Tag: Rivers

  • Five killed in Rivers renewed violence

    Five killed in Rivers renewed violence

    •Two at High Court complex, three at Bori   

    Two private security guards at the Rivers State High Court complex in Port Harcourt, the state capital, have been killed.

    The killings disrupted the court’s sitting.

    Three other persons were reportedly killed in Bori, headquarters of Khana Local Government.

    Police spokesman Ahmad Muhammad, a Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP), confirmed the attacks in Port Harcourt, yesterday.

    The two security guards were said to be on night duty at the Block ‘C’ (new court building) of the complex.

    The courts could not sit, but police Hilux trucks and security agencies kept watch.

    Judiciary workers were asked to go home.

    Mohammad said no police officer was killed in any of the attacks.

    But he said the police had tightened security around the area to forestall further attacks.

    Chief Security Officer (CSO) of the complex Tabo-Tubor Douglas corroborated the police position on the alleged killing of officers in the attack.

    Douglas debunked the report that some police officers were killed in the attack.

    The CSO urged media men to always crosscheck their facts before going public.

    He said: “I want to appeal to the media to always verify their source. There was no gunshot anywhere on the premises last night. No policeman was killed. Instead, it was our people that were killed: two security men; the third person was injured and is at an undisclosed hospital.

    “This place was as calm as every other place last night (Monday night).

    “We came to work this morning (yesterday) to discover that police officers had taken over the complex. On enquiry, we discovered that two of my security men had been killed and their bodies found within the premises.

    “Nobody knows who killed them.”

    Asked about the time he resumed and discovered the bodies, Douglas said: “I resumed at some minutes past 6 am. The police had taken over the complex and the victims  killed before then. Nobody can tell the actual time the attack took place. But it must have happened before we resumed this morning (yesterday).”

    According to him, besides the two victims, no office was tampered with; neither was anything stolen.

    Douglas dismissed insinuations that the attack might not be unconnected with the suspected resumption yesterday of the trial of the three suspected killers of a militant leader, Sogboma George.

    The matter was scheduled to come up yesterday at one of the High Courts in the complex.

    The CSO noted that the matter had been going on in the last four years without problems.

    He wondered why anybody believed that yesterday’s sitting should be the reason for attacking innocent persons on legitimate duties.

    Douglas said: “Please, the Sogboma matter has been on in this court for over four years. The sittings have been peaceful. People should stop saying what they do not know and allow the police to carry out their investigation.”

    The CSO denied knowledge of whether or not the case was supposed to come up in the court yesterday.

    He said: “Even at that, the people have been coming here for the matter without any problem. I believe somebody decided to do this to create a scene.”

    Douglas assured that courts will resume sitting today.

     

  • 12 feared dead in Rivers cult clashes

    •Police confirm four deaths 

    Gunmen suspected to be cultists on Saturday killed 12 residents of Ula-Upata and Edoha of Ahoada East Local Government of Rivers State.

    The dead included a woman and her three children.

    The attacks occurred barely 48 hours after some gunmen killed three persons in Okwale in Khana Local Government.

    The attack on Ula-Upata reportedly occurred at 1 pm while Edoha was reportedly invaded at 9 pm on same day.

    Police Commissioner Musa Kimo confirmed the killing yesterday in Port Harcourt, the state capital.

    The police chief said four persons were killed at Ula-Upata but did not confirm the casualty at Edoha.

    He listed the victims as: Monica Zion (62), Gospel Nwuka (45), Patricia Ziko (42) and Rogers Nwuka (28).

    Kimo said four teams had been deployed in Ula-Apata to restore peace.

    The police chief urged residents to give the command information to enable it take prompt action on crimes.

    A source said armed men invaded and killed 10 residents of Ula-Apata at 1 pm and moved to Edoha, killing two residents at 9 pm.

    The police said normalcy had returned to Ula-Apata, contrary to reports that the area had been deserted.

    The command urged the residents to go about their legitimate duties without fear.

    It assured them of protection.

    An eyewitness said: “Yesterday (Saturday) was bloody at Ula-Ukpata and Edoha. Gunmen killed 19 persons at Ula-Ukpata and Edoha. They invaded Ula-Ukpata at 1 pm and killed 12 persons.”

    “They reappeared at 9 pm and killed two more residents, and moved to Edoha, a nearby village, and beheaded five. The heads of the victims were left on Edoha Road.”

    Police assistant spokesperson Grace Iringe-Koko attributed the tragedy to a cult war between two rival groups.

    Iringe-Koko, who did give details, said only two deaths were confirmed.

  • Rivers community looks beyond oil

    The Bille Community Welfare Association (BCWA), Abuja gathered the people of the community for a one-day sensitisation programme in Port Harcourt, the Rivers State.

    The theme was: “Bille Beyond Oil” . They also launched a book titled “Who’s Who in Bille.”

    In a lead paper delivered by a prominent son of the town and a retired Director from Rivers State Civil Service, Dawari Boisa, he traced the history of the people which he said started in the 9th Century and later became one of the five distinct Eastern Niger Delta Ijo Communities.

    In the paper titled: “Bille Beyond Oil: Strategies for Present and Future Sustainable Economic Development of the Kingdom” Boisa argued that the discovery of crude oil from Bille in 1958 has made his people to drift from fishing to crude oil dependent economy.

