Tag: OPC

  • OPC threatens protest in oil communities

    •Over alleged neglect

    The Oodua Peoples’ Congress (OPC) yesterday threatened to embark on a protest in the major oil fields in the coastal area of Ondo State over alleged neglect by the oil companies operating in the area.

    It slammed the Niger Delta Ministry and the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) for their “lukewarm” attitude to the plight of the indigenes.

    The group frowned at the failure of the oil companies to make impact in the area and accused the NDDC and the Niger-Delta Ministry of complicity.

    A letter signed by OPC’s National Publicity Secretary, Ajayi Olusola, Coordinator in Ondo State, Comrade Alao Olutayo and the Mayegun of OPC, Williams Ayerin and sent to the Commander of the Naval Forward Operational Base (FOB), Igbokoda, accused Chevron, Exxon, Mobil and Agip oil companies of jeopardisng the future of the indigenes.

    The group urged President Goodluck Jonathan to call the management of the oil companies to order in the interest of peace.

    The statement said Ilaje Local Government, the only oil producing council in the Southwest, produces over 800,000 barrels of oil per day.

    OPC vowed to embark on a protest in the oil fields to press home its demand.

    The group accused NDDC and the Niger Delta Ministry of collaborating with the oil companies at the detriment of the oil communities.

    It said Errha fields produce over 250,000 barrels of oil per day and Agip Oil, through its Abo Oil field, also produces over 150,000 barrels of oil per day without any project sited in the area by the oil companies.

    OPC said despite the huge revenue accruing to the oil companies and the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) through the oil communities, none of the indigenes has been employed by any of the oil companies.

    The statement said many communities, such as Ayetoro, Ikorigho, Odonla, Seluwa and Obenla would soon go into extinction following explorations on their lands by the oil companies.

    OPC said oil spills have occurred in the communities and the oil companies have not cleaned them up, adding that they have also failed to compensate the victims.

    “We are planning to protest at the Agbami oil field, Errha oil field, Abo oil field and other oil fields in the onshore and offshore of Ilaje waterways and this may not be in the interest of the oil communities.

     

     

     

     

  • Declare June 12 Nigeria’s unity day, Fasehun urges FG

    Declare June 12 Nigeria’s unity day, Fasehun urges FG

    Dr Fredrick Fasehun, Founder of the Odu’a People’s Congress, on Tuesday in Lagos urged the Federal Government to proclaim June 12 Nigeria’s unity day.

    Fasehun told a news conference that June 12 was the truest mark of Nigerian unity.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the historic June 12, 1993 presidential elections, which most observers adjudged fair and free, was believed to have been won by the late business mogul, Chief M.K.O Abiola.

    However, on June 23, the Gen. Ibrahim Babangida-led administration annulled the election and subsequently handed over power to an interim government headed by Chief Ernest Shonekan, a businessman.

    Fasehun said: “Just as the Federal Government has declared May 29 Democracy Day, it should consider proclaiming June 12 unity day.

    “June 12 should be our unity day because on that day, all the constituent units of Nigeria spoke with near-unanimity and elected Abiola their president.’’

    Fasehun, the interim National Chairman of the yet-to-be registered Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN), said that Nigerians could not forget June 12 as it had become part of the country’s political history.

    “We remember the rape of June 12. We remember the pains of June 12. We remember the dislocation caused by its cancellation.

    “We remember the lives lost, the limbs lost and the livelihoods lost because of June 12,” he said.

    The politician urged President Goodluck Jonathan to work out a compensation plan for the families of Nigerians, who died in the struggle for democracy.

    “As part of events marking the last Democracy Day, President Goodluck Jonathan announced a N5.7 billion compensation for victims of the 2011 post-election violence.

    “Some governors had made similar gestures in the past. We demand that government should immediately expand the scope of the current compensation plan to include victims of June 12,’’ he said.

    Fasehun also criticised a comment credited to the 2011 Presidential Candidate of the Congress for Progressive Change, retired Gen. Muhammadu Buhari, faulting emergency rule in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa States.

    He called for a national conference as a way out of the nation’s myriad of problems.

