Tag: Ogoniland

  • FG begins confidence-building in Ogoniland over oil drilling resumption

    FG begins confidence-building in Ogoniland over oil drilling resumption

    The Federal Government has commenced confidence-building in line with the agreement it reached with Ogoni leaders as part of measures to resume oil exploration in Ogoniland.

    It was gathered that the government had already started the rehabilitation of four key health facilities such as the General Hospitals each in Eleme, Khana,Terabor; and health centre K-Dere in Gokana.

    The Ogoni leaders had demanded the establishment of the Federal University of Environment and Technology, Saakpenwa/Koroma; reconstruction of the Eleme section of the East-West Road; and consideration of qualified Ogonis for employment at NNPC Limited as well as interventions on critical infrastructures in Ogoniland.

    While most of the demands had been met, it was gathered that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu dispatched a monitoring team from the Office of the National Security Adviser (NSA) led by Ojukaye Flag-Amachree, Director of Energy Security; Goodluck Ebelo, Special Assistant to the NSA and Prince Austin Kabari, Secretary of the Energy Security Working Group, to the area to facilitate the demands.

    The monitoring team reportedly visited key locations such as the East-West Road, the Federal University of Environment and Technology campus, health facilities, and the proposed site for an industrial park, among others to see the extent of work.

    Speaking at the weekend, the Acting Chairman of the Nyo-Khana Area Council of Chiefs and Elders, Mene Sunday Kabari-Nule, confirmed that progress was ongoing expressing hope that the hospital projects would help combat sicknesses in the area.

    He said: “This project is for the Nyor Khana people, and they are very happy. For Taabaa as a community, it’s what they have been praying for to revive that hospital and now we have a brand-new one. You can feel the happiness everywhere in the community.”

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    He commended the Federal Government for the initiative and prayed for its speedy completion.

    He said: “Right now we are happy with President Tinubu and the Federal Government for bringing this to us, and we are praying that God should grant them the grace to complete the project on time so that we can start using it,” he added.

    The Community Development Committee Chairman of Taabaa, Elder Prince Neekpoabie also expressed confidence that the contract, when completed, would significantly improve health of the people

    He said the project, which was being revived after many years of abandonment, would tackle health issues in the area adding that it had already employed many community youths reducing criminal activities in the area.

    “The youths who previously had no jobs are now working here, which has helped reduce crime in the area,” he said.

    Also, the Youth President of Taabaa, Nwikeh Torue, said community youths were happy with the government and pledged maximum security for the site, assuring contractors of a safe working environment.

    “I am here to assure the contractors and workers of maximum security at the site; no one will interfere with their work,” he said.

    The Project Manager at the site, Mr. Azubuike Lucky, said that the community had been cooperative since work began, noting that most of the workers were  indigenes.

    “You can see our progress, the people are working with us cordially. We have had no issues since arrival,” he said.

  • Oil resumption: FG begins confidence-building in Ogoniland

    Oil resumption: FG begins confidence-building in Ogoniland

    The Federal Government has commenced confidence-building in line with the agreement it reached with Ogoni leaders as part of measures to resume oil exploration in Ogoniland.

    It was gathered that the government had already started the rehabilitation of four key health facilities such as the General Hospitals each in Eleme, Khana,Terabor; and health centre K-Dere in Gokana.

    The Ogoni leaders had demanded the establishment of the Federal University of Environment and Technology, Saakpenwa/Koroma; reconstruction of the Eleme section of the East-West Road; and consideration of qualified Ogonis for employment at NNPC Limited as well as interventions on critical infrastructures in Ogoniland.

    While most of the demands had been met, it was gathered that President Bola Ahmed Tinubu dispatched a monitoring team from the Office of the National Security Adviser (NSA) led by Ojukaye Flag-Amachree, Director of Energy Security; Goodluck Ebelo, Special Assistant to the NSA and Prince Austin Kabari, Secretary of the Energy Security Working Group, to the area to facilitate the demands.

    The monitoring team reportedly visited key locations such as the East-West Road, the Federal University of Environment and Technology campus, health facilities, and the proposed site for an industrial park, among others to see the extent of work.

    Speaking at the weekend, the Acting Chairman of the Nyo-Khana Area Council of Chiefs and Elders, Mene Sunday Kabari-Nule, confirmed that progress was ongoing expressing hope that the hospital projects would help combat sicknesses in the area.

    He said: “This project is for the Nyor Khana people, and they are very happy. For Taabaa as a community, it’s what they have been praying for to revive that hospital and now we have a brand-new one. You can feel the happiness everywhere in the community”.

    He commended the Federal Government for the initiative and prayed for its speedy completion.

    He said: “Right now we are happy with President Tinubu and the Federal Government for bringing this to us, and we are praying that God should grant them the grace to complete the project on time so that we can start using it,” he added.