    Borisa blamed this drift on the “very heavy polluted rivers and creeks due to oil spills from oil and gas exploration and exploitation activities like oil spillages and gas flaring in the area which made fishing to be unviable economic occupation.”

    The situation, he also said, has been aggravated by the illegal crude oil refining activities.

    He marshalled out six points which the people should latch on to enable them improve their lot and these include  show of love and commitment to Bille Kingdom as well as effective participation in politics.

    Addressing the people, the Chairman of the occasion, Elder Boma Benebo said the event was an outcome of the dialogue the chiefs and stakeholders of Bille had in Abuja in 2014.

    Benebo also said that the theme of the event is an indication that “Bille is well located geographically and possesses enough potential for tourism and large scale fishing.”

    A Cchief of Bille, Barrister Iyalla Igani recalled that town used to be a sanctuary for those who wanted to rest from the hustle and bustle of the cities, lamenting that over the years, the town has lost this tourism status.

    In a goodwill message, the Bille Kingdom Development Committee Chairman, Asatubo Kemuel,  said Bille Beyond Oil requires a sustainable and healthy environment which supports economic activities and wealth creation.

    Kemuel  also called on oil companies operating within their territory to adequately carry out human capital and infrastructure development initiatives by way of corporate social responsibility because globally, this is regarded not as a mere moral obligation “but as legal obligation that arises out of the industry regulatory framework.”

    A Director from the Rivers State Ministry of Chieftaincy Affairs, Mrs Ine Olumati who represented the ministry, commended the people for  the event.

    The highlight of the occasion was the unveiling of a 166-page book titled: “Who’s Who in Bille” written by another son of the soil, Mr Harvest Emmanuel-Olu in which he profiled prominent sons and daughters of the land who consequently launched it with some millions of naira.

  • Wike gives 247 Rivers secondary schools science equipment

    In a bid to stop principals  and schools from extorting  money from parents for practicals during  West African  Senior Secondary School Examination (WASSCE), Rivers State Governor,  Nyesom Ezenwo Wike  has  distributed science  equipment and consumables to 247 secondary schools  in  the state.

    The governor also distributed funds to all the schools to purchase perishable consumables for the practicals aspects of the examination.

    Making the presentation to school principals last weekend, Wike said that with the new equipment and funds, principals have no reason to charge illegal levies of any kind.

    Represented by the Chairman of the Rivers State Senior Secondary Schools Board, Chief David Briggs, the governor said: “All Science practical Materials for 2015/2016 WASSCE remain free for every student to use and no princ ipal should surcharge any student for the practical materials which is provided free  and at no cost to Rivers people.

    “The funds that will be released to the schools are meant to ensure that they buy consumables required for the SSCE science practicals. No Principal should on any account levy any student for the purchase of  consumables  for  science  practicals.”

    Replying,  Mrs- Leyiga Ebeh Charity, Principal of Community Secondary School, Rumuapara in Obio/Akpor LGA praised Wike for taking into consideration the plight of the less privileged.

    Also speaking, Mr Kuete Teekaa, Principal of Government Girsl Secondary School (GGSS) Koroma Tai said with the distribution of the equipment and funds, principals  would have no excuse to charge levies.

     

  • Rivers vigilance group arrests suspected armed robber

    The residents of Diobu axis in Port Harcourt City Local Government Area of Rivers State yesterday heaved a sigh of relief following the arrest of a suspected notorious armed robber, simply identified as Amanga.

    The suspect, who most of the residents identified as one of those terrorizing the area, was arrested by a vigilante group while stealing a refrigerator at the Ojioto area of Port Harcourt.

    The leader of the Diobu Vigilante group, Mr. Victor Ohaji, while handling over the suspect to the police, said Amanga was a confirmed notorious armed robber who has been terrorizing the area.

    Ohaji alleged that the suspect and his gang were responsible for the various cases of robberies, rape and all other criminal acts in the area.

    “   My men are out to assist the police fight crime in this area. The people of Diobu can now sleep with their two eyes closed. We are youths of this state and we are tired of the insecurity in our area. We will continue to partner with the police and other security agencies,” Ohaji said.

  • Why we abandoned foreign studies half-way, by Rivers students   

    Rivers State students, who were on scholarships abroad, but returned home on the order of the government to continue their studies in the country have decried the development.

    They wondered why it was during their time the government discontinued foreign sponsorships when their mates concluded their studies abroad.

    Former Governor Rotimi Amaechi’s administration began programmes encouraging Rivers youths to study outside abroad.

    Some of them have completed their studies and returned home; others stayed abroad for their Masters and Doctorate or work.

    But those offered admission to study abroad a year or two before Amaechi left office have been enmeshed in the state’s boiling politics.

    Governor Nyesom Wike said his administration had no money to pay for students on scholarships abroad.

    Instead, the governor said the students should return to Nigeria to continue their studies in local universities.

    Our investigation showed that many students have returned, following the government’s directive.

    In an interview in Port Harcourt, the state capital, Governor Wike said despite his decision to discontinue the fees of students abroad, his government cleared fees of those in final year.

    The governor said his government could not allow the students to suffer but would offer them opportunity to study in Nigeria.

    Our reporter spoke with some returnee students, who said the government’s discontinued payment of their fees forced them to abandon their studies and return home.

    According to them, they returned because their visas would not be renewed without payment of their school fees.

    The distraught students noted that the government’s failure to settle their allowances caused them hardship.