    “National Assembly members should concentrate on their core business of law-making and leave making a new constitution to a sovereign national conference of the federating units.

    “The lawmakers should no longer stand in the way of the conference,” he said.

  • Jonathan’s perspective on OPC and MASSOB

    Jonathan’s perspective on OPC and MASSOB

    President Goodluck Jonathan has not availed the country reasons for labelling the Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) and the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra (MASSOB) as national security threats. He owes the country a full explanation. Does the label have anything to do with the antecedents of the two groups both of which are regarded in many circles as ethnic militias? Or does it have anything to do with their present dispositions? Or perhaps, it has something to do with the lackadaisical manner the Islamist sect, Boko Haram, was at first handled before it snowballed into a full terrorist group. Whatever the considerations were, the country will be puzzled that the president has suddenly considered the OPC and MASSOB security threats almost at par with Boko Haram, the Islamist sect against which a full blown military engagement is underway.

    During the presentation of the mid-term report of his administration in Abuja on Democracy Day last week, the president suggested that, “Nigeria faces three fundamental security challenges posed by extremist groups like Boko Haram in the North; the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra in the South-East; and the Oodua People’s Congress in the Southwest.” If this is not strong stuff, then consider his next statement. “The activities of the Movement for the Actualisation of the Sovereign State of Biafra and OPC,” he added tersely, “though not as violently intense as those of Boko Haram, they still pose a serious security challenge to the Nigerian state.” It was expected that the president would say something major on the security challenges facing the country, but no one thought he would make such sweeping statements that are capable of boxing his administration in?

    Except the OPC is a sleeper cell of militants, there is nothing to show that in the past few years, it is an active militia able and willing to levy war against the state on the scale or even half the scale of the Boko Haram sect. In fact more than anything else, the OPC has become both a cultural organisation and security consultants to troubled and harassed neighbourhoods insufficiently serviced by the regular law enforcement agencies. Its leaders are not only known, they have also bidden for federal government’s lucrative pipeline security contracts, especially pipeline protection and surveillance jobs. In addition, their leaders are increasingly at the forefront of cultural activities, particularly those with tourism potentials.

    MASSOB’s leaders are known, and their offices are not hidden. They send out periodic press releases, grant interviews with their photographs emblazoned all over newspaper pages, and have advanced reasons for the Igbo to receive equitable share of national resources or, failing that, to enter into either a confederal arrangement with the rest of the country or outright autonomy and independence. They have advocated these causes openly through public channels. Admittedly, their advocacy has sometimes been accompanied by violence, but often they have been provoked by or resulted from a misunderstanding with law enforcement agents. In any case, because their members and leaders are known and their grievances understandable, if not legitimate, the state has a responsibility to engage them within the confines of the law. It will be counterproductive to radicalise them.

    This is, however, not to say there are no fringe elements within both groups, just as there are fringe elements acting more dangerously and independently in other areas of national life. Indeed, this column had in the past worried that the elite in both the Southwest and Southeast had engaged in unregulated romance with ethnic militias, a habit it concluded amounted to an abdication of the reasoned leadership they should give conservative and radical elements within their regions. However, it amounts to a hasty and extreme measure to label the two groups as security threats before engaging them in discussions and monitoring their activities to establish a pattern of constitutional subversion. It must be recalled that the federal government also failed to engage Boko Haram until it gradually metamorphosed into a terror group after its leaders were extrajudicially murdered. The same mistake must not be repeated.

    By summarily describing the OPC and MASSOB as security threats, the president will face intense criticisms from puzzled citizens. He will also endure unflattering comparisons between his kind consideration of Niger Delta militants to whom placatory mouth-watering contracts have been given and the heavy-handedness with which he seems prepared to deal with the considerably tame and ostensible militias from other parts of the country.