    The Community Development Committee Chairman of Taabaa, Elder Prince Neekpoabie also expressed confidence that the contract, when completed, would significantly improve health of the people

    He said the project, which was being revived after many years of abandonment would tackle health issues in the area adding that it had already employed many community youths reducing criminal activities in the area.

    “The youths,.who previously had no jobs are now working here, which has helped reduce crime in the area,” he said.

    Also, the Youth President of Taabaa, Nwikeh Torue, said community youths were happy with the government and pledged maximum security for the site, assuring contractors of a safe working environment.

    “I am here to assure the contractors and workers of maximum security at the site; no one will interfere with their work,” he said.

    The Project Manager at the site, Mr. Azubuike Lucky, said that the community had been cooperative since work began, noting that most of the workers were  indigenes. 

    “You can see our progress,.the people are working with us cordially. We have had no issues since arrival,” he said.

  • Pardon for Ogoni Nine

    Pardon for Ogoni Nine

    By Bisi Olawunmi

    President Bola Ahmed Tinubu is currently engaged in a high-powered political-sociological cum economic engineering in Ogoni land with a view to enhancing peace process and consequently allow  the oil to flow, again, in Ogoniland,  after 30 years of violent  agitation shut the wells .

    The latest in the peace process is the granting of pardon to the Ogoni Nine convicted and executed on November 10, 1995 for incitement and murder of the Ogoni Four on May 21, 1994 , as reported in the media, including The Nation and The Punch both  on Friday, October 10.  

    The pardon is the latest effort to placate the militant wing of the Movement for the Survival Ogoni People (MOSOP) led by writer, environmental activist, Ken Saro-Wiwa, who had early in September been given national honours by President Tinubu. The Ogoni Nine were Ken Saro-Wiwa,  Barinem Kiobel, Saturday Dobee, Nordu Eawo, Daniel Gbooko, Paul Levera, Felix Nuate, Baribor Bera and John Kpuine. These national honours for the Ogoni Nine had sparked criticism of the federal government for ignoring the Ogoni Four, victims of brazen, broad daylight murder.       

    Following the backlash, President Tinubu on Wednesday, September 24, bestowed the national honour of Commander of the Order of Niger (CON) on the Ogoni Four, the four prominent Ogoni leaders murdered at the incitement of Ken Saro-Wiwa. The four were Albert Badey, Edward Kobani, Theophilus  Orage and Samuel  Orage.  They were among founding leaders of the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP) who brought Ken Saro-Wiwa into the organization as publicity officer because of his media connection.

    President Tinubu deserves some commendation for allowing reason and pragmatism to eventually prevail over blackmail. 

    The Ogoni 13,  a festering sore that refuses to heal, has deeply polarized  the Ogoni community in Rivers State and to some extent, the larger Nigerian society on the matter of guilt or otherwise of the Ogoni Nine, with the pro Ken Saro-Wiwa  group dominating the public narrative.  The poser here is: How did the Tinubu presidency get persuaded – or railroaded – into granting that initial faux pas honour to the Ogoni Nine?

    The Ken Saro-Wiwa saga is a classic example of how a well-oiled propaganda machinery can easily sway the unwary and the intellectually indolent, because propaganda appeals to the emotion and not to reason.  Details of the crime were wilfully ignored by many, as if being an activist is a license for murder.

    I will start on a personal note. I had an opportunity to meet Saro-Wiwa at the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos. His fellow Ogoni, James Nally, a staff of NAN then, brought him to NAN office. He raged about Ogoni marginalization.  He came across as an Ogoni irredentist, which manifests in one of his books – The Darkling Plain (1989- 268 pages) where he noted the Ogoni as the only honest tribe in Nigeria!  James, his kinsman, also had this sense persecution in the office and of the Ogoni as an ethnic group. 

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    The tragic journey for the Ogoni 13 began on May 21, 1994 when a murderous mob of Ogoni youths descended on prominent Ogoni leaders gathered in the palace of Gbenemene, the traditional ruler of Gokana, to celebrate one of their own.  According to reports, security agents had escorted Saro-Wiwa out of that town earlier in the day, given the restiveness of youths who were ardent disciples of the environmental activist. As he was being led out, he was reported to have told the youths that their oppressors were meeting to share money from Shell Oil Company and from the government, describing them as vultures. In Ogoniland, the prevalent notion was that once Saro-Wiwa tagged anyone ‘vulture’, it amounted to a death sentence. Some elders were said to have gone to Kiobel, one of the Ogoni Nine, to come to the palace and calm the mob. This commissioner in government was reported to have told the emissaries that he could not counter Ken Saro-Wiwa’s directive.    

