Tag: Tompolo

  • Tompolo’s meeting: Police block venue

    Tompolo’s meeting: Police block venue

    •Ijaw youths kick

    A team of armed policemen yesterday blocked the entrance to Izon Wari (Ijaw House), Yenagoa, venue of the cancelled meeting on the supposed resurrection of the Movement for Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND).

    The meeting was summoned for yesterday by former militant commander, Government Ekpemupolo otherwise called Tompolo, but was called off on Friday on the advice of Governor Seriake Dickson and  largely on the strength of opposition by prominent former militants and a faction of MEND who alleged a sinister plot by the meeting’s convener.

    Ex-militants like  Victor Ben Ebikabowei, popularly known as Boyloaf, Africa, Pastor Reuben, Shoot-at-Sight, Ogunboss, Ateke Tom, Farrah and many other former ‘generals’, and ‘commanders’ as well as spokesman for MEND, Jomo Gbomo, had vowed to have nothing to do with  Tompolo or  his meeting.

    The governor, however, proposed an alternative forum for the ex-militant leaders at a later date.

    He promised to meet with them personally to discuss issues affecting them and other matters of overall strategic interest of the region and the country.

    He called for their understanding and cooperation.

    Tompolo denied any ulterior motive other than deepening the prevailing peace in the Niger Delta.

    “The tension generated by the meeting is uncalled for, diversionary and mischievous as no evil is intended in whatever form,” he said in a statement to douse fears over the meeting.

    However, policemen cordoned off the area yesterday just in case some militants might still want to defy the governor on the cancellation of the meeting.

    A truck and five patrol vans filled by fully armed operatives were sent to the area.

    It was also observed that strategic junctions leading to the Sani Abacha Expressway where the Ijaw House is located were manned by security men.

    As at 11am, the security operatives were seen monitoring the activities of motorists and commuters plying the area.

    The Police Public Relations Officer (PPRO), Mr. Asinim Butswat, said the presence of security operatives in the area should not be considered strange since the police maintain a nipping point there.

    He added that since Dickson had called off the meeting, the police expected the ex-militants to obey the governor’s directive.

    He said: “The meeting was called off by the governor. We have a nipping point. It was not in any way to stop them from meeting. The meeting was already called off by the governor and we believe that they have adhered to the position of the governor.”

    However, the Ijaw Youths Council (IYC) Worldwide condemned the deployment of the police in the area.

    It called action illegal.

    Spokesman for IYC, Mr. Eric Omare, said the action signposted a return to the dark days of military dictatorship, saying: “This is illegal, unconstitutional and a draw back to the dark days of military dictatorship where Nigerians were deprived of their fundamental rights.”

    The IYC said Nigeria is in “a constitutional democracy where things are done according to law.”

    It added:”the 1999 Constitution which is the foundation upon which our democracy is built recognizes the right to freedom of assembly and movement. The Niger-Delta people whether as ex-agitators or youth groups have the right to assemble in a meeting and free movement.

    “Since yesterday, the 24th of July, 2015, all officers and administrative staff of the INC and IYC including Bayelsa State civil servants under the Bayelsa State Ministry of Ijaw National Affairs and Culture have been denied access to the premises.

    “This is a threat to our nascent democracy. Democracy is not only about having rice and beans to eat but the enjoyment of basic and fundamental rights which are enshrined and guaranteed in the constitution.

    “The military movement into the Niger Delta region, we have been reliably informed, would commence this week. The IYC, the Ijaw Nation and the Niger Delta people wish to alert Nigerians and the international community of this impending humanitarian disaster.”

    He accused the President of treating the people and the region as enemies and conquered zone.

    “President Buhari has demonstrated so far in office that he is not interested in the welfare of the people of the Niger Delta but only in the oil resources found in the region.

    “The IYC calls on President Buhari to order the military and police officers presently forcefully occupying Ijaw House, Yenagoa to immediately vacate the premises and stop forthwith the violation of the rights of people who have business to carry out at Ijaw House.

    “Political, opinion and religious leaders and the international community should prevail on Buhari to have regard for constitutionalism in the Niger Delta region and stop the violation of the rights of Niger Deltans.

    “The IYC would also take immediate legal and related actions to address these violations. Whether President Buhari likes it or not, the Niger Delta people would meet to determine their destiny in Nigeria.”

  • What future for Tompolo,  ex-militants?

    What future for Tompolo, ex-militants?

    Towards the end of last week, a terse statement by ex-militant leader Tompolo, calling for a meeting of former militants sent waves across the country leading to fear that they are regrouping, Shola O’Neil, S’South Regional Editor, in Port Harcourt, examines the behind the headline issues.

    The ‘General Officer Commanding’ (GOC) of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), Chief Government Ekpemupolo, is famous for his reticent nature. The man popularly called Tompolo hardly speaks, at least not in public, and when he does his words are usually measured and weighty. His actions have stood him out among his peers in the Niger Delta agitation for a better deal from the Nigerian nation.

    So, when he sent out an invitation on Thursday, July 23, rallying all “Commanders and leaders of the various wings of MEND …to a crucial and urgent meeting” in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital, it reverberated across the region and beyond.

    The tension generated by the invitation was heightened by recent developments by at the national and regional levels.

    Although the distribution list of the invitation was not included, that it was intended for various wing leaders, meant that it was a serious affair. Dokubo Asari, founder of the Niger Delta Peoples Volunteer Force; Ebikabowe Victor Ben (aka Boyloaf), Ateke Tom, Ezekiel Akposibowei (aka Egbema I) and Shoot-at-Sight, Ogunboss among other colleagues from Ondo, Edo, Delta, Bayelsa, Rivers and Akwa Ibom states, were therefore expected.

    Had the meeting held, it would be first time that such high calibre of former militants would be congregating since President Goodluck Jonathan lost the March 28 presidential election.