     

  • ACN, UPN, pipeline  contracts and OPC

    ACN, UPN, pipeline contracts and OPC

    Shortly before the inauguration of Nigeria’s Fourth Republic, I travelled by public transport to Ilorin. Somewhere in Ibadan, we came upon a band of Odua Peoples Congress (OPC) toughs wielding various weapons including automatic guns, short machetes and axes. Their leaders/commanders wore various specially embroidered clothes that harked back to the era of the Yoruba wars. Apart from small gourds strapped to their jumpers, they also wore red wrist or head bands with cowries stitched to them. They stopped traffic majestically and defiantly, and strolled across the road with not a care in the world. A few kilometres down the main road to Ilorin, we again encountered another band, this time in a convoy of beat-up cars and perhaps a pick-up van, if my memory serves me well. They drove fiercely and menacingly, some sitting on top of their cars, and others popping their heads out of the windows as their vehicles bobbed and weaved through the choked traffic.

    This was in the late 1990s, barely a few years after the 1994 Rwandan genocide raged in all its atavistic and sanguinary fury. Using the autocratic regime of Gen Sani Abacha as pretext, Yorubaland began to regress into anomie and idolatry. While still in traffic, and as OPC militants were strutting their stuff, I became both troubled and humiliated. Was this what the Southwest had become? Was the region’s civilisation so tenuous that it took just one destabilising incidence to demolish its accomplishments and send the region lumbering abjectly into the embrace of undemocratic and impulsive bands of area toughies? The OPC may no longer be brazen and daring as it was, but it has kept its structure fairly intact, and continues to attract mainly those who, like cultists, want a sense of adventure and meaning to life.

    The Southwest was somewhat lucky to have understood very early the pitfalls of putting its hopes and trust in an ethnic militia. Given the cold shoulder in polite circles, the OPC quietly morphed into a militia of local enforcers and security consultants. These jobs were needed to keep them busy in place of the revolution they, and many people, believed loomed in the 1990s and early 2000s. After reading about the Rwandan genocide and watching a documentary on it, not to talk of the post-Tito Yugoslavia that dissolved into civil war, it was easy to make up my mind about the dangers of indulging ethnic militias, whether among the Yoruba or in Boko Haram territory. The Yoruba were lucky the OPC experienced considerable attenuation over the years; the North is not so lucky in the hands of Boko Haram, which they at first indulged, then lamely opposed, and finally watched with quiet dismay and resignation from afar.

    For those who naively put their trust in the OPC as the saviour, backbone and standby militia of the Yoruba, the ongoing struggle for pipeline security contracts and leadership supremacy between Frederick Fasehun and Gani Adams can be very disillusioning. Sometime in April, Dr Fasehun had delivered a broadside on Mr Adams for attempting to match him wit for wit and brawn for brawn. But he also acknowledged that he had bidden for a pipeline security contract because the six million youths in his militia deserved the federal government’s economic patronage, just as Niger Delta youths are beneficiaries of very lucrative federal government contracts. No one knows where he got the outlandish figures of OPC membership. But responding to the ACN spokesman’s criticisms that he bade for the contract in order to fund a political party and turn it into a destabilising counterpoise to the region’s dominant party, Fasehun offered a most peremptory and non-ideological argument indicating that in his political world everything boiled down to money. That this materialism subverts the lofty principles of the Southwest, especially the lodestar of the Unity Party of Nigeria (UPN) he is presumptuously trying to revive, is immaterial to him.

    I have read many opinions on the contract bid by the OPC leaders, and find them humbling. In defending Fasehun, most of the views quite illogically ignore the contradictions between propping up oneself as a saviour or defender of the Yoruba and being a federal government contractor. The Tompolos, Boyloaf and Dokubos of the Niger Delta have never tried to sound principled or ideological. From their antecedents and their current standing, they give the firm impression they need financial empowerment more for its own sake than for any esoteric reasons. They are not driven by any principle of democracy, federalism, human rights, or any other lofty values that ennoble humanity. If the right contracts are dispensed to them, it becomes an incentive to work with and give support to the government of the day. In this they are at least honest, for they do not attempt the disingenuousness their OPC counterparts have now become famous for. How Mr Adams and Fasehun, for instance, hope to get pipeline protection contracts from the Jonathan presidency and in the same breath defend the values that have characterised the Yoruba for centuries is a puzzle. More puzzling is the fact that they do not see the tragedy of outsourcing security to ethnic militants and repentant bigots.