    At this point, the mob went berserk, broke into the gathering and unleashed mayhem. As narrated by Suage Badey, son of Albert Badey, one of the Ogoni Four, the father was said to have escaped from the venue and ran to hide in the house of a woman. However, when the mob threatened to lynch the woman, he had to come out of hiding and the mob pounced on him. The mob got the other three.

    In a horrific display of bestiality and cannibalism, this pro Ken Saro-Wiwa mob dismembered these four prominent fellow Ogonis and the pieces of their bodies carted away such that there was nothing for the children to bury!  And this happened in broad daylight!  The murderers were natives and the people know themselves.

    Why Ogoniland remains on tinder box, that should be tended with great caution, is the demand of the Ken Saro-Wiwa group for the exoneration of the Ogoni Nine while the pro Ogoni Four are demanding the bodies, or even the bones, of the four Ogoni chiefs to bury and a public apology from MOSOP to give them closure.  However, with campaigners aggressively seeking that the Ogoni Nine should be exonerated of the killing of the Ogoni Four, is it then that the Ogoni four were killed by ghosts? 

    The pro Ogoni Nine demand is symptomatic of the pervasive impunity in the country where criminal elements, including murderers, have developed the effrontery to claim immunity from justice. It is that bad and reason why violence is literally drowning the country.     

    The media, local and international, have been complicit in the Ogoni tragedy by their morbid partisanship in the saturation reportage of Ken Saro-Wiwa, apparently inducing in him a sense of invincibility that ultimately led him on to the path of perdition. Can the Nigerian press claim to have been accurate and fair to the Ogoni Four in their news reports and analyses of the Ogoni saga all these years?  What is more, virtually all media reports about the Ogoni Nine are discriminatory – it is usually Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight others!!! So, the eight others are non-persons?

    Successive governments have been complicit in environmental degradation, especially in oil producing areas of the country, a lax that brought Ken Saro-Wiwa to limelight in his agitation for remedial measures of his polluted homeland.  Governments would rather cohort with exploitative multinational oil companies than protect the environment for the good of the people. To that extent, Ken Saro-Wiwa was engaged on a noble cause. The Ogoni Four were similarly engaged in agitation for environmental clean-up of Ogoniland. They only differ in strategies, with the Ogoni leaders preferring the non-violent approach as against Ken Saro-Wiwa’s militancy.  The point has to be made, and strongly too, that disagreement in strategy should not be a license for murder.     

    Suage Badey, son of murder victim, Chief Albert Badey, while appearing Arise TV programme ‘Prime Time’ on October 1 spoke of “palpable tension” in Ogoniland given the subsisting deep divisions while Kenneth Kobani, son of Chief Edward Kobani  at the 2025 memorial service for the Ogoni Four indicated the resolve of the families of their parents for the bodies and penance.  A partisan inclination by the Tinubu administration will generate resentment from other side-lined stakeholders in Ogoni land. That cannot foster the peace process. An emerging trend where the state usually surrenders to militancy is one of the reasons Nigeria today is prostrate before terrorists, bandits, kidnappers, ritualists and sundry violent agitators.

    •Dr. Olawunmi is Senior Lecturer, Department of Mass Communication, Adeleke University, Ede, Osun State.

  • Hope rises for FG 2.5m b/pd oil production in Ogoniland

    Hope rises for FG 2.5m b/pd oil production in Ogoniland

    • PINL brokers peace between warring factions in Rivers HOSCOM

    Indications are that efforts by the Federal Government to resume crude oil production to the targeted tune of 2.5 million bpd in Ogoniland of Rivers State will become a reality soon.

    This followed a recent peace resolution by the Pipeline Infrastructure Nigeria Limited (PINL) among warring factions of the crude oil bearing community in the area.

    The development brings to an end decades of bloody intra-community conflicts which has negatively impacted crude oil production activities in Ogoniland and brings hope to the targeted 2.5- million barrel per day(b/pd), production of the FG.

    The feat by PINL, the pipeline surveillance contractor covering the eastern corridor of the Trans Niger Pipeline (TNP) is furtherance of its peace and consensus building among its 215 pipelines host communities, which has greatly to daily throughput on the TNP to 100 percent.

    Bodo in Gokana local government of the State is a major oil bearing community and an artery for oil pipelines, gathering crude oil from various pipelines and locations, including the Trans Niger Pipeline (TNP) to the export terminal in Bonny.

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    But, the community has in the past decades been faced with intra community squabbles, orchestrated by different armed gangs leading to loss of lives and properties, including peoples businesses, residential houses, among others.

    This crisis situation has in this period deprived the community of development and empowerment opportunities accruing from oil production activities in the community.

    Some of the benefits that have eluded the HOSCOM for decades as a result of internal crisis include participation in pipeline surveillance operations and other corporate social responsibilities PINL.