    It would be recalled that Tompolo and those associates shook the nation the last time they met in Yenagoa in the heat of the rescheduled Presidential election. Three former warlords met at Creek Haven, the official seat of power of the Bayelsa State Government, with Governor Seriake Dickson reportedly in attendance. The message from the meeting was ominous – President Jonathan must be re-elected for the continued peace and security of the Niger Delta region as well as for the continuous existence of the country.

    The threat elicited condemnation from all sections of the country, as well as a famous riposte by Gen Theophilus Danjuma, who called for the arrest of Tompolo and other attendees at the meeting. But rather than be sated, Tompolo reaffirmed his stance in Warri, Delta State.

    “Gen. Danjuma and his cohorts”, he said, “should know that I remain resolute on my position in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, that President Jonathan must win this election for Nigeria to continue to stay together.”

    At about the same time the governorship candidate of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Lagos State, Mr Jimi Agbaje, was also quoted as alluding to the capacity of Niger Delta militants to cripple the nation’s economy by attacking oil facilities in the region if their ‘son’ and ‘brother’ fails the re-election bid.

    The defeat of Jonathan in the March 28 election and the inauguration of the incumbent president were watched with trepidation by people of the region.

    Tompolo had been rarely seen or heard since then until on Thursday.  Before the election though, it was gathered that he and other former MEND leaders were watched closely by security agencies.

    It was against the above scenario that the planned revival of MEND in Yenogoa generated much interest and attention both within and outside the region. Tompolo is the most respected (and feared) agitator in the region. His influence and sphere spread from Cross River to Ondo.

    He formed MEND in the wake of the 2005 Joint Task Force’s aerial and water bombardments of Okerenkoko, and other parts of Gbaramatu Kingdom after the end of the fratricidal Warri crisis, which was a precursor of the Niger Delta crisis.

    The crisis became a full blown war in May 2009 when nine officers of the Nigerian Army were killed around the Chanomi Creeks of Warri South West Local Government Area of Delta State in May 2009.

     Why so much ado about a meeting?

    Beyond the initial war threat by former militants though, recent developments in the Niger Delta region and apparent change in the Federal Government’s policy thrust on handling of former militants when compared to the patronages they enjoyed during the immediate past administration, were some of the reasons why the meeting generated tension.

    Since President Muhammadu Buhari took over in May 29, the monthly stipend paid to beneficiaries of the amnesty programme has stopped. The stipend was part of the package approved by the late President Umar Yar’Adua as part of the deal to get Tompolo and others to drop their arms and exchange lives in the creeks for the city.

    Since Buhari’s inauguration, the emolument and other patronages have stopped, leading to building tension in the area. Only recently, women protested in Yenagoa over the non payment of fees for 13 students undergoing pilot training with the German national carrier, Lufthansa in Frankfurt, Germany. There have also been protests by their counterparts in Nigeria, who have severally blockaded the East-West highway to express their grievances.

    Although the Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, explained that the default was due to ongoing investigation of the running of the programme, there had been rumour that the new administration planned to stop the amnesty programme when its initial five-year period ends in December.

    While the delay in the payment of monthly stipends mostly affected the wellbeing of foot-soldiers and other backdoor beneficiaries of the amnesty programme, President Buhari’s cancellation of the controversial multibillion pipeline surveillance contracts, was seen as directly hitting on Tompolo and other former ‘Generals’ of MEND.

    It was widely reported that during the first phase of the contract awarded shortly after Jonathan’s inauguration in 2011, Tompolo’s share of the contract was a whopping N5.1bn, while his counterparts Asari Dokubo, Ebikabowe Victor Ben (aka Boyloaf) and Ateke Tom got N1.44bn, N608million and N608m respectively. Although the deal was meant to ensure security of the oil facilities, incidents of pipeline vandalism and illegal bunkering escalated. The exception was in some parts of parts Delta State under the control of Tompolo.

    Apart from the stoppage of amnesty stipend and pipeline surveillance contracts, the recent sacking of the Director General of the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Dr Patrick Akpobolokeimi, a protégé of Tompolo, was viewed as part of a general plot to remove the remaining vestige of his overbearing  influence during the immediate past administration.

    The former university lecturer’s appointment as NIMASA’s DG after the controversial sacking of Mr Temisan Omatseye in 2010, was due mostly to the influence of Tompolo, who also reportedly facilitated the renewal of his mandate by the former administration.

    Tompolo’s influence over NIMASA was buttressed by Global West Vessel Services, a company linked to Tompolo, getting the lucrative N15 billion ($103m) contract for the supply of vessels and security platforms, from Dr Akpobolokaemi-led NIMASA. A Maritime University was also located by Akpobolokaemi at Okerenkoko along with other platforms of the agencies.

    Furthermore, local and international media have been awash with reports of alleged fraud in the oil and gas sector under the last administration. Mrs Deziani Alison-Madueke, an Ijaw from Bayelsa State, was the Minister of Petroleum Resources during Jonathan’s entire full tenure. She is at the centre of investigation into subsidy scam as well as several alleged illicit deals involving the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and allocation of oil mining licences.

    The Presidency has also disclosed of an ongoing probe of the Amnesty Programme, headed by Mr. Kingsley Kuku, an Ijaw from Arogbo in Ondo State. Kuku is a very close associate of Tompolo, who is also instrumental to his appointment and longevity in the position. The former amnesty boss singled out Tompolo for praises during a thanksgiving service held at the end of his assignment in Arogbo.

    Before Tompolo’s convention of the MEND meeting, there was a general siege mentality among some Ijaw people, who expressed concern over probes targeting the former president and his Ijaw appointees, including Mrs Madueke.

    The feeling, although not as strong, is similar to the one displayed when disgraced former Bayelsa State governor, Chief Diepriye Alamieyeseigha, was arrested in London for alleged money laundering in 2005. After his impeachment and subsequent arrest in December of that year, MEND in its inchoate stage made his release one of their conditions to cease hostility.

