Tag: Shola O’Neil

  • Lawmaker urges parties to eschew tribal sentiment

    The lawmaker representing Warri Federal Constituency of Delta State in the National Assembly, Mr Daniel Reyeneju, has admonished political parties to educate their members and ensure that their best candidates go for political contests.

    He said only the best, well-educated candidates would ensure that political and tribal differences are put aside when issues germane to national development are subject of discourse and contest, adding that superior ideas should always triumph for Nigeria to achieve greatness.

    The position was contained in his welcome address at a symposium tagged, “The Burden of Representation in Our Democracy,”  held in Warri, in honour of Late Mrs Omawumi Udoh, who represented the Warri South Constituency I in the Delta state House of Assembly from 2003 until her death in December 2016.

    He said, “The contest of ideas remain a veritable aspect of development (because) I know very well that in countries whose respective democracy earned the appellation of ‘advanced’ one of the cardinal focuses is to ensure the education of members of political parties.”

    “Nation building is an endless process. It is within this context that we can understand why even the presumably most developed countries of the world remain endless enmeshed in all that is required not only to develop, but also to sustain development.

    “In such interactions, ideas and logics are up for contest and the superior ones must be allowed to triumph. One of the fundamentals of such interactions is that such forum will ideally present opportunity for many participants to learn more and acquire new ideals, including cross-fertilising of ideas,” he added.

  • Itsekiri leaders kick over NDDC board appointment, demand EDP slot

    The leaders of Itsekiri ethnic nationality in Delta state have rejected the recent appointments into the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), as was recently announced by the Federal Government.
    The oil-rich ethnic group is furious over the non-appointment of their kinsman inthe position of Executive Director, Project of NDDC, to complete the tenure of one of their own who was sacked along with the last dissolved board in December 2015.
    The Itsekiri leaders, who are members of the All Progressive Congress (APC), in a petition to President Muhammadu Buhari, particularly flayed the role played by some members of the party in the appointments.
    The petition, a copy of which was obtained by our reporter, was signed by Messrs Robinson Ariyo, Felix Ighonmieyetan and David Omadeli, APC candidates in the Warri South Constituency I and Warri North in the 2015 election and Leader, APC Warri South-west respectively.
    It stated: “The entire Itsekiri Nation, particularly those of us who are committed members of the APC are disappointed and piqued to say the least. This is because of the names sent to the Senate for ratification as members of the proposed Board of Niger Delta Development Commission, NDDC.
    “We are compelled at this juncture to mention that one of our own, Engr. Tuoyo Omatsuli occupied the position of Executive Director of Projects, EDP in the Board of NDDC for two years (December 2013 through December 2015) before Your Excellency  dissolved the Board and appointed a Sole Administrator.
    “For the two years, Engr. Omatsuli held the position of EDP, his performance speaks volume till date and it was only normal for us as Itsekiri, in line with the Act establishing NDDC, to expect that an Itsekiri man should at least be appointed to complete the remaining two years.”
    The petition fingered a leader of the APC in the state and a powerful minister from the Niger Delta region as mastermind of the perceived injustice against their kinsmen in the appointment.
    They therefore appealed to the President to revisit the nomination of Adjogbe Ajenakevwe, an Urhobo from Delta Central Senatorial District, as EDP in the proposed NDDC Board, stressing that this would be in the interest of justice and fairness and to create a sense of belonging for the Itsekiris.
    “The Itsekiri people will not be swayed by the arguments of a few selfish elements that this is a new government and things have changed when it comes to the existing working principles between ethnic Nationalities in Delta State in particular and the Niger Delta in general as it affects appointments in the NDDC Board,” they added.
  • Disaster averted in Warri as tankers explode

    Disaster was averted in Effurun, Delta State on Friday when two petroleum tankers caught fire at Avwenayeri petrol filling station on Airport road.

    The Nation learnt that the fire was sparked off during the transloading of product suspected to be kerosene from a truck with registration number Lagos XN 321 JJJ to another.

    Although what sparked off the inferno was not immediately known, eyewitnesses’ accounts indicated that it was possibly sparked off from the pumping machine.

    Although no life was lost, source put the cost of the devastation at over N20million.

    “It could have been worse because if it was petrol involved it could have spread around even up to adjoining buildings and cars on the busy road.”

    The owner of one of the trucks marked in the colours of Oando, Mr Martin Okolie told our reporter that he got a call about the incident while he was still in bed.