    PINL is the main surveillance contractor on the eastern corridor of the TNP.

    Some of the key stakeholders at the meeting included, the Paramount Ruler of Bodo City, HRH, King John B. Berebon, political and youth leaders of the community, Officials of PINL, representatives of the Minister of Petroleum (Oil), National Security Adviser (NSA) the Project Management Office (PMO) and Department of State Services (DSS).

    Hon Eddie Julius, Special Adviser to the Minister of Petroleum Resources (Oil) on Host Communities, while speaking on the significance of the peace deal described it as timely, especially to the country and oil industry saying it would guarantee safe operations that would result in increased crude production in Bodo and the entire Ogoniland.

    Also speaking on the importance of the peace deal the Admin, National Security Adviser (NSA) Niger Delta Office, Port Harcourt, Young Harry Amakiri informed that it was significant to help in achieving the mandate of the President to increase oil production to 2.5-million barrels per day noting that crisis anywhere that affects production, would affect that negatively.

  • Environmentalists lament renewed oil spill, pollution in Ogoniland

    Environmentalists lament renewed oil spill, pollution in Ogoniland

    The Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF) and other environment-focused Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) have lamented renewed pollution incidents in the Ogoni area of Rivers State.

    A statement issued yesterday by Miss Kome Odhomor, Media/Communications Lead at HOMEF noted  that a visit by HOMEF’s team and other CSOs to the spill sites met with distressed indigenes and residents of the affected communities.

    Odhomor noted that the impacted community members expressed their pains over exposure to toxic hydrocarbons and abandonment by the relevant authorities.

    She quoted the Women leader of the community, Chief (Mrs) Augustina Biebie, as complaining that the level of restlessness and apprehension in the community had only worsened.

    Biebie said: “The spill brought crude oil into the houses of many of our people. The thick smell of crude oil has affected our health. Breathing has become a problem, and it has become difficult to even feed because some of us cannot light fires in our kitchens.”

    Also, another community leader, Pastor Kpobari Bani, whose house was affected, said: “Since this incident started, I have not been able to cook for fear of explosion. My mother has been displaced and has moved to a neighbour’s house for fear of the explosion.

    “Shell said it has sold the facility to Renaissance Energy, which now owns the pipeline. So we are calling on them to come and stop the spill. We also call on the government and other relevant authorities to come to our aid and bring remedy to the land.”

    The Executive Director of HOMEF, Dr. Nnimmo Bassey, expressed disappointment over the alleged level of neglect to communities.

    Bassey said: “We are in a disaster zone and further disasters can erupt from even an accidental spark of fire. The slow response of the government and oil companies underscore the lack of care for the people and the environment. This level of laxity is absolutely unconscionable.

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    “The fact that this spill that happened a week ago is yet to be stopped sends a very strong point to why the government should focus on cleaning up Ogoniland and not seek to open new oil wells. The old wells should be shut down, and decommissioned. Our communities must not continue to be sacrificed on the altar of petrodollars.”

    He also called on all relevant authorities to move into action to curtail the spread of the flowing crude.

    Bassey further said: “The government cannot be silent at a time like this.  This is a time when all agencies should be here to stop the leak by shutting down the pipeline, stop the pollution and carry out urgent clean-up and remediation.

    “We call on NOSDRA, NESRA, MENA and HYPREP to move into swift action to stem the unfolding ecological and human crises.”

    The HOMEF boss called for a swift action to plug the leakage, remediate the land and carry out a thorough health audit on the exposed people of the community.

    “Government must show that they care for the people and the environment. Aged oil facilities should be decommissioned and retired, and all alleged divestments should be nullified to ensure that those who have made our communities literal landmines do not walk away from accountability,” HOMEF stated.

    Also commenting on the spill, Celestine Akpobari, an environmental activist, stated: “This is one of the reasons we have rejected the idea of restarting oil exploitation in Ogoni. The exploitation has not started, but the situation is becoming more volatile with spills of this nature.

    “This is supposed to be a remediation site, but as you can see it is an ecological crime scene. We are afraid that if this is not properly contained, the damage will be far worse than what we see.”

    Recall that on May 6, the Trans Niger Pipeline ruptured and triggered streams of crude oil flowing through B-Dere community, Gokana Local Government Area of Rivers.

    The cause of the explosion is said to be equipment failure.

    A similar explosion occurred in the Bodo community on March 17, 2025, which caused a massive fire that spread through the mangroves.

    These spills show very clearly the massive risks the communities will be exposed to if the desire of the federal government to resume oil extraction in Ogoniland happens.

    Many of the B-Dere community people have been internally displaced while those already impacted by the spill are living in fear over their health and safety.