    Although Tompolo did not state the agenda of the meeting in the terse invitation, a copy of which was forwarded to The Nation, the development listed above gave credence to concerns that the motive could be a return to insurgency in the Niger Delta. He has since denied nursing any sinister motives in a subsequent statement.

    Tompolo’s long time media aide and confidant, Comrade Paul Bebenimibo, who was contacted by our reporter on Thursday, apart from confirming the meeting, divulged very little else. Pressed by our reporter, he merely said it was to deliberate on the state of the nation and Niger Delta in the light of prevailing situations.

    However, a MEND faction loyal to Henry Okah believed that the meeting was a ploy to stop the present administration’s ongoing probe of the oil industry and Jonathan’s stewardship. In fact, a statement by MEND’s spokesperson, Jomo Gbomo, accused Tompolo of convening the meeting to “defend oil thieves and corruption officials of the Goodluck Jonathan’s administration.”

    The faction affirmed its support for President Muhammadu Buhari and “his government’s courage to probe the administration of ex-President Jonathan,” insisting that the examination should also include the office of the former President, the ex-First Lady, Dame Patience Jonathan, and the Niger Delta Amnesty Programme.

    Pressure on Tompolo to shelve meeting

    Nevertheless, there were sections of Ijaw and other tribal leaders in the state who felt that the timing of the meeting was ill-conceived. It was gathered that shortly after the story on planned reconvention of MEND went viral online, Tompolo started receiving series of calls from his kinsmen and other leaders.

    The host governor, Mr. Seriake Dickson, in the heat of the debate, advised the ex-militants to shelve their meeting. The governor’s call was contained in a statement by his media aide, Mr Daniel Iworiso-Markson.

    “He was inundated with telephone calls; people were calling from all over the world to confirm if he was truly the convener of the meeting,” a Gbaramatu source, who asked not to be named told our reporter on telephone Saturday.

    But beyond concerns that the proposed meeting could plunge the region into fresh crisis, pressure on the former militant leader also revealed deep-seated grievances of, not just some sections of the region, but some of Tompolo’s colleagues in the struggle.

    For instance, Okah’s faction, the arm of MEND led by ‘General’ Bibi Oduku opposed the meeting even before indications emerged that it would be cancelled. Speaking with our reporter, the leader of the Niger Delta Amnesty Progressive Change for Buhari, faulted the timing and agenda of the meeting.

    The group wondered why Tompolo thought it wise to convene a meeting of MEND in the first two months of Buhari’s administration when he failed to take similar step in Jonathan’s four-year tenure.

    “What were the developments that came during Jonathan’s government that Buhari has now stopped that we have to meet about? We view this as a gimmick by some persons to gain relevance in the present administration.”

    Feelers from the camps of Boyloaf, Ateke and others indicated that they were not favourably disposed to the Yenagoa meeting.

    Our Yenagoa reporter said shortly after the planned meeting was made public, Boyloaf kicked against it. Quoting a source, he said, “Boyloaf will not attend the meeting. He has also called on security agencies to be at alert to avert any breakdown of law and order. Apart from him, many other notable ex-militant leaders will not be there.

    “It is expected that Africa, Pastor Reuben, Shoot-at-Sight, Ogunboss, Ateke Tom, Farrah and many other former ‘generals’, and ‘commanders’ will boycott the event.”

    It was gathered that some leaders of the group were not comfortable that Tompolo took the initiative without contacting and sounding them out, while others were still said to be aggrieved about how Tompolo ‘cornered’ Jonathan and contracts in the past half-decade.

    Beyond the fraction within MEND, our check revealed that a cross section of tribal leaders in the region were uncomfortable with ‘threat’ of another crisis, particularly as some parts of the region were yet to recover from the 2007 – 2010 oil war declared by MEND.

    “While some few individuals, their family members and clans may have benefited, the larger part of the people have nothing to show for their suffering during the crisis because the benefit was cornered by a few individuals,” an Isoko leader from Delta State said.

    Speaking in the same vein, Chief Ayirimi Emami, an Itsekiri community leader, who has a turbulent history with Tompolo, described the botched meeting as uncalled for, noting that the Ijaw leader had no moral justification to convene any meeting on Niger Delta. He noted that after having unfettered access to the seat of power and enjoying “juicy contracts from the Federal Government through NIMASA, pipeline surveillance, maritime security and other forms of undue favours,” he should be grateful for the amnesty programme and be quiet.

    “Members of the fractured MEND have been granted amnesty long ago by the Federal Government and whatever the agenda of that meeting should be disregarded by the Buhari administration, which has shown absolute focus. We are determined to give the Buhari administration total support,” Ayiri added.

    Also, a cross section of leaders from the region felt that it was too early to assess the Buhari government, since he was yet to appoint ministers and other key officials to drive his agenda.

    “Under this kind of situation, what are we going to judge about him? So far, he has started well by trying to clean the Augean stable and although he has made some appointments, it is yet too early. If they need to meet at all, it should be in six months or thereabouts when things are fully in place.”

    Nevertheless, feelers from the states indicated that crime rates and other nefarious activities could spiral in the weeks ahead unless the amnesty funds are released to beneficiaries.

    “There are thousands of youths who rely on the stipend to cater for their families; if they don’t get payment in the days ahead, they may result to illicit means to make ends meet and this could pose greater challenges for security and peace in the Niger Delta,” a very top member of the Joint Task Force told our reporter on condition of anonymity.

    Blame the media

    Smarting from the avalanche of negative reaction on the failed meeting, Tompolo issued a clarification shortly after midday on Friday. While lamenting the misconception about his intention, he flayed a “mischievous section” of the media.

    In the statement titled “Why I called Saturday meeting”, he said he was “compelled to clarify issues as they relate to the meeting of the leadership of ex-agitators under the platform of MEND and other organisations” because of tension it had generated.