    One of the students, Fortune Anokuru, of Computer System Engineering at Nottingham Trent University, United Kingdom, said he was preparing for second year when news came that Rivers students on scholarships abroad should return home.

    He said students, who have not returned home, were doing menial jobs to survive.

    Fortune said: “We came back because we were unable to pay our fees, and the country made it compulsory that it would not renew student’s visa unless we paid our fees. The government has decided to discontinue paying our fees abroad.

  • ‘Buhari should stop political killings in Rivers’

    ‘Buhari should stop political killings in Rivers’

    Senator Magnus Abe was the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) for the Rivers Southeast District in the inconclusive March 19 rerun. In this interview with BISI OLANIYI in Port Harcourt, the River State capital, he says the Buhari administration should put an end to the politically-motivated killings and the intimidation of APC members in the Southsouth state.

    What is your assessment of the political situation in Rivers State?

    It is really quite unfortunate that in 2016 Nigeria, we will be discussing these issues. The unprecedented level of violence that we witnessed in the 2015 elections has not abated. In fact, the 2016 rerun elections in Rivers State were actually worse than the 2015 elections.

    Even, after the elections, the threats to members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the state is still high. Indeed, in many communities in my senatorial district (comprising the four Ogoni LGAs Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme, as well as Andoni, Opobo/Nkoro and Oyigbo councils), which is the district where the elections were postponed, a lot of our party members perpetually run out of their communities, because a lot of them are being attacked and killed.

    In fact, the very one that has shivers down my spine is the case of one young man, who used to be in the opposition and just recently joined the APC. He was with me last night, telling me that he was in danger and that I am in danger. Just this afternoon, we got information that he was assassinated at a burial.

    People went to a burial where everybody was gathered. the assassins came down in cars, opened fire on him in front of thousands of people and killed him in cold blood. I am still in shock. We keep saying to people that we are in danger; something should be done. It is this same group of people that have been attacking and killing people in the area over the past three, four years.

    It was the same gang that attacked members of the APC when they were going to attend the President Muhammadu Buhari’s inaugural rally in Port Harcourt and the President visited them in the hospital. They are still killing people up till now. It was the same gang that attacked the APC rally at Bori in Khana LGA three times, publicly opened fire on people.

    It was a similar gang operating in another area that attacked the APC rally in Okrika. The funny thing is that, in all these things that are happening, there is no investigation going on. Nobody is being arrested, prosecuted or detained.

    The re-run are inconclusive. What is the way forward?

    I do not think that that statement by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is in consonance with the sovereignty of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. We have laws in this country and what makes a country sovereign is the fact that your laws are effective within your own borders.

    The Nigerian law does not anticipate a situation where the INEC has to take permission from any group of criminals before it can conduct elections. That is not the law. The law is that the INEC is to set a date for elections and the Nigerian state is to make the place conducive for elections. That is the law.

    So, if the place is not conducive and people do not come to agree with the INEC up till 2019, does it mean that the elections will not hold? What if the same situation is replicated across the country, are we going to now cancel elections in this country? The same lack of security that is making it impossible for us to hold elections is making it impossible for ordinary Nigerians to go about their normal business.

    How will you describe the roles of security agencies in the March 19 rerun in Rivers State?

    You cannot hold the security agencies directly responsible for what is happening in Rivers State. The governor (Nyesom Wike) is the chief security officer of the state. The Federal Government has effective command on the security agencies. Somebody has to give an order to the security agents to fish out the hoodlums and put a stop to these killings.

    Somebody has to fund the order, when it is given. Somebody has to work with the security agencies to implement the order. As it is today, the security agencies are tired. If somebody is arrested now, before evening, people will call you from the highest levels of state government to release the person. They will ask, why are you arresting him?

    If you dare charge the person to court and it goes to the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP), advice will be written. I mean there are all sorts of shenanigans that the government can use to make sure that people they want to protect are protected. The message is getting to the criminals that as long as they are in power, nothing will happen. That is what is emboldening them.

    If you post policemen or soldiers, you deploy them to a place. Somebody is supposed to feed them, fund their presence there and provide water. They are human beings. People are supposed to support them. Where they do not get the support, who is going to be responsible for the kind of effectiveness that you expect from the security agencies?

    There are just two ways of dealing with this thing. The Rivers state government is supposed to take the lead in putting a stop to the criminality, but let me give you an example. You heard what happened in Gokana LGA of Rivers state, when the SSG Kenneth Kobani, an indigene of Bodo-Ogoni in Gokana LGA), was arrested. He (SSG) is the Chairman of the Arrest Resistance Committee set up by the Rivers State government and at the place where he was arrested, members of the committee opened fire on the soldiers and bombed the INEC office in Gokana LGA.

    The police could not free the youth corps members who were held hostage there. So, the matter in Rivers State is serious beyond words and if the state government is going to put political expediency above the life of Nigerian citizens, then, the Federal Government has the responsibility to step in, provide the leadership and resources necessary to bring this sad episode to an end. You cannot just blame security agencies. How are they going to achieve that?

    The APC’s government at the centre alive to its responsibility of protecting lives and property of Rivers residents?

    Today, there are communities in Ogoni that have publicly banned the holding of APC meetings, with the support of militants in the communities, asking people who are members of APC to leave the communities. We have reported it to the security agencies. No action has been taken. So, what is the APC to do? This matter is strictly between the Federal and state governments. They are the ones that have the powers of cohesion, resources and constitutional responsibility to deal with this issue.