    Officials of Renaissance Energy have yet to respond to requests for reaction and update on Joint Investigative Visit (JIV).

  • Why crude oil production should resume in Ogoniland

    Why crude oil production should resume in Ogoniland

    By Tekena Amieyeofori

    Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC) extracted crude oil from Ogoniland from 1958 to 1993, raking in billions of petrodollars at the expense of indigenous oil-producing communities.

    When SPDC finally pulled out of Ogoniland in 1993—at the height of the Ogoni non-violent struggle in 1993- thousands of spill incidents had occurred in various locations. 

    According to a recent ALJAZEERA report, more than two million barrels of spilled crude contaminated arable lands and fresh water from approximately 3,000 oil spill incidents between 1976 and 1991. 

    The outcome of what has been generally deplored as ecological genocide sent many to their early graves, following increased incidence of terminal illnesses and livelihood losses in the dark days of SPDC’s operation in Ogoniland.

    Many developments during the course of oil-induced conflict in Ogoniland point to the fact that SPDC had its way because it was dealing with a rentier state that was interested more in collecting royalties than the health of the environment and its citizens. 

    This is evident in the trumped up charges brought against the Ogoni nine (led by Ken Saro-Wiwa) and their subsequent extrajudicial execution under the military junta of the late General Sani Abacha on November 10, 1995. 

    Despite having devastated Ogoniland as a result of its irresponsible approach to crude oil mining, SPDC had the audacity to apply for renewal of its mining license, a request which the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP) vehemently opposed on July 3, 2018.

    Over the years, Ogoni oil fields have held an allure for treasure hunters like SPDC for obvious reasons. Ogoniland accounts for most of the oil fields in OML 11 which ranks among the most lucrative oil blocks in Nigeria’s Niger Delta region.

    The Ogoni oil fields also extend to OML 2 which is another economically vibrant oil block to be reckoned with in Nigeria’s oil belt. 

    In a 2019 report, the Guardian observed that the Ogoni oil fields were producing 130,000 barrels of crude oil daily as far back as May, 1993. The implication is that Ogoniland remains a crucial factor in Nigeria’s economic survival.

    One thinks, if truth be told, the Ogoni people’s resolution to shut in oil fields domiciled in their communities was the right course of action taken to save lives at the time. However, it is now out of place to continue to resist resumption of oil and gas production in the wake of SPDC’s ouster in 1993. 

    As a matter of fact, the outright rejection of every other operator suggests that there are no responsible corporate citizens in the petroleum industry, whether local or international. Moreover, the obstinate resistance to the reopening of the Ogoni oil fields is akin to biting one’s nose to spite one’s face. 

    For all its vast endowments in human and natural resources, Ogoniland remains largely backward in virtually all indices of development. Without a shadow of doubt, recommencement of oil and gas production will do Ogoni people more good than harm in the current political dispensation. 

    Firstly, resumption of oil production will generate more revenues both for the central government and subnational governments that directly interface with the people. The immediate benefit of increased revenues will be improved infrastructure to drive sustainable development. 

    For instance, additional revenues could be used to fund projects like roads, bridges, schools and hospitals that are in acute short supply in Ogoniland. Secondly, resumption of oil production will generate employment for the growing army of jobless youths, most of whom are currently operating in illegal economic spaces to eke out a living. Naturally, employment generation would reduce poverty, as the income earning population is expected to increase and fend not only for themselves, but also their dependents.

    Perhaps one should add that the fixation of a tiny band of Ogonis with a perpetual closure of the Ogoni oil fields offends the sensibilities of other oil-producing communities in the Niger Delta, who despite been visited with same ill fate of environmental pollution, have kept their oil fields open for production, providing economic resources from which the Ogoni people have benefited over the years. 

    Furthermore, it is important to note that the Ogoni Question has received, by far, more attention than the collective misery of their neighbours in the Niger Delta, both locally and internationally. 

    Fortunately, this attention has resulted in the establishment of the Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project (HYPREP) which has the mandate to oversee the Ogoni cleanup project and restore lost livelihoods in communities. Whether or not HYPREP is living up to expectation is another kettle of fish; its presence alone gives the Ogoni people a sense of restorative justice that the rest of the Niger Delta anticipates. 

    One would have expected the naysayers to demonstrate a spirit of solidarity with their kith and kin in Ogoniland and their neighbours in the Niger Delta to critically examine the pros and cons of resumed oil and gas production and make an informed decision that benefits all stakeholders. 

    From all indications, the few minority opposed to resumed oil and gas production in Ogoniland are living in the past, thinking that it is still business as usual in the petroleum industry whose operations have undergone significant reforms with the enactment of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021.