    Speaking further, he said, “I consider it unfortunate that a section of the Nigerian nation and the media have chosen to mischievously tread the path of misinforming the public and right thinking person by linking the meeting to whatever decision the current government at the centre may have taken in relation to the stoppage of the pipeline surveillance contract, even though payment have not been made for the services rendered in the renewed contract, or termination of appointments.

    “This is highly provocative and despicable,” he added.

    Tompolo explained that contrary to the negative reactions his proposed meeting generated, his intention was to help douse the tension building up over the continued delay in payment of amnesty stipends to beneficiaries.

    While asserting his leadership of former agitators in the region, particularly due to his role in providing leadership when the idea was first muted, he conceded that there was misconception about the delay. He therefore maintained that it behoves of him to douse the tension and explain the delay to his colleagues before the situation got out of hand.

    According to him, “The nation would recall that in the build up to the amnesty offer of the late President, Alhaji Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, there was hesitation on the part of most of Niger Delta agitators until God in His infinite mercy, granted me wisdom to provide leadership.

    “While some of us understand to an extent, the apparent delay in the continued payment of the monthly stipend to the ex-agitators in view of the seeming scrutiny of government agencies, including the Amnesty Office by the current administration, same cannot be said of the majority of beneficiaries of the Amnesty programme.

    “To this extent, some of us, particularly myself and other leaders have been under intense pressure from ex-agitators, commanders, individuals, parents and guardians as well as communities who are beneficiaries of the Amnesty programme. While a few see the delay in the payment of their monthly stipends in the light of the need for the current government to settle in properly, others see the delay as a template to stop the programme. The expulsion of some students (home and overseas) by their schools and training institutions particularly has heightened these fears.

    “Hence, I thought it wise that a meeting of the collegiate leadership of the platform under which we operated as agitators could be convened to appraise the situation and possibly, explore means to douse the tension that is growing among the disarmed youths whose stipends (training allowances and tuition fees) have been delayed for months.

    “This becomes more compelling in view of the fact that as leaders of the platform that served as midwife to the Amnesty offer, we owe the nation a duty to play our roles in order to stem a relapse of the relative peace in the Niger Delta Region.”

    Tompolo flayed the tension generated by the meeting, describing it as “uncalled for, diversionary and mischievous”, adding that there was no evil intended in whatever form.

    “We appreciate the pressures being mounted by leaders from the region especially as some have expressed concern that the meeting could be misinterpreted to mean the resurgence of hostilities; we say it is not.”

    He assured that having embraced peace, “I remain supportive of various governments at all levels, including the President Mohammud Burhari’s government, but wondered why a meeting of the ex-agitators could prop anxiety.”

    As at the time of this report yesterday, policemen had taken over the venue of the botched meeting in Yenagoa, while people of the state and beyond went about their normal business.

    So far only time will tell if the matter has been laid to rest.

     

     

     

  • Tompolo’s meeting: Police take over venue

    Tompolo’s meeting: Police take over venue

    A team of armed and riot policemen, on Saturday took over Izon Wari (Ijaw House), venue of the proposed controversial meeting of former commanders of the Movement for Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State.

    The meeting which generated security concerns in the region and attracted condemnations from stakeholders was called by former militant commander, Government Ekpemupolo popularly known as Tompolo.

    The Governor of Bayelsa State, Mr. Seriake Dickson, advised the ex-militants to shelve the gathering and meet with him later on a separate day.

    Notable ex-militant commanders such as Victor Ebikabowei Ben fondly called Tompolo, Africanus Ukparasia famously called ‘General’Africa and others also condemned the proposed meeting and asked their supporters to stay away from the gathering.

    Africa specifically said: “We will not allow any individual to disrupt the peace and progress in the Niger Delta region in the name of ex-agitator. We warn against such attempts because we will resist and seriously deal with it”.

    Investigations revealed that the police deployed a detachment of armed security operatives within and around the Ijaw House, a building dedicated for activities aimed at promoting the Ijaw nation.

    A truckload of mobile policemen supported by five patrol vans of fully armed operatives were sent to the area.

    It was also observed that strategic junctions leading to the Sanni Abacha Expressway where the Ijaw House is located were manned by security men.

    As at 11am, the security operatives were seen monitoring the activities of motorists and commuters plying the area.

    But when The Nation returned to the area at 2pm, the the scheduled for the meeting to kick-off, there was no sign that the gathering would hold.

    The motive behind the deployment of policemen was unknown.

  • Tompolo allays fears on MEND meeting

    Tompolo allays fears on MEND meeting

    No evil plan intended – Ex-militant leader

    Leader of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), Chief Government Ekpemupolo (aka Tompolo), has allayed fears that Saturday’s meeting of the militant group in Yenagoa, Bayelsa state, is  meant to restart war in the region.

    He said contrary to the perception in some quarters, the meeting was aimed at deepening the prevailing peace in the area.

    It would be recalled that the meeting called by Tompolo had led to fear of possible resurgence of militancy in the oil-rich Niger Delta.

    However, Tompolo, in a statement he personally signed on Friday, described the concern as diversionary, particularly against the backdrop of insinuations that the meeting has to do with the termination of his and other former militants’ lucrative pipeline surveillance contacts.

    He said, “The tension generated by the meeting is uncalled for, diversionary and mischievous as no evil is intended in whatever form.”

    While assuring of his commitment to continue peace and security in the region, he said, “Calling off today’s meeting can also be an option if need be, in order to strengthen our belief in a peaceful Niger Delta.

    “I am compelled to clarify issues as they relate to the meeting of the leadership of ex-agitators under the platform of MEND and other organisations summoned at my instance.

    “The nation would recall that in the build up to the Amnesty offer of the late president, Alhaji Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, there was hesitance on the part of most of Niger Delta agitators until God in His infinite mercy, granted me wisdom to provide leadership.