    If the Federal Government, because President Muhammadu Buhari does not want to intervene in the work of Rivers State, has kept quiet to give the state an opportunity to deal with this issue, should not be taken for granted. The security challenge in Rivers State is clearly not being dealt with by the state government. So, it is now up to the Federal Government to step in and take responsibility.

    Somebody must be responsible for what is happening in Rivers state. It cannot be that it is nobody’s business. Neither can it be the business of the APC or the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). This is the business of Nigeria and there are authorities responsible for what happens in Nigeria.

    Why are some of your people working against you, to ensure you do not return to the Senate?

    What I see going on is politics gone too far. Everybody knows that, if there is an election in Rivers Southeast Senatorial District and the people are allowed to choose their representative, I will be chosen. Everybody knows that across the state. It is not a hidden matter. but, everything is being done to stop the people to have the right of free choice.

    The Rivers governor had gone to say, stop Senator Abe by all means and from that time till today, there has been no peace. Everything is being done to stop the people of the area from having the opportunity to elect a representative of their choice. Everything is being done to cow the electorate. Everything is being done to stop people from coming out to vote.

    I have said it time without number that I am not asking for any favour. All I want is to create an atmosphere where people can vote and the votes can be counted. If that happens, win or lose, I stand by what the people decide, but there are people who are going out of their way to make sure that, that does not happen. That is the cause of everything that you are seeing here.

    Is the crisis in confounding to you?

    There is nothing out of the ordinary that is going on in Rivers State other than the fact that you have an administration that has refused to put the security of lives and property against its own political interest. You have a situation where the laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria are suspended in Rivers State. You have a situation where all the rights guaranteed by the Nigerian constitution to Nigerians are being denied members of the APC in Rivers state, including the right to life.

  • Saga of riverine communities who defecate in rivers, from which they drink

    Saga of riverine communities who defecate in rivers, from which they drink

    DEFECATING in the house and going to deposit the excreta in rivers lining the neighbourhood is a common sight in most riverine communities. Checks showed that the residents in some cases go directly to the river to defecate, without feeling abashed about it. For them, it has become an accepted way of life. They stroll out armed with medium paint buckets, nylon bags and newspapers neatly used to package the faeces they had excreted in their various homes and head straight to the river that bounds the community.

    Like short put throwers, they fling the wastes as long as their energy could muster into the river and without minding who was watching, they elegantly walk back to their homes. Beside the spot where they deposited their wastes is where the children in the neighbourhood always have their pleasure bath.

    This was the situation when The Nation visited some riverine communities in Lagos and parts of Ogun State recently.

    Some of the residents after emptying their bowels went and deposited the wastes in the rivers. Not minding what the effect of the rubbish that had been thrown into the river could be, the children who were swimming in the river took a competitive dive, splashing the polluted water at each other’s face in excitement. In the height of their ecstasy, some of the innocent children poured a handful of the water into their mouth and used a finger to scrub round it.

    “We are bathing and catching fun. The excitement we have swimming in the river doesn’t make us to realise whether somebody is throwing excreta into it. We don’t have water supply that can make us bathe as often as we want, especially in this hot weather. We equally don’t have the opportunity to go to swimming pools to swim like our privileged colleagues. This is what we have and we would not hesitate to make good use of it,” one of the children said as he took a plunge back into the river.

    Aside from bathing in the polluted river, checks showed that the river also serves other purposes for the residents who are mostly indigents. In extreme situations, some of the residents said they have had to drink the polluted water from the river. Much as this appears as fun for the children, findings revealed that the ugly development is a problem that has been eating up the adult residents of the riverine communities for a long time.

    It was gathered that they have grappled with the challenge for many decades and have often paid dearly for it as some of them, the children in particular, have had to suffer myriad of illnesses ranging from cholera, diarrhea to other water borne diseases. In fact, medical and environmental experts who spoke with The Nation said the deplorable condition in the communities could have been responsible for the mysterious death of 20 children in Eti Osa Local Government Area of the state early in the year.

    In most of the communities visited by our correspondent, a good number of the aged respondents expressed unreserved anger when they were asked to speak about their condition. It was like opening a chapter of their lives that they had closed and didn’t want reopened.

    A resident of Ebute Iga, Chief Ibikunle Matimoju’s remark showed the frustration and how long the people have lived with this problem. The octogenarian told The Nation that as an infant, his mother used to put alum in the water to purify it before they could have water to drink.

    “We have been in this deplorable condition long before I was born. We have been voting during elections as far back as 1954 when late Chief Obafemi Awolowo and Benson were at the centre of political activities in this environment. Right from that time, politicians have been making series of promises to us, assuring us that they would provide solutions to our challenges but till date, nothing has been done.

    “Aside from the government, several individual’s have always come here with other people to know what our challenges are and always promise to come back to do something thereafter but none of them has ever come back not to talk of doing anything to alleviate our plight.”

    Regretting that his children and grandchildren have inherited the problems they were born with, he said: “We don’t have potable water. My mother used to fetch water from the river and to make it fit for us to drink, she would put alum in it. Back then, the river was not as bad as it right now. As I am speaking with you, we can’t dig wells or toilets in this area because before you dig a foot, water will be everywhere.

    “This is why we defecate in our houses and go to the river to deposit them. I must confess that it t is not a cheering development. It is something that draws tears from our eyes because our children and grand children have come to inherit the problems that we grew up to know.”