    Unlike in the past when there was paucity of legislations to drive good corporate governance in the petroleum industry, the PIA has unbundled the behemoth previously known as the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), creating a new regulatory framework for the upstream, midstream and downstream sectors to function efficiently with a view to making the industry more attractive to investors.

    In the upstream sector, the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), in its 2024 oil licensing round, insists that successful bidders must demonstrate capacity for compliance with environmental sustainability and development of host communities as a prerequisite to qualify for award of an oil block. 

    Ordinarily, this development should give opponents of crude oil and gas production in Ogoniland cause to shift from their rather obstinate position that is completely at variance with the wish of the generality of Ogoni people.

    Since Nigeria’s transition to democratic governance in 1999, successive governments have made unsuccessful attempts to convince Ogoni people to accept proposals for recommencement of oil and gas production in their land. Fortunately, a positive outcome of negotiations with the people has been implementation of the Ogoni cleanup project which President Bola Tinubu inherited when he came to power in May 2023. 

    But unlike previous governments that proposed the building of military barracks, correctional centre and cemetery, in Ogoniland, the government of President Tinubu has approved the establishment of a University of Environment and Technology to be sited in one of the world’s most ecologically devastated communities. 

    Hopefully, the proposed university will provide the much-needed support for the cleanup project when it finally comes on stream.

    Moreover, it will complement the socioeconomic benefits of resumed oil production highlighted above, and open up the entire Ogoniland for rapid development.

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    Feeling the pulse of the Ogoni people, most of them are in support of resumed crude oil and gas production under the administration of President Tinubu, a disposition that is attributable to Mr. President’s demonstration of openness and honesty in his engagements with the people. It goes without saying that prospects for an enduring reconciliation and resumption of crude oil and gas production in Ogoniland are quite bright.

    As a precondition for lasting peace, however, the teeming supporters of President Tinubu and his laudable plan for the transformation of Ogoniland demand exoneration for the Ogoni nine who were brutally murdered for demanding their rights. 

    The people also demand that a panel of enquiry be set up to investigate the killing of the Ogoni four and others who lost their lives at the height of military repression in Ogoniland.

    For a president who stood up against military dictatorship in the 1990s, the same time the Ogoni martyrs rose in defence of their motherland, it would beat one’s imagination to see a different Asiwaju Tinubu treating the Ogoni Question with levity. 

    To cut a long story short, the Ogoni people, Rivers State and the Federal Government are in dire need of resumed oil and gas production in Ogoniland. But the beneficiary of the anticipated recommencement of production must be a more responsible corporate citizen with a proven capacity to heal old wounds.

    Dr. Tekena Amieyeofori, Journalist and Conflict Scholar, can be reached via tekena4real@gmail.com

  • Stakeholders give condition for resumption of oil production in Ogoniland

    Stakeholders give condition for resumption of oil production in Ogoniland

    •Demand post-mortem exoneration for Ogoni Nine

    Stakeholders under the coalition of civil society organisations have demanded the exoneration of Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight other Ogoni leaders executed in 1995 as a condition for the resumption of oil extraction in Ogoniland.

    The coalition made its position known in a statement signed in Bori, Khana at the weekend by  Georgina Tenalo, President of the Federation of Ogoni Women Association (FOWA); Fegalo Nsuke, President of MOSOP; Evangelist Barine Caroline Nagbo; Barinaadaa Wugale, Executive Director of the Ogoni Solidarity Forum, South Africa; Michael Keania Karikpo, Country Manager of Natural Justice among others.

    The group insisted that the country’s response to the Ogoni people’s non-violent agitation was characterised by violence and led to atrocities such as mass arrests, unjust detention, and the execution of Saro-Wiwa and his comrades.

    Fegalo Nsuke, President of MOSOP, who read the position of the coalition, said that the exoneration of the Ogoni leaders was a necessary step towards correcting the historical injustices perpetrated against the Ogoni people.

    He urged President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to exhibit the same courage and determination that led to the end of the oil and forex subsidies in addressing the demands of the Ogoni people.

    Nsuke said: “We are witnesses to the uncommon courage and grit that it took to end the oil subsidy and Forex subsidy. We urge President Tinubu to exhibit a similar trait in dealing with this fundamental miscarriage of justice and abominable abuse of power by the Abacha Junta at the behest of Shell.”

    The coalition also demanded the establishment of a peace and reconciliation panel to investigate the deaths of the Ogoni Four to bring healing to their families.

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    The coalition expressed concerns over the lack of inclusivity in the current oil resumption process, saying that women and youths were not represented in the delegation that visited President Tinubu.

    They demanded a halt to the consultation process and the reconstitution of the facilitation group to reflect the diversity of the Ogoni community.

    The coalition said that the Ogoni people had consistently opposed oil resumption, citing concerns over environmental degradation, neglect, and marginalisation.

