government Areas, including Obio-Akpor, Port Harcourt City, Eleme, parts of Etche and Ikwerre Local Governments.

    He also revealed that 70 service providers are contracted go round the areas areas daily to collect refuse at the receptacle sites designated by the state government.

    “The challenges the authority faces come from some residents who dump waste indiscriminately and in unauthorized places. In January to May 2013, over 700 sanitation offenders have been arrested and charged to the state’s sanitation magistrate court.”

    Director of Operation RSESA, Mr. Job Emmanuel, said its health officers are working hard to ensure that Port Harcourt and its environs were kept clean. He also regretted the attitude of some residents.

    He said: “When drains are cleared the water flows. I regretted that some residents in Port Harcourt intentionally dump waste at the drains. Every day we are on the road doing sensitisation campaign including using the media to inform the people on the health implication of dumping waste indiscriminately but yet only few people understand what we are talking about.”

    Pastor Kingsley Egunatu, of Numac Project Company Limited commended the Adeogun-led RSESA for discipline brought into waste management in the area. “Adeogun has sanitized the whole place. He made it compulsory that evacuation at the receptacle must be daily and should be from 6pm to 12pm. And if service provider violates any of the rules he or she will not only see his contract with RSESA terminated but he will be arrested. In fact, since he came onboard service providers are more serious than before. Trucks are being positioned at the receptacle point before 5pm to enable waste generators dump directly to the truck instead of dumping on the ground.”

     

  • Niger Delta youths praise govt on amnesty

    Niger Delta youths praise govt on amnesty

    The Niger Delta Youth Leaders Administrative Council (NDYLAC) has praised the Federal Government for the presidential amnesty programme, saying it had transformed the lives of youths in the region.
    The President of NDYLAC, Mr Emeka Uzoka commended the government for the programme when he addressed newsmen in Abuja.
    He also praised Mr Kingsley Kuku, the Special Adviser to the President on Niger Delta Affairs, for his efficient coordination of the amnesty programme.
    Uzoka said that the programme had recorded laudable achievements in the Niger Delta.
    “Mr. Kuku has contributed immensely to the empowerment of our youths, especially in the area of capacity building.
    “Through this programme, most of the ex-militants and youths have been trained as pilots, shipbuilders and skilled personnel in the oil and gas industries.
    “Also, there are engineers and other professionals among the beneficiaries of the presidential amnesty programme”, he said.
    Uzoka stressed that Kuku’s leadership of the presidential amnesty committee engendered the quality management of amnesty programme, urging the people of the region to support the committee’s activities.
    ”All we need at this time is the consolidation of the achievements and the celebration of the gains of the amnesty programme,’’ he added.