    If Chief Matimoju was sad by the development, 100-year-old Pa Salawu Sanni was visibly disturbed when our correspondent sought his view on the issue.

    He noted that the community made conscious efforts to build a toilet for members of the community to avert the stench and health hazard associated with depositing human wastes in neighbourhood rivers.

    “Our late traditional ruler did everything possible for us to build a toilet but it didn’t work out. As you must have heard, we don’t have toilets. We have paint buckets that we defecate in, in our homes. After doing that, we would go and pour it in the river. Our children bathe and swim in the river. What we have done is to tell them the portion they must not go beyond when they are swimming.”

    Chief Lateef Eshinlokun, the traditional leader of the community, also expressed his anger about the plight of community.

    “The problem we are going through in the community is borne out of the fact that they see us as common villagers who do not matter in the scheme of things. They would always come and ask for our vote but immediately we give them our support, they would turn their backs at us. Before I became the traditional ruler of the community, the agency responsible for environmental issues asked us to construct toilet. We made the move but we didn’t dig far before we encountered water.

    “At a point, some officials suggested that we should have a tank where we would be depositing our excreta so that it would be removed from time to time. But before you know what was happening, there were cockroaches everywhere and people could not cope. All that didn’t work at the end of the day. We also attempted to dig a well but that also had its challenges. The water that came out was salty. We couldn’t use it to bathe because it is not good for our body.”

    A visit to Ogolonto, another riverine community in the area also showed how the environmental challenge bedeviling the people is making life unbearable for them.

    One of the residents who identified himself as Ogunsanya Bello said the difficulty in having a proper place to defecate has always put them in serious mess, adding: “Virtually all the houses in this neighbourhood don’t have toilets. We often go to the river to defecate. It is a huge challenge because the stench is always disturbing. Flies and cockroaches do feast on this excreta and later come to perch on our food. This has often caused all manners of sicknesses for the people. Some children end up stooling and vomiting.

    “Aside from the challenge of not having appropriate places to defecate, the problem of water supply is also causing huge problem for us. We always have to buy water but all hands are not equal. Some people don’t have the means of buying water and because they have to use water, they take water from the river that we defecate in to take care of their domestic needs. They bathe, wash and in some extreme cases drink them. This also leads to huge health challenges, some of which may begin o manifest in future,” he said.

    Akeem, a resident of Agboyi Ketu, appeared unruffled about the development as he said: “What is the big deal in bathing in the water that people defecate into? Ai mo iye igbe leko (There is uncountable faeces in Lagos). It appears you are just a new comer to this area because if you are familiar with this environment, you will not be perturbed about what you are seeing.

    “When you are bathing in your house and you see a dirty object in your water, don’t you remove it and continue bathing? That is what happens here but we don’t remove the dirt be it faeces or anything. When you are swimming and you find any rubbish, you dodge it and move in opposite direction. The people that are supposed to be of help to us have abandoned us and we have created an alternative way to survive.”

    Salau Jimoh, another resident of the area, however, expressed worries about their condition, adding that they face all manners of health challenges as a result of it. He said: “Typhoid, skin rashes and diarrhea are common sicknesses that happen here. Unfortunately, our people don’t link it with our state of hygiene. It is always worse for people that are new because their whole body system would be disorganised for sometime before they adjust.

    “At times, some innocent young boys that have not known anything about sex contract gonorrhea in the course of bathing in the polluted water and because going to hospital is not part of us, they would always go and treat it locally. This could have serious reproductive health for them later in life but they are not aware of it.”

    It was also a tale of lamentation at Ilase, a community in the suburb of Ogun State, as the residents narrated their difficulty getting potable water and appropriate place to defecate.

    A prominent member of the community, Mathew Kehinde Alaje, said they were drinking the water in the neighbourhood river before now, regretting that they have lost every access to getting potable water thereafter.

    “We are having problems getting water in this neighbourhood. Many of our people don’t have money to buy sachet water and therefore make do with what they see. This is very unhealthy for the people as it portends great danger to their health. The people in government are not concerned about our plight. They don’t even know that human beings are living here except when election is approaching.

    “Aside from water challenges, many residents also have problems with defecating. Many landlords have attempted to dig soakaways but they ended up abandoning them because they ran into water shortly after they started. This makes it impossible for many to have proper places to defecate. It is worrisome because human wastes are not what you handle carelessly because of the health problems that comes with doing that,” he remarked.

    “We drink, bathe and wash with any water we can lay our hands on because it is not all the time that one has the money to buy water. It is even worse now that the economy is extremely inclement. We go into the bush to defecate because, as you must have heard, we can’t dig soakaway because water comes out as soon as you begin to dig the soil. Just imagine how the blind people in the community will be defecating.

    “Think about how disabled people in the area who crawl would manage to enter the bush to defecate. Don’t you think that before they would have crawled from their houses to the bush, they would have ended up using their bodies to mop the feaces on the floor?  Or would somebody that is on wheel chair move the wheel chair to the bush or river to defecate? It is a serious mess we at hand,” Biodun, a resident, said.

    Alhaja Basirat, another resident of the area, recounted that previous attempts to construct borehole in the community have yielded no fruits.