    But the dishonesty of the OPC leaders and their self-serving philosophy do not end there. They are not squabbling over ideology, or over political orientation, or even over societal reengineering. These self-appointed defenders of the Yoruba race are squabbling over two things only: contract from the government, and leadership position in the OPC. It is a surprise that it has taken so long for many Yoruba elites to see through the gimmickry of the militia. While the contracts have not yet been awarded, Fasehun has spoken condescendingly of subletting less than one-third of the contract’s value to Mr Adams’ faction of the OPC. The latter, inured to the paradox of Yoruba defenders fighting for crumbs from a potential enemy, is asking for nothing less than half of the total value of the contract. This, he says, is because he leads about 90 percent of the membership of the OPC.

    The dissembling duo already has projects in the pipeline. While Dr Fasehun is attempting to revive the defunct UPN, Mr Adams, less pretentious, less ambitious, but perhaps more practical and self-important, simply wants to keep his boys engaged and happy. Both suggest that the Southwest deserves it, for the ACN, according to them has proved incapable of taking care of the welfare of the region. On April 18, Fasehun published a rambling and innuendo-ridden advertorial in which he attempted to rationalise the revival of the UPN. The best in the advert is his exaggerated affectations on democracy. But it would have been better if he had not published anything, for it is clear that in spite of his activist years, he lacks both the depth and character to preach democracy to anyone or offer leadership to any group.

    Fasehun assumes that merely invoking the name of UPN is enough to bring back the glory of the Chief Obafemi Awolowo era. He forgets that it was not the party that ennobled Awo; on the contrary it was Awo through his brilliance, depth, passion and discipline, not to say contempt for federal handouts, that ennobled the party. What virtue will Fasehun bring to the party he seeks so cavalierly and comically to resuscitate? I can see none. And what on earth has come over opinion writers and analysts that they give Fasehun a hearing, he that recently asked for Major Hamza Al-Mustapha to be pardoned, he of doubtful ideology and of hidden motives? Had the ferment in the country graduated into a revolution and any of the two OPC leaders assumed prominence, imagine what terrors, poor judgement and mediocrity would have been unleashed on the region.

    As Mr Adams said in his provocative response to Fasehun’s angry and disrespecting characterisation of his rival, the two OPCs are perfectly irreconcilable. But much more than the struggle for leadership of the ethnic militia, the pipeline contract controversy has exposed the superciliousness of the older man and the superficiality of the younger claimant. The elites and opinion moulders in the Southwest must surely have taken the measure of the two pretenders to the Yoruba throne. They are first and foremost contractors, a duo of self-serving and ambitious leaders without the farsightedness, discipline, sacrifice and competence to interpret the past and decipher the tangled skein of Nigeria’s future, let alone embody the values and virtues that have stood the Southwest out for centuries.

  • Police won’t join forces with OPC to find Lagos council chair

    The Lagos State Police Command yesterday said it would not need the assistance of the Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) to secure the release of the Chairman of Ejigbo Local Council Development Area (LCDA), Mr Kehinde Bamigbetan, who was abducted by yet unknown gunmen near his home on Monday.

    The Command’s Deputy Police Public Relations Officer (DPPRO), Ozoani Damasus, spoke with reporters yesterday.

    Reacting to the OPC’s assurance that it would work with the police to ensure the release of the council boss, Ozoani said OPC is an outlawed group, which a constituted authority would not work with.

    The police spokesperson said: “OPC is a banned organisation and it remains banned. So, we are not aware of them working with us to secure Bamigbetan’s release. We are yet to make any arrest for now, but we are on top of the situation. We have our strategy and we cannot disclose it in public.

    “Let me assure you that police are on top of the situation and efforts are on to ensure his immediate release. There will be proper briefing after his release.”

    Prayers continued to hold at the Bamigbetans’ 21, Ono Iwa Mimo Street, Ori-Oke, Egbe home yesterday.