    “The nation will also recall that under the Amnesty programme as inherited by the immediate past president, Dr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, relative peace was enjoyed even as security of lives and property was enhanced to an appreciable level.

    “Also, oil production increased from 700,000 barrels per day to 2.5million barrels per day. Put simply, hitherto aggrieved Niger-Delta youths who inadvertently became agitators, upon the acceptance of the Amnesty offer, refrained from armed agitation to face normal urban life,” he added.

    Tompolo said contrary to fears being expressed in some quarters, the meeting was called to douse tension generated by delay in the payment of the monthly stipend to former militants and their foot soldiers by the Federal Government.

    “While some of us understand to an extent, the apparent delay in the continued payment of the monthly stipend to the ex-agitators in view of the seeming scrutiny of government agencies, including the Amnesty Office by the current administration, same cannot be said of the majority of beneficiaries of the Amnesty programme.

    “To this extent, some of us, particularly myself and other leaders have been under intense pressure from ex-agitators commanders, individuals, parents and guardians as well as communities who are beneficiaries of the Amnesty programme.

    “While a few see the delay in the payment of their monthly stipends in the light of the need for the current government to settle in properly, others see the delay as a template to stop the programme. The expulsion of some students (home and overseas) by their schools and training institutions particularly has heightened these fears.

    “Hence, I thought it wise that a meeting of the collegiate leadership of the platform under which we operated as agitators could be convened to appraise the situation and possibly, explore means to douse the tension that is growing among the disarmed youths whose stipends (training allowances and tuition fees) have been delayed for months.

    “This becomes more compelling in view of the fact that as leaders of the platform that served as midwife to the Amnesty offer, we owe the nation a duty to play our roles in order to stem a relapse of the relative peace in the Niger Delta Region,” he stated.

     

  • Tension in Niger Delta as Tompolo resuscitates MEND

    Tension in Niger Delta as Tompolo resuscitates MEND

    There was concern in military circles in the Niger Delta yesterday about the planned meeting of leaders of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND).

    The meeting, slated for Izon House in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital, is being convened by MEND leader Government Ekpemupolo.

    A terse invitation, a copy of which was made available to our reporter, reads: “My dearly beloved commanders and leaders of various wings of the Movement of the Emancipation of the Niger Delta(MEND), I greet you all.

    “It is my pleasure to humbly invite you to a crucial and urgent meeting as follows: Venue: Izon House, Yenagoa, Bayelsa State.

    “Date (of the meeting is) Saturday, July 25, 2015. Time (is) 2pm Prompt.”

    The letter was initiated with Tompolo’s traditional title – Izon Ibe-Ebidouwei.

    Tompolo said the meeting would to deliberate on recent developments in Nigeria and the fate of the Niger Delta in the political dispensation.

    Speaking through his media aide, Comrade Paul Bebenimibo, he said the MEND leaders would chart a path for the progress of the region.

    However, The Nation gathered that the planned meeting is a source of concern for top military commanders in the region.

    Tompolo, a known supporter of former President Goodluck Jonathan, was the founder of the deadly group that crippled oil production in the region from 2005.

    It was gathered that he was placed under security watch following the defeat of Jonathan in the March 28 presidential election.

    The former militant leader has maintained a low profile since after the election and subsequent inauguration of President Muhammadu Buhari on May 29.

    Also, Tompolo’s Ijaw kinsmen from the key oil producing areas of Delta state have given the Delta State government ultimatum on the controversial state Oil Producing Areas Commission amendment law.

    Military authorities say that the conventing of MEND leaders at about the same time Gbaramatu and other Ijaw youths in Delta are spoiling for war with the state governor was troubling.

    An ultimatum by youth leaders from Gbaramatu, Ogulagha, Ogbe-Ijoh, Egbema, Diebiri among others expires on Sunday night.

    The youth leaders under the umbrella of Flow Station/Well Head Host Ijaw Communities of Delta State are determined in their protests against the Amendment Bill before the House of Assembly.

    The Bill is the handiwork of Governor Ifeanyi Arthur Okowa. Yesterday, they issued a fresh warning calling on the governor to see reason with the people and withdraw the document.

    Spokesman of the communities Comrade Sheriff Mulade spoke of the health challenges and deprivation bedeviling the people in the communities hosting oil and gas facilities, stating that derivation was the only way to lessen  their plight,

    He said: ‘’Derivation as it were is simply a principle of giving back to the source of revenue generated through natural resources and it is a compensation for the loss of fishing and farming rights, health challenges and environmental degradation caused by oil exploration and production activities in our communities. Oil and gas are not produced by ethnic groups but are produced by communities which are clearly known and which bears the brunt of oil exploration and production activities.

    ‘’The negative effect of this arrangement is that politicians who are not from oil bearing communities would be the ones to determine the direction of the commission to the detriment of the oil and gas producing communities.’’

  • Tension in Niger Delta as Tompolo resuscitates MEND

    Tension in Niger Delta as Tompolo resuscitates MEND

    There was concern in military circles in the Niger Delta region on Thursday following the planned meeting of leaders of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND).

    The meeting, slated for Izon House in Yenagoa, Bayelsa, is being convened by MEND leader, Chief Government Ekpemupolo.

    A terse invitation, a copy of which was made available to our reporter, reads: “My dearly beloved Commanders and Leaders of various wings of the Movement of the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), I greet you all.

    “It is my pleasure to humbly invite you to a very crucial and urgent meeting as follows:

    Venue: Izon House, Yenagoa, Bayelsa State.

    “Date (of the meeting is) Saturday, July 25th, 2015. Time (is) 2pm Prompt,” concluded the letter, which was signed with Tompolo signing off with his traditional title – Izon Ibe-Ebidouwei of Izon nation.