    “A politician came and gave us a borehole some years ago but it didn’t work. The whole thing is just there. There was also another one that was dug within the premises of our mosque. It brings out water but you can’t use it for meaning things. There is also another one that a corporate body did in a neighbouring community when they were promoting their detergent. They abandoned it after sometime. Through the efforts of the people the borehole has started working but the water it brings out would turn a white container to red within a short time of fetching it. We are suffering from both ends and dying in silence.

     

    Environmental/ medical experts speak

    An environmental expert and Director Corporate Accountability and Administration, Environment Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FOEN), Akinbode Oluwafemi, bemoaned the condition of the people lamenting that the coastal belt is under siege.

    “Nigeria coastal belt is about 853 kilometers long. That area of our country has suffered enormous environmental challenges as a result of industrialisation and activities of extractive industries.  If you take a look from the Niger Delta side, you will find that there have been oil spills, gas flaring, marine pollution as a result of heavy vessels that come to the state end up in these rivers. Besides, we also have the discharge of all sorts of chemicals into these rivers. All these compromise the environment.

    “The environment in the riverine communities has actually been subjected to a state of siege. There is just no way that the environment can be tolerant of those things and it makes adaptation difficult for the people. In February, 20 children were killed in Eti Osa Local Government Area. Initially people attributed it to a strange disease. But it was later found out that it was measles. So you can link a lot of things going on in the riverine areas with sanitation, water and poverty. There is acute water problem in Lagos State but it is worse. There are some places where the water coming from their boreholes is mixed with petrol and they are drinking it like that,” he said.

    Taking a medical look at the condition of the residents, Dr. Rotimi Adesanya, a public health physician, said: “The residents are bound to suffer enormous health challenges because flies would always perch on their excreta and move on to perch on their food. When they eat food that flies have dropped their larva on, they would be susceptible to suffer from diseases like cholera, typhoid that is endemic. They are also prone to suffering from Hepatitis A and B viruses, skin diseases like measles.

    “Aside from the human wastes that are dumped in the rivers, the wastes constantly dumped in the rivers by various companies are also capable of causing skin problems called dermatitis for the people. Consuming salty water by the people can cause dehydration and make them drink a lot of water. Salty water is concentrated and can cause high blood pressure for the elderly residents in the communities.

    “It can worsen the health condition of those that already have the sickness. Where the water enters their mouth and body system in the course of bathing in the polluted rivers, it can cause diarrhea, stooling and vomiting, especially for the children. It is also capable of causing dysentery an abdominal pains for them.”

    For the residents that are consuming well water, Dr Adesanya has this to say: “Well water contains a lot of chemicals and this can cause electrolyte imbalance. Some of this water is contaminated by mercury which is poisonous to human body and capable of causing untimely death. Some of them also contain lead that could make the children not to be performing well in school because it causes mental retardation.”

     

    Solution

    Proffering solution to the challenge, Dr Adesanya advised: “The residents must work together to get a proper way of disposing off their wastes. The various governments should also make their presence felt in these communities to bring about behavioural change. They should also endeavour o build health centres in these areas to take care of their health needs.”

    Akinbode on his part said: “The people should act by rising to demand that water should be made available to them because they bear the burden of the environmental problem of our development. Developed countries take coastal areas as assets but the coastal belt in Lagos is an apology because everywhere you place your feet, you will step on human wastes.

    “Digging boreholes is not the solution to the problem because this has its own environmental challenges too. There are about 25 water works in the state and from Marina, most of these riverine communities can be served safe water because the distance is just about few kilometers apart.”

    Efforts to speak with the Commissioner for Environment in Lagos State, Mr Adejare Babatunde, were unsuccessful. Thereafter, our correspondent reached out to the public relations officer of the Lagos State Environmental Protection Agency (LASEPA) who after seeking to know the purpose of the enquiry asked him to come on Thursday to speak the Director General (DG).

    The meeting did not also hold as she said the DG was in a meeting, adding: “The issue does not fall within the purview of what LASEPA does. It is the ministry of environment that can speak on it.”

    However, the commissioner for the environment at a recent retreat organised to review and consolidate on the draft of the Lagos State Water and Sanitation Policy (WASH) in preparation for its presentation to the state executive council promised to ensure a speedy implantation of the policy. He also expressed optimism that an implementation of the policy will lead to decline in childhood mortality.

    “Through the WASH policy, we are teaching mothers to be more hygienic and to use safe water to provide food for their babies. The number one killer of children is diarrhea, so if we take care of the safe water part of it, that would lead to decline in the death of children,” Dr Adejare submitted.

    Speaking after the death of 20 children suspected to have died of measles early in the year, the Commissioner for Health, Mr Jide Idris, also said: “The state government is conducting mapping of all slum areas in the state toward reducing the health hazards associated with such areas.”

  • Fg must step in, stop politically-motivated  killings in Rivers-apc Chieftain, Senator Abe

    Fg must step in, stop politically-motivated killings in Rivers-apc Chieftain, Senator Abe

    The Chairman of the Senate Committee on Petroleum (Downstream) in the 7th National Assembly, Senator Magnus Ngei Abe, is the candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) for the Rivers Southeast Senatorial District in the inconclusive March 19 rerun. Abe, who hails from Bera-Ogoni in Gokana LGA of Rivers State, is a former Secretary to the State Government (SSG) and Rivers ex-Commissioner for Information. In this interview with BISI OLANIYI in Port Harcourt, the former Minority Leader in the Rivers House of Assembly says the President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration must quickly step in and put an end to the politically-motivated killings and assassinations in Rivers State. He also expresses surprise that there are communities in Rivers that the people have publicly banned the holding of APC meetings, with the support of militants in the communities and they will ask APC members to leave the communities, among other issues. Excerpts:

    There are lots of crises, killings in Rivers State. From all indications, the All Progressives Congress (APC) seems to be at the receiving end. How do you view the situation?