    They reiterated their commitment to sharing their resources with other Nigerians, but only on the basis of mutuality, fairness, equity, and justice.

    The coalition said: “We have no doubt in our minds that President Tinubu will work to heal the wounds inflicted on Ogoniland by a brutal dictatorship in cahoots with Shell. We urge President Tinubu to, as a sign of good faith; ensure the exoneration of Ken Saro-Wiwa, Baribor Bera, Saturday Doobee, Nordu Eawo, Daniel Gbokoo, Felix Nuate, John Kpuinen, Dr. Nubari Kiobel either by executive order or via a re-examination of the patently false evidence by the prosecution against these innocent Ogoni sons.”

    The coalition demanded the reconstitution of the facilitation group guiding the oil resumption process in Ogoniland to include representatives of women, Ogoni youths, families of the ‘Ogoni nine,’ MOSOP, and the Ogoni Council of Churches to ensure fairness, equity, and justice.

    The coalition said: “We also demand that the facilitation group be reconstituted to ensure it reflects the diversity of the Ogoni community and to ensure fairness, equity and justice.

    “Within this context, we demand that the consultation facilitation group should include representatives of women, representatives of Ogoni youths, a representative nominated by the families of the “Ogoni nine” and a representative of MOSOP and a representative of Ogoni Council of Churches.”

  • Stakeholders give condition for resumption of oil production in Ogoniland 

    Stakeholders give condition for resumption of oil production in Ogoniland 

    Stakeholders under the coalition of civil society organisations have demanded the exoneration of Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight other Ogoni leaders executed in 1995 as a condition for the resumption of oil extraction in Ogoniland. 

    The coalition made its position known in a statement in Bori, Khana at the weekend by  Georgina Tenalo, President of the Federation of Ogoni Women Association (FOWA); Fegalo Nsuke, President of MOSOP; Evangelist Barine Caroline Nagbo; Barinaadaa Wugale, Executive Director of the Ogoni Solidarity Forum, South Africa; Michael Keania Karikpo, Country Manager of Natural Justice among others.

    The group insisted that the country’s  response to the Ogoni people’s non-violent agitation was characterised by violence and led to atrocities such as mass arrests, unjust detention, and the execution of Saro-Wiwa and his comrades.

    Fegalo Nsuke, President of  MOSOP, who read the position of the coalition, said that the exoneration of the Ogoni leaders was a necessary step towards correcting the historical injustices perpetrated against the Ogoni people. 

    He urged President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to exhibit the same courage and determination that led to the end of the oil and forex subsidies in addressing the demands of the Ogoni people.

    Nsuke said: “We are witnesses to the uncommon courage and grit that it took to end the oil subsidy and Forex subsidy. We urge President Tinubu to exhibit a similar trait in dealing with this fundamental miscarriage of justice and abominable abuse of power by the Abacha Junta at the behest of Shell”.

    The coalition also demanded the establishment of a peace and reconciliation panel to investigate the deaths of the Ogoni Four to bring healing to their families.

    The coalition expressed concerns over the lack of inclusivity in the current oil resumption process, saying that women and youths were not represented in the delegation that visited President Tinubu. 

    They demanded a halt to the consultation process and the reconstitution of the facilitation group to reflect the diversity of the Ogoni community.

    The coalition said that the Ogoni people had consistently opposed oil resumption, citing concerns over environmental degradation, neglect, and marginalization. 

    They reiterated their commitment to sharing their resources with other Nigerians, but only on the basis of mutuality, fairness, equity, and justice.

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    The coalition said: “We have no doubt in our minds that President Tinubu will work to heal the wounds inflicted on Ogoniland by a brutal dictatorship in cahoots with Shell. We urge President Tinubu to, as a sign of good faith, ensure the exoneration of Ken Saro-Wiwa, Baribor Bera, Saturday Doobee, Nordu Eawo, Daniel Gbokoo, Felix Nuate, John Kpuinen, Dr. Nubari Kiobel either by executive order or via a re-examination of the patently false evidence by the prosecution against these innocent Ogoni sons”.

    The coalition demanded the reconstitution of the facilitation group guiding the oil resumption process in Ogoniland to include representatives of women, Ogoni youths, families of the ‘Ogoni nine,’ MOSOP, and the Ogoni Council of Churches to ensure fairness, equity, and justice.

    The coalition said: “We also demand that the facilitation group be reconstituted to ensure it reflects the diversity of the Ogoni community and to ensure fairness, equity and justice. 

    “Within this context, we demand that the consultation facilitation group should include representatives of women, representatives of Ogoni youths, a representative nominated by the families of the “Ogoni nine”and a representative MOSOP and a representative of Ogoni council of Churches.”