    Contacted, Tompolo said the meeting was to deliberate on recent developments in Nigeria as well as the fate of the Niger Delta region in the current political dispensation.

    Speaking through his media aide, Comrade Paul Bebenimibo, who did not divulge further detail about the meeting, said the MEND leaders would chart a path for the progress of the region.

    However, The Nation gathered that the planned meeting is a source of concern for top military commanders in the region.

    Tompolo, a known supporter of former President Goodluck Jonathan, was the founder of the deadly group that crippled oil production in the region from 2005.

    The Nation gathered that he was placed under security watch following the defeat of Jonathan in the March 28 presidential election.

    The former militant leader had maintained a low profile since after the election and subsequent inauguration of President Muhammadu Buhari on May 29.

     

    Also on Tompolo:

    Jonathan okays oil jobs for Tompolo, others

    FG terminates Jonathan’s N21billion contract to Tompolo

    Tompolo, Asari only reacted to North’s threat, says Oritsejafor

    Tompolo: I insist Nigeria’ll break if Jonathan loses

     

  • Tompolo’s contract

    • Another good riddance to bad rubbish!

    Expectedly, the Federal Government has terminated the $103m (about N21billion) maritime security contract awarded by the Goodluck Jonathan administration to Global West Vessel Specialists Nigeria Limited (GWVSNL) believed to be owned by former Niger Delta militant, Government Ekpomupolo a.k.a. Tompolo. The Presidency, according to report, had ordered the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) to discontinue payment for the provision of platforms for security of the nation’s waterways and this had stopped since last month. The contract was awarded by NIMASA in 2011.

    This is the second such unconscionable contract awarded by the Jonathan administration to be terminated by the Muhammadu Buhari government. The first was the pipeline protection contracts awarded to the Oodua People’s Congress (OPC) and Niger Delta militia group which was also stopped last month, with the Federal Government giving a marching order to the Nigerian Army and Navy to take over protection of the pipeline.

    Nigerians had always opposed the outsourcing of the security of these vital national assets to the militants and ethnic militias. Unfortunately, for reasons best known to it, the Jonathan administration which seemed bent on professionalising militancy, insisted on going ahead with the contracts.

    Thus, as those given the contracts were smiling to the banks, the security agencies that have the constitutional mandate to secure these assets were starved of funds. This was evident in the several setbacks the military suffered in the fight against Boko Haram fighters, as the country had to look for help from outside to fight the insurgents.

    Although the former president did not hide his proclivity for pandering to parochial interests in his actions and utterances, not a few persons wondered how this could be taken to such ridiculous lows, whereby the president would surrender the security of the country’s maritime domain to his kinsman when there are government security agencies that have the constitutional role to perform such functions? If it was a public-private partnership (PPP) as the Jonathan government called it, it must have been a warped one at that.

    Apart from being a serious indictment of our security agencies, the contract awards were also a national disgrace; they exposed the nation to ridicule because there is no such paradigm anywhere in the civilised world. To worsen matters, the country did not get value for the money it paid to secure the national assets as over 400,000 barrels of crude oil were being stolen daily from our shores under President Jonathan. That this persisted for years made many people to suspect that it was the same people who were given the job of maritime security that were colluding with the international shipping companies to steal the country’s oil.

    It is against this background that we commend the Buhari administration for terminating these so-called contracts which represented nothing but “job for the boys” and a veritable avenue to siphon public funds. Any rational Nigerian knew that such contracts could only have been awarded by an administration like Dr Jonathan’s, and that the moment the government was voted out, it was a matter of time for the contract to be terminated.

    However, with the maritime security contract now terminated, the government should channel the money paid to the private firm to strengthen the Navy and marine police whose responsibility it is to secure the nation’s waterways. Where more resources are required for these agencies to perform, the government should not hesitate to provide them. If after getting the necessary requirements the security agencies still cannot perform, then it becomes a matter to be handled administratively. The solution does not lie in funding rag-tag militants and ethnic militias to handle such sensitive duties.

  • Tompolo, Asari only reacted to North’s threat, says Oritsejafor

    Tompolo, Asari only reacted to North’s threat, says Oritsejafor

    Minister of State for Defence during the Chief Olusegun Obasanjo administration, Dr Rowland Oritsejafor, has defended the position of ex-Niger Delta militant leaders on the re-election of President Goodluck Jonathan.

    Oritsejafor, in an interview with reporters in Warri, Delta State, said the ex-militant leaders were not threatening the country but reacting to statements made by some North’s leaders.

    He said: “The militants only reacted to what the Northern have said. Let us be conscious in analyzing security situation. Where you make a statement does not suggest or mean that it is the party’s policy. Let’s get that very clear. I can be invited to Aso Rock and then I make a statement, does that mean that the president supported what I said. Let us be very clear, PDP is a peaceful government with well-respected and responsible people. There is no way the PDP would support violence. Some people are making statements, I cannot come and defend those statements because I don’t know from where they are coming and I wasn’t there. However, as far as PDP is concern, we will pursue peace and it is in our interest to pursue peace. So why would we want to invest in violence when we have opportunity to show what we can do. You can hear the president going round, it is all about what he has done and he keeps rolling them out.

    “In the past, indeed of our faults as a party is that we underreported our achievement and we are correcting that now and things  are taking a better shape so I don’t see what we should embrace violence.”

    He also justified the award of surveillance contracts to the ex-militants.

    Oritsejafor said: “All over the world it is people that acquire weapons as long as you have the license to do it. To me that is not the problem. We have to be very careful with this issue. We should not politicize everything. Every Nigerian citizen has the right to acquire weapons if he is licensed. But unless you have something against them and you have taken them to a competent court of law. Yes these guys were militants. But let me ask you a question, do these guys have a cause for carrying arm against the Federal Government? The fact they were militants does not stop them from partaking in activities going on in the country. They carried arms because they were oppressed and when they protested, government recognised that they have been wronged and the matter was corrected.”