    It is really quite unfortunate that in 2016 Nigeria, we will be discussing these issues. The unprecedented level of violence that we witnessed in the 2015 elections has not abated. In fact, the 2016 rerun elections in Rivers state were actually a bit worse than the 2015 elections.

    Even after the elections, the level of threats on members of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the state is still high. Indeed, in many communities in my senatorial district (comprising the four Ogoni LGAs Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme, as well as Andoni, Opobo/Nkoro and Oyigbo councils), which is the district where the elections were postponed, a lot of our party members perpetually run out of their communities, because a lot of them are being attacked and killed.

    In fact, the very one that has shivers down my spine is the case of one young man, who used to be in the opposition and just recently joined APC. He was with me last night, telling me that he was in danger and that I am in danger. Just this afternoon, we got information that he was assassinated at a burial.

    People went to a burial where everybody was gathered, the assassins came down in cars, opened fire on him in the burial in front of all the thousands of people and killed him in cold blood. I am still in shock. We keep saying to people that we are in danger; something should be done. It is this same group of people that have been attacking and killing people in the area over the past three four years.

    It was the same gang that attacked members of the APC when they were going to attend the President Muhammadu Buhari’s inaugural rally in Port Harcourt and the President visited them in the hospital. They are still killing people up till now. It was the same gang that attacked the APC rally at Bori in Khana LGA three times, publicly opened fire on people.

    It was a similar gang operating in another area that attacked the APC rally in Okrika. The funny thing is that in all these things that are happening, there is no investigation going on. Nobody is being arrested, prosecuted or detained.

    With the current situation in Rivers State with inconclusive elections and the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) clearly stating that it will not hold any election in the state, until the security situation improves, what is the way forward?

    I do not think that that statement by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) is in consonance with the sovereignty of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. We have laws in this country and what makes a country sovereign is the fact that your laws are effective within your own borders.

    The Nigerian law does not anticipate a situation where INEC has to take permission from any group of criminals before it can conduct elections. That is not the law. The law is that INEC is to set a date for elections and the Nigerian state is to make the place conducive for elections. That is the law.

    So, if the place is not conducive and people do not come to agree with INEC up till 2019, does it mean that the elections will not hold? What if the same situation is replicated all across the country, are we going to now cancel holding of elections in this country? The same lack of security that is making it impossible for us to hold elections is making it impossible for ordinary Nigerians to go about their normal business.

    You have been part of the whole political activities that have been going on in Rivers State. How will you describe the roles of security agencies, especially the police, military, DSS and others in the March 19 rerun in Rivers State?

    You cannot hold the security agencies directly responsible for what is happening in Rivers State. The governor (Nyesom Wike) is the chief security officer of the state. The Federal Government has effective command on the security agencies. Somebody has to give an order to the security agents to fish out the hoodlums and put a stop to these killings.

    Somebody has to fund the order, when it is given. Somebody has to work with the security agencies to implement the order. As it is today, the security agencies are tired. If somebody is arrested now, before evening, people will call you from the highest levels of state government to release the person. They will ask, why are you arresting him?

    If you dare charge the person to court and it goes to the Director of Public Prosecution (DPP), advice will be written. I mean there are all sorts of shenanigans that the government can use to make sure that people they want to protect are protected. The message is getting to the criminals that as long as they are in power, nothing will happen. That is what is emboldening them.

    If you post policemen or soldiers, you deploy them to a place. Somebody is supposed to feed them, fund their presence there and provide water. They are human beings. People are supposed to support them. Where they do not get the support, who is going to be responsible for the kind of effectiveness that you expect from the security agencies?

    There are just two ways of dealing with this thing. The Rivers state government is supposed to take the lead in putting a stop to the criminality, but let me give you an example. You heard what happened in Gokana LGA of Rivers state, when the current SSG (Kenneth Kobani, an indigene of Bodo-Ogoni in Gokana LGA) was arrested. He (SSG) is the Chairman of the Arrest Resistance Committee set up by the Rivers state government and at the place where he was arrested, members of the committee opened fire on the soldiers and bombed the INEC office in Gokana LGA.

    In all Rivers governor has said, have you heard him mention the fact that assault weapons were used on youth corps members in Gokana LGA? Has he condemned it? He has not condemned it. Is he going to go after those who did it? He is not going to, because they are his boys. He set up the committee – Arrest Resistance. They were armed to resist arrest, even by the military. They are not afraid of the soldiers.

    The police could not free the youth corps members who were held hostage there. So, the matter in Rivers state is serious beyond words and if the state government is going to put political expediency above the life of Nigerian citizens, then the Federal Government has the responsibility to step in, provide the leadership and resources necessary to bring this sad episode to an end. You cannot just blame security agencies. How are they going to achieve that?

    You have just mentioned the Federal Government. Is APC’s government at the centre alive to its responsibility of protecting lives and property of Rivers residents?

    APC is a political party. We have a government in Nigeria that is for all Nigerians. I have heard people say that those who are getting killed are cultists. Why is APC claiming everybody killed is its member? I have always responded by raising two issues. First is that whether the people are members of the APC or cultists, whoever, there is a process in Nigeria for taking human life and that process is not being followed in Rivers State.