  • Scores wounded as Ijaw, Urhobo clash in Delta

    At least three persons were fatally wounded and scores still missing after an early morning clash between the Urhobo

    people of Aladja and Ijaw of Ogbe-Ijoh communities in Udu and Warri Southwest local government areas of Delta state, on Thursday.

    Although what caused Thursday’s clash was not immediately known at the time of this report, findings revealed that the two communities have been involved in incessant clashes for decades.

    Both communities are locked in a boundary dispute that predates the Ijaw /Itsekiri war that lasted from 1997 to 2004.

    An indigene of Ogbe-Ijoh, Mr Richard Koremene told our reporter on telephone that three of his kinsmen had been butchered.

    “Some Ogbe-Ijoh persons have been injured and tension is very high now and there is concern that the hostility might escalate.”

  • I did not threaten to bomb oil facilities  – Tompolo

    I did not threaten to bomb oil facilities  – Tompolo

    Embattled former militant leader, Chief Government Ekpemupolo has denied issuing an ultimatum to the Federal Government to withdraw troops from the Niger Delta region.

    He described reports of the purported deadline as handiwork of his enemies who want to see his end.

    A statement by his media aide, Comrade Paul Bebenimibo stated: “It has come to our notice that some mischief makers have made a publication in the name of High Chief Government Ekpemupolo, alias Tompolo, which is trending in the social media, that he has given few days to President Muhammedu Buhari to withdrew military from the Niger Delta region, otherwise he is going to blow up oil pipelines.

    “We wish to state categorically that the said publication is not from Tompolo, rather it is the work of those that have sworn to kill him by all means, but Jehovah God forbid.”

    The statement insisted Tompolo has stated his resolve to toe the path of peace despite his face-off with security operatives.

    He said he  would “not resort to violence or destroy oil facilities because of the issue he is having with the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC.

    “No amount of provocation and persecution can make him to destroy the country that he has helped to build in recent time. He will discretionally continue to pursue his course legally.

    “It is his prayer for those that are pushing for his death to have a re-think as he believes fervently in Jehovah God Who sees the heart of every human being, that he has no evil intention against Nigeria or any individual, therefore he will come out stronger in the face of these temptations and trials.”

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  • Government and his army

    Government and his army

    Bad blood. Lives lost. Properties destroyed. Neigbours becoming suspicious of one another. Trust taking a long vacation. And like Femi Kuti noted in one of his songs: “Truth don die.” This, in a nutshell, is the tale of the $16b Export Processing Zone (EPZ) project in Warri southwest, Delta State, which has remained stagnant all this while.

    But despite all these, nothing prepared me for the event of Sunday, November 16. My phone buzzed. The first instinct when the inspiring ringtone “There is power in the name of Jesus” blared out was for me to meditate and allow the phone ring for some time before answering it.

    The man at the other end is Shola O’Neil, our Southsouth Regional Editor, who I consider one of the shining stars of Nigerian journalism’s new generation.

    I was nearing the newsroom’s door when his call came in. I had taken permission to close early because I needed rest. Unlike my restless self, I had sat the bulk of the four hours or so that I spent at work that day.

    “Hello Shola,” I said.

    “Hello editor,” he answered me. The humble man in Shola always likes to address me as editor.

    “I don’t even know how to start,” he said and paused, “we are in a kind of situation.”

    The reception was not very good. So, at some point, I was not hearing Shola very well.

    He told me a group of 14 reporters, including two from The Nation— Shola and Bolaji Ogundele— were in the custody of men of Tompolo, the man whose full name is Government Ekpumopolo.

    The phone cut at a point. I went into my car and re-dialled Shola’s number. He explained to me that they were arrested on their way back from a news conference addressed by Itsekiri over the controversial EPZ that President Goodluck Jonathan was not allowed to carry out its ground-breaking last weekend.

    The EPZ has been a subject of controversy between the Ijaw and Itsekiri since the idea was mooted. Last week, this paper had used the picture of Ijaw youths declaring war against the Itsekiri to lead its Southsouth edition. With this in mind, I wondered why it became a sin for reporters to cover the Itsekiri side of the debacle. Shola was in Oporoza, the home town of Tompolo to cover this news conference and rally over the $16bn EPZ project. Shola has been on top of the fuzz over the project and he was excited when he got a call that the Itsekiri were also protesting at Ogidigben. So, there he went to get their side of the EPZ brouhaha.