  • Establishment of varsity in Ogoniland excites MOSOP

    Establishment of varsity in Ogoniland excites MOSOP

    • Tinubu signs University of Environmental Tech Bill

    The signing of a bill establishing the Federal University of Environmental Technology, Ogoni, in Rivers State by President Bola Tinubu was well received by the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP) yesterday.

    Special Adviser to the President on Policy Communication, Daniel Bwala, said it was a way of addressing historical injustices and fostering inclusive development.

    “I am pleased to inform Nigerians that Mr. President @officialABAT has assented to the bill establishing Federal University of Environmental Technology, Ogoni, in Rivers State.

    “It’s important to highlight that the Renewed Hope administration of President Bola Tinubu is all about righting the wrongs of the past and putting in place institutions to guard against future segregated developments,” he stated in a post on X.

    MOSOP’s Publicity Secretary, Saviour Oscar Imeabe, said it was a good beginning but appealed to the President to look into other pressing requests of the Ogoni people.

    He said: “We are appealing to Mr President to exonerate the Ogonis that lost their lives while agitating for the struggle.

    “Mr. President should also pay attention to our agitation for the creation of Bori State and the implementation of the Ogoni Bill of Rights.

    “The Ogoni clean-up exercise was supposed to last for 30 years before talking about oil resumption so the question  is why calling for oil resumption when the clean-up exercise is still ongoing?”

    Ogoni-born rights defender, Akpobari Celestine, described the President’s gesture as a good take-off point, adding, however, that it would not address their pains or unlock the closed oil wells.

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    He said: “It doesn’t address our pains. This does not mean that the oil wells are now open.

    “We still have the issue of exoneration of Ken Saro-Wiwa and others and the release of Ken Saro-Wiwa Memorial Bus seized by the Customs since 2015.

    “Despite a valid court judgement obtained on 20th April 2025, the item has not been released.

    “We also have the issue of political marginalisation and that of state creation. The government is yet to contribute one kobo to the clean-up.”

    Protest over non-inclusion in oil production talks

    Also yesterday, at least, seven Ogoni communities from Gokana Local Government Area of Rivers State protested their non-inclusion in initial engagements by the Federal Government to resume crude oil production in Ogoniland.

    The communities of Mogho, B-Dere, K-Dere, Bera, Bodo, Kpor and Gbe, however, hailed President Bola Tinubu’s call for negotiated return of oil production in Ogoni after over three decades of operational closure.

    In a communiqué issued after their meeting, the communities said: “We as oil-bearing, highly impacted communities are not opposed to any genuine process that will lead to an early return of oil companies in our land.”

    But they vowed to oppose the development if people spearheading the negotiation fail to include them in future engagements.

    “We shall vehemently oppose and reject any ongoing or future process that seems clearly to ignore or consign to the background communities, landlords, farmers/fishermen whose livelihoods are, or will be injuriously impacted resulting from the proposed oil resumption in Ogoni,” the communiqué stated.

    The communities said they should be allowed to play a leading role in all negotiations because they bore the negative impacts of oil production.

    They said: “As a host to major oil fields, flow stations, manifolds and a gateway to Bonny export terminal, we make bold to say that the eventual outcome of any negotiation without our active participation will be rejected and our land and communities made inaccessible.”

    All the paramount rulers of the seven communities, council of chiefs, community development committees, and youth and women leaders signed the communiqué.

    The paramount rulers of Mogho, His Royal Highness (HRH) Mene Stephen Kpea; B-Dere, HRH Kadilo Sooh; K-Dere, Mene Isaac G; Bera, HRH Mene Magnus B.A; Bodo, HRH King John Berenson; Kpor, HRH Mene Avalobari Ntaoh and Gbe, HRH Mene Friday Gia, were among the community leaders that endorsed the communiqué.

  • ‘SPDC will not return to Ogoniland’

    The General Manager, External Relations of Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC), Igo Weli, has said the Anglo/Dutch oil giant will not return to Ogoniland for oil production.

    He spoke at the weekend in Port Harcourt, during the presentation of the 2019 edition of “Shell in Nigeria Briefing Notes” to the media.

    The “Shell in Nigeria Briefing Notes” is an annual publication detailing the activities of the business interests of the global energy giant in Nigeria, covering SPDC, Shell Nigeria Exploration and Production Company, and Shell Nigeria Gas.

    He said: “Oil production by SPDC in Ogoniland seized in 1993 (from 1958), following a rise in violence, threats to workers and attacks on facilities. The SPDC Joint Venture (JV) has produced no oil or gas in Ogoniland since then. Although, one of Niger Delta’s main pipelines, the Trans-Niger Pipeline (TNP), transverses Ogoniland.

    “In 2012, SPDC transferred operatorship of the JV’s assets in Ogoniland to the Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC), the production and exploration arm of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC)…”