    So, it does not matter who these people are. The critical thing is that they are Nigerian citizens and this is not how their lives are supposed to be terminated at will in this country. APC is a political party. It has no power to actually do much. I am one of the leaders of APC.

    Today, there are communities in Ogoni that have publicly banned the holding of APC meetings, with the support of militants in the communities, asking people who are members of APC to leave the communities. We have reported it to the security agencies. No action has been taken. So, what is the APC to do? This matter is strictly between the Federal and State Governments. They are the ones that have the powers of cohesion, resources and constitutional responsibility to deal with this issue.

    If the Federal Government, because President Muhammadu Buhari does not want to intervene in the work of Rivers state, has kept quiet to give the state an opportunity to deal with this issue, should not be taken for granted. The security challenge in Rivers state is clearly not being dealt with by the state government. So, it is now up to the Federal Government to step in and take responsibility.

    Somebody must be responsible for what is happening in Rivers state. It cannot be that it is nobody’s business. Neither can it be the business of APC or Peoples Democratic Party (PDP). This is the business of Nigeria and there are authorities responsible for what happens in Nigeria.

    Why are some of your people working against you, to ensure you do not return to the Senate?

    What I see going on is politics gone too far. Everybody knows that if there is an election in Rivers Southeast Senatorial District and the people are allowed to choose their representative, I will be chosen. Everybody knows that across the state. It is not a hidden matter, but everything is being done to stop the people to have the right of free choice.

    The Rivers governor had gone to say, stop Senator Abe by all means and from that time till today, there has been no peace. Everything is being done to stop the people of the area from having the opportunity to elect a representative of their choice. Everything is being done to cow the electorate. Everything is being done to stop people from coming out to vote.

    I have said it time without number that I am not asking for any favour. All I want is to create an atmosphere where people can vote and the votes can be counted. If that happens, win or lose, I stand by what the people decide, but there are people who are going out of their way to make sure that, that does not happen. That is the cause of everything that you are seeing here.

    How will you describe the current situation in Rivers State?

    There is nothing out of the ordinary that is going on in Rivers state other than the fact that you have an administration that has refused to put the security of lives and property against its own political interest. You have a situation where the laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria are suspended in Rivers State. You have a situation where all the rights guaranteed by the Nigerian constitution to Nigerians are being denied members of the APC in Rivers state, including the right to life.

    We have a situation where people have said that members of the APC are traitors and they should be killed. Even today that APC now constitutes the Federal Government, nobody has demanded that the people should be told that we have a constitutional right to belong to any party of our choice. There is nowhere else in this country where members of any political party-be it APC or PDP, are being targeted for extinction the way it is going on in Rivers statwe and nobody is saying anything.

    What is the fear ahead?

    I am afraid for my life. We have been talking and shouting and people keep going down one after another and nobody is doing anything. I mean I have never seen this kind of situation before. Prior to the rerun elections, we shouted and talked.

    Everybody knew that it was going to be bloody in Rivers state. President Muhammadu Buhari himself gave an order that security agencies must make sure nothing untoward happened here and we saw the results. As we speak now, Rivers people, especially APC members, are still being killed or assassinated. Nobody is saying anything, but we will not stop talking.

  • Dumebi, Corps member killed in Rivers, buried

    Dumebi, Corps member killed in Rivers, buried

    The remains of Okonta Dumebi Samuel, a National Youth Service Corps (NYSC) member killed during the rerun elections in Rivers State, have been laid to rest in his hometown of Illah in Delta State. The body was committed to earth last Friday in Okonta’s family compound after a service of songs held in his honour at the Christ Holy Family Catholic Church, Illah.

    The late Dumebi, with state code number RV/15B/5539, was an ad-hoc staff of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) in the rerun election. He was killed by yet to be identified gunmen while returning to his base after submitting the poll results at the INEC collation centre in Ahoada West Local Government Area.

    In his sermon at the funeral, Reverend Father Peter Mbuogwu, who presided, condemned electoral violence, urging politicians to desist from encouraging thuggery in elections. He said people must fear God, adding that only God gives power to whoever He wishes.

    Mbuogwu told the youths to resist attempt by politicians to use them to commit atrocities. He charged them to use their talents for the good of the society. He prayed to God to grant the late Dumebi eternal rest. He said the best way to immortalise the victim was for politicians to respect the sanctity of human life and have peaceful approach towards election.

    It was a moment of grief for the family members and mourners, who gathered to perform dust-to-dust rite for the late Dumebi. The family was joined by dignitaries, including a delegation from the NYSC and colleagues of the deceased.

    The NYSC Director-General, Brigadier-General Johnson Olawumi, noted that the Corps member died while contributing his quota towards a better country. “The late Dumebi believed in Nigeria, he served and died for Nigeria,” he said.

    Speaking through the Director of Corps Welfare and Inspectorate, Mrs Rhoda Kaka Kwaki, Olawumi reaffirmed the directorate’s assistance to the family.

    In his message read at the funeral, INEC chairman, Prof Mahmood Yakubu, described Okonta as a “martyr and Nigeria’s hero of democracy”.

    Yakubu, represented by the Resident Electoral Commissioner in Delta State, Baritor Kpagih, assured that the commission would immortalise the deceased.