    On their way back to Warri from the Itsekiri event, Tompolo’s boys hijacked the boat conveying them and took them to their camp in Oporoza.  They seized all documents on them and the pictures of the Itsekiri protest.

    What Shola told me next shocked me: “They came with a rifle, which they claimed to have found on our boat.” The gun, Shola said, was only ‘discovered’ two clear hours after they were seized by gun-wielding men and held at their camp. The mention of camp got me thinking. Do they still have camps? I thought all such camps were disbanded when the militants accepted the presidential amnesty programme. I began to query the sincerity of the leadership of the militants to the whole amnesty programme.

    The excuse that a gun was found on the boat carrying the reporters, which also had some civilians on it, gave the militants the temerity to manhandle them. Shola, Bolaji, Shola Adebayo, Regional Editor of Leadership, who has covered Delta State for many major newspapers in the country, and others were there for no less than six hours before they were handed over to the Navy.

    Other seized reporters are: Regional Editor of Vanguard, Emma Amaize, Warri correspondent of National Daily, Emma Arubi, Awoso Harry of Delta Broadcasting Service (DBS) Warri; Olu Philips and Paulinus Odedeyi of Channels Television; Osarose Sadoh and Alex Omoniyi, of Africa Independent Television (AIT); Anthony Ebule, Celestine Ukah, Josephine Ughweri and Victoria Nwaeze, all of Fresh Angle, a Warri-based tabloid.

    The excuse for handing them over to the Navy was that a gun was found on their boat. That makes them criminals. Warped logic.

    The news hounds were thus guilty of taking sides with the Itsekiri to attack them. Their explanation of covering the Itsekiri event for fair hearing made no sense to the obviously high militants, who detained them from 1pm till about 7pm.

    Shola could only call after they had been handed over to the Navy. The militants, he told me, said Itsekiri journalists were colluding with their people. Shola is Itsekiri. Bolaji is not and the bulk of the 14 seized reporters are not Itsekiri. So, how did they arrive at this conclusion?

    The reporters spent the night at the NN base in Escalon and were brought to Warri on Monday morning. When I spoke with Shola on their way to Warri, I assumed they were being taken home by the Navy. How wrong I was! They were actually taken to another naval base in Warri for detention. They spent several hours and only regained their full freedom in the evening. They left the naval base traumatised and sorry for our dear country.

    Daily Independent’s Arubi was tortured alongside the other six non-journalists seized on the boat. Their sin: being Itsekiri. They accused Arubi of writing ‘nonsense’ against their leader (Tompolo). He was forced to hold a rifle and his picture was taken and reportedly published on the social media.

    What kind of a nation is this? The militants who handed over the reporters to the naval men for alleged gun-running were also bearing arms, which I doubt they have licence for. The navy could not query them on this; yet, it willingly detained men who have, over the years, contributed through their pen to the nation.

    Aside contributing to the nation, these men have also contributed to the lives of men such as Tompolo, who became overnight billionaires. In saner societies, Tompolo and his like are unlikely to be treated as heroes. It is very unlikely they will have the sort of access they have to the corridors of power, not to talk of enjoying million-dollar contracts from government agencies.

    Since we started Niger Delta Report last year, Shola has repeatedly promoted the activities of a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) floated by Tompolo to burnish his image. He would always plead with me to accommodate the stories on the foundation. That was why I was shocked that Shola could have problem with Tompolo’s boys.

    Perhaps Shola and others fell victim to the dictum that “all is fair in a war” because that is what the EPZ matter has become.  Brothers do not trust brothers again. Or how does one explain the situation in Ugborodo, one of the communities hosting the EPZ? Camps have emerged in Ugborodo and destruction has been the name of the game. And now the Ijaw have joined the fray demanding that the name of the project must reflect joint ownership by Ijaw and Itsekiri. The Itsekiri say the project is on their land and so should have no Ijaw colouration.

    What is in a name, you may ask? Will the project be more beneficial to the people on the account of the name it is given? Will its name mean a better tomorrow for the people?

    My final take: This avoidable fight over name and sundry issue has dragged on unnecessarily. I suggest that a neutral name should be found to ease the tension. I believe Jonathan can call Tompolo to order and remedy the situation. Detaining and torturing reporters for writing ‘nonsense’ against Tompolo gives me the impression he runs a government of his own. At the risk of being marked for writing ‘nonsense’, I dare say that the fact that he bears ‘Government’ and is close to the powers-that-be should not get into his head. He has been lucky thus far and should not take it for granted.