    On whether Jonathan deserves another term, he said:“He has done so much. The challenges are colossal but if you look at governance, he has brought governance closer to the people in different area. Is it transportation, electricity has improved. We are talking about measurable indices of performance. Since I came to Warri the light has not tripped and no generator and you know power is key to us. Things are happening you can see gender equality. The president of Rwanda became extremely popular because of given opportunities to women folks in terms of governance and you can see what is happening here; he brought in trusted woman who are doing well in the area of government.

    “Security is a great challenge, it is unfortunate, but the mistake between us and those who have security in their country is that security is not left only in the hands of profession; everybody has to be cautious in the area of security. It is only then that you can help the professionals to achieve what they want. People who are throwing bombs are living among us. Why are we silent, why are we not observant and why do we wait till people are killed, maimed and property destroyed before we start shouting. I want to appeal that security is collective responsibility. It should not be used as an index of political achievement. That will be sad. All of us, our lives are important, are future and property are important so we must all be committed to the security of the nation.”

     

  • Concern as Tompolo, Emami shun $16b project peace meeting

    Hope brightened for the $16 billion Gas City Project in Warri, Delta State, yesterday, as the Ijaw and Itsekiri hosts agreed on the groundbreaking ceremony for the strategic project.

    But the truce brokered by Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan was received with mixed feelings, following the absence of the protagonists, Chief Government Ekpemupolo (Tompolo) and Chief Ayirimi Emami, representing Ijaw and Itsekiri interests.

    Governor Uduaghan, according to a statement by his Chief Press Secretary, Sunny Ogefere, said: “The two groups resolved to make room for peace as well as ensure that the $16b Gas City Project takes off successfully.”

    Under the terms of the peace deal, it was gathered that the gas city would be named Ogidigben Gas City, while the deep sea port part of the project would be removed from the contentious Kpokpo to Gbaramatu Kingdom.

    Mr Austin Oboroegbeyi, who spoke on behalf of Ugborodo and Chief Godspower Gbenekama of Gbaramatu said they agreed that the Gas Industrial City would be named after Ogidigben and the Deep Sea Port after Gbaramatu.

    NNPC’s Group Executive Director (Gas and Power) Dr David Ige said the title of the project would not affect the original concept of the project, stressing: “They (projects) are inter-dependent projects.”

    However, independent investigation by our reporter showed that there were concerns that the peace deal could be a political move by The Presidency in view of the condemnation that greeted President Goodluck Jonathan’s no-show at the initial ceremony slated for last November.

    The President shied away, citing security reports, after Tompolo, ex-leader of the defunct militant group and his Gbaramatu kinsmen threatened violence if the President went ahead with the ceremony.

    The Itsekiri ethnic group, in reaction to the development, threatened to give block vote to the APC candidate, Gen Muhammadu Buhari,  prompting the President to make three quick visits to the state within weeks and a private visit to the Olu of Warri, Ogiame Atuwatse II, Tompolo and Emami.

  • Tompolo: I insist Nigeria ’ll break if Jonathan loses

    Tompolo: I insist Nigeria ’ll break if Jonathan loses

    FORMER Niger Delta militants seem unrepentant on their widely condemned stand that there will be trouble should President Goodluck Jonathan lose the February 14 election.

    Among those who condemned the former militants’ stand is one time Defence Minister Lt.-Gen. Theophilus Danjuma, who said war mongers should be arrested.

    But yesterday, former Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) leader Government Ekpemupolo (aka Tompolo) restated the threat he issued along with other ex-militant leaders in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State.

     The threat, said to have been issued in the presence of Bayelsa State Governor Seriake Dickson and the Special Adviser to President Jonathan on Niger Delta, Mr Kingsley Kuku, has been widely condemned.

     Tompolo attacked Gen. Danjuma, former President Olusegun Obasanjo, leader of the All Progressives Congress, Asiwaju Bola Tinubu, and all perceived enemies of President Jonathan, who he insisted must win to avert a crisis.

     He said: “Gen. Danjuma and his cohorts should know that I remain resolute on my position in Yenagoa, Bayelsa State, that President Goodluck Jonathan must win this election for Nigeria to continue to stay together.”

     Besides, Tompolo, in the statement signed by his Media Adviser, Mr Paul Bebenimibo, in Warri yesterday, accused the former Army chief of being behind the stoning of President Goodluck Jonathan in Katsina and Bauchi states.

    Bauchi State Governor Isa Yuguda said Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) members were behind the stoning of the President’s convoy in Bauchi.

     Tompolo warned that Nigeria was already on the brink of disintegration in the wake of the expiration of the 1914 amalgamation treaty, hinting that the defeat of President Jonathan could be the final nail on the coffin.

     Said he: “Gen. Danjuma should be reminded that the devilish treaty that brought the Southern and Northern Protectorates together in 1914 expired last year. Danjuma and his likes, such as Gen. Buhari, Gen. Obasanjo and Mr. Bola Tinubu, should be grateful to President Jonathan who has been keeping this country together.

     ”If not for President Jonathan, Nigeria would not have been any more.  Danjuma and his cohorts should be reminded of the saying that ‘those who live in glass house should not throw stones’.

     ”The call by Gen. T.Y Danjuma (rtd) to arrest me and other agitators for a better living for the people of the Niger Delta region is an indication that he is behind terrorism in the North eastern part of the country as well as the stoning of President Jonathan’s convoy in Kastina and Bauchi states, because he has never condemned those acts, even though Boko Haram attacked churches and mosques in his home town.

     ”Is Gen. Danjuma not aware of the peaceful atmosphere when Gen. Buhari visited Delta, Rivers and Bayelsa (home state of the President) states for campaign?  Why is it that President Jonathan’s convoy was attacked in Kastina and Bauchi states without any provocation?

    “Who is Gen. Danjuma if not for the oil wealth he is enjoying from the Niger Delta? He should be rather arrested for being behind terrorism in the North.

    “Where was Danjuma when Mallam Ciroma Adamu threatened to make Nigeria ungovernable, if President Jonathan defeated the All Progressive Congress Presidential candidate, Gen. Muhammedu Buhari?  Where was this so called statesman when the APC campaign Director General (DG), Mr. Rotimi Ameachi threatened to form a parallel government if President Jonathan wins the 2015 elections?  Where was this hypocrite when Dr. Junaid Muhammed, Muhammedu Buhari and Atiku Abubakar all said in separate interviews that the nation will boil if Jonathan won the election in 2011?

    “Is it the interest of Nigeria Gen. Danjuma is protecting or his oil bloc in the Niger Delta?  Is it the interest of Nigeria Danjuma is protecting or his 50 million dollars donation to Gen. Buhari for his campaign?

     ”Let Gen. Danjuma and his cohorts know that they will not see any Ijaw man, the Igbos and others to fight on their side if the war that they are planning broke up,” he added.

     The Ijaw Youths Council (IYC), in a statement circulated by its spokesman, Eric Omare, said the former defense chief’s call fell short of such expected from a statesman, expedition viewed against the background of the fact that he failed to comment while President Jonathan’s campaign train was consistently attacked in some northern states.

    The IYC, which claimed to be in the meeting in the Bayelsa state’s Government House where the threats were allegedly issued, also described the reports of threat as misleading as such was never part of the meeting’s resolutions.

    The group however called on security agencies in the country to ignore the calls from General Danjuma and the opposition All Progressives’ Congress (APC) for the arrest of the former militant leaders as they were borne out of misleading reports.

    “We are surprised that General Danjuma swiftly called for the arrest of Tompolo, Asari and other Niger-Deltans, whereas he has neither condemned nor called for the arrest of those who have been consistently attacking the convoy of President Jonathan in the northern part of the country. General Danjuma’s call is not deserving of an elder statesman who is supposed to be unbiased rather than his obvious bias against the Niger-Delta people. Only yesterday, in Gombe State a supporter of President Jonathan who was pasting his posters was attacked and seriously brutalised. Why has General Danjuma not condemned this dastardly act if he is really an elder statement?

    “There was no time at the meeting the Governor of Bayelsa State, Hon. Seriake Dickson, with youth leaders and ex-Niger Delta freedom fighters where it was resolved that Niger Delta people would destabilise Nigeria, if President Jonathan fails the February 14, 2015 presidential election. This did not form part of the resolutions of the meeting, which were read out by Hon. Kingsley Kuku for Governor Dickson to transmit to Mr. President.

    “The meeting was called by the Governor of Bayelsa State, to solicit support for President Jonathan from Niger-Delta youths and ex-freedom fighters. However, the meeting frowned at and  its dissatisfaction with the persistent attack on the campaign convoy of President Jonathan in some northern states when General Buhari, his main opponent, was protected and campaigned freely in the south during his campaign tour. Hence, the meeting condemned in the strongest terms the attack on President Jonathan and resolved that nobody can intimidate President Jonathan out of the presidential race. At the meeting, all the youth leaders and ex-Niger Delta freedom fighters resolved to put their grievances aside and agree to work for the re-election of President Jonathan.

    “Therefore, the report on ex-militants threatening to destabilise Nigeria in the event of President Jonathan losing the 2015 election is not part of the resolution of the meeting. The meeting could not have discussed that as we are confident that President Jonathan would win the February 14, 2015 presidential election.

    “We, therefore, call on Nigerians and the security agencies to disregard the call for arrest of Tompolo, Asari and others, which is based on a misleading report. The accusation levelled against President Jonathan by the APC is also unfounded,” the statement said.

    A former Minister of Defence (State), Dr Rowland Oritsejafor, called for caution over threats on the outcome of next month’s election, stressing that President Jonathan does not support violence.

     Oritsejafor, who spoke to reporters in Warri, Delta State, remarked that that the initial threat was reportedly issued at the Bayelsa State Government House does not mean that it was the position of the Governor Seriake Dickson, or that of the PDP.

     He said, “I can be invited to Aso Rock and then I make a statement; does that mean that the president supported what I said? Let us be very clear, PDP is a peaceful government with well-respected and responsible people. There is no way the PDP would support violence.

    “Some people are making statements. I cannot come and defend those statements because I don’t know from where they are coming and I wasn’t there. However, as far as PDP is concerned, we will pursue peace and it is in our interest to pursue peace.

    “So why would we want to invest in violence when we have opportunity to show what we can do? You can hear the President going round, it is all about what he has done and he keeps rolling them out.”

    Pressed for reaction on the failure of security agencies and the Federal Government to take action on the threat, Oritsejafor conceded that he “would be worried if nothing is being done about it, but I don’t have the information and you have to be very careful when it comes to security.”

    “You don’t know what they are doing, except you have done your investigation. If nothing is being done, that is unfortunate and I need to find out,” Oritsejafor added.

    The leader of the Niger Delta People’s Volunteer Force (NDPVF), Alhaji Mujahid Dokubo-Asari, also yesterday, replied Gen. Danjuma in an abusive manner calling for his and other ex-militant leaders’ arrest for making provocative and inflammatory statements on Jonathan’s re-election.

    Dokubo-Asari, an indigene of Buguma, the headquarters of the Asari-Toru Local Government Area of Rivers State and a former President of the Ijaw Youth Council (IYC), spoke yesterday by the telephone, said: “Danjuma is a big…

    “How can a … call for my arrest?

    “I was misquoted. I did not make any provocative statement in Yenagoa and I did not threaten anybody. President Jonathan has already won the election.”

    In Dokubo-Asari’s view with the “impressive” performance of President Jonathan, there is nothing to worry about.