Tag: Tompolo

  • MEND: Okah, Tompolo disown threat

    MEND: Okah, Tompolo disown threat

    Two former leaders of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) Chief Government Ekpemupolo (aka Tompolo) and Henry Okah have allayed fears of the possible resurgence of violence in the Niger Delta.

    Their assurance came on the heels of Wednesday’s threat by MEND’s Jomo Gbomo to resume violence through “Hurricane Exodus” from today (Friday) at 00:00 hrs over the March 26 sentencing of Mr. Henry Okah in South Africa to 24 years jail term for the October 1, 2010 bomb blasts in Abuja.

    But despite the assurance, tension pervaded the creeks of the oil-rich region last night.

    Residents of riverine communities in Bayelsa, Delta and Rivers states told our reporter they noticed