    Though reporters were prevented from entering the compound, some members of an unidentified church were seen leaving after praying for about an hour for Bamigbetan’s release.

    Dignitaries continued to throng Bamigbetan’s home where his wife in solidarity visit to his wife, Fatimah, children and relations, were waiting anxiously to see him.

    The wife of the Speaker of the House of Assembly, Mrs Mayowa Ikuforiji, and his entourage, prayed with the family.

    A source from the family said: “The more the delay, the more apprehensive the wife and children become. People have been coming; prayers have been offered, but what is important is that he is found. I cannot say whether the kidnappers are still contacting the family.

    There were high hopes that the abducted council boss may be released soon as the kidnappers reportedly promised to release him this morning at a yet unnamed location.

    A source, who preferred anonymity, told The Nation yesterday that the kidnappers got in touch with the family and assured it to be prepared to receive Bamigbetan at an undisclosed location by tomorrow (today) morning.

    “As we talk, the kidnappers are getting in touch with the family which has kept the hope of the family and well wishers alive. But we pray and sincerely hope that the abductors will keep to their promise,” the source said.

    A socio-political group, the Osun Development Agenda (ODA), has called for Bamigbetan’s unconditional release, after an emergency meeting in Osogbo, the Osun State capital.

    Its deputy convener, Rahman Shenge, in a statement, expressed shock over the incident, describing it as unfortunate, adding that Bamigbetan’s abduction was a bad omen for the Yoruba and a reflection of worsening security situation in the country.

    It said: “This dastardly act calls for serious concern on the part of all Yoruba sons and daughters who must now wake up from their slumber and complacency as it is now clear that the Southwest of Nigeria is no longer immune from the malady of heinous criminalities which we once thought was impossible here.

    “As an organisation, we are naturally worried about the safety of our convener (Bamigbetan) and the psychological trauma he must be going through in the hands of his captors who have made a baffling demand for $1million as a ransom for his life and freedom.

    “While we call for the immediate unconditional release of Comrade Bamigbetan, we call on all Nigerians and state governments in the Southwest to reflect on this ugly development and its implications for the security the Nigerian state and the need to decentralise it for effective maintenance of law and order in our land. Clearly, the need for state police can no longer be dismissed.”

  • Adams decries neglect   of Yoruba language

    Adams decries neglect of Yoruba language

    The National Co-ordinator of the O’odua People’s Congress (OPC) and Chief Promoter of Olokun Festival Foundation, Otunba Gani Adams, has once again decried the decline in the usage of the Yoruba   language. He made this observation at the grand finale of the Osun Osogbo festival recently held in Osogbo, the Osun State capital.
    The OPC leader spoke at the group’s celebration ground after visiting the Osun Osogbo Grove as part of the group’s annual tradition during the festival.
      He said it was acceptable to say culture holds the streams of all moral values and language is one of  the values that culture holds. According to him, he was worried  that as a language becomes weak and unused, the ideas, philosophy of the culture of that language disappears.
    He said: “A language transmits the ideology of a culture. Osun Osogbo, as an expression,for instance, cannot be given an exact interpretation in any other language  because it is an ideology that intrinsically belongs to the Yoruba culture.”
    The OPC leader also identified the problems facing the Yoruba language as the “the unfortunate influence of other foreign languages acceptable as the media of instruction in schools and of social interaction among elite. It is very hard to see a home in Yorubaland that is not encouraging speaking of foreign languages, especially English, among their children.”
    He said many Yoruba parents  now measure fluency in the English language as a yardstick for measuring intelligence. He said the Yoruba language and other adopted languages like English could be used side by side without damaging one for the other.
     Adams said by allowing the Yoruba language to die, the values and ideologies that the Yoruba people need to nurture their existence as descendants of Oduduwa will die as well.
    He said the Yoruba people should see the language as an important aspect of their lives and every thing should be done to keep it alive.
    The OPC Osun Osogbo festival also witness songs and dances and other creativer cultural expressions. On the band stand was a popular Yoruba musician, St. Janet who played her hearts out to the appreciaition and admiration of the OPC members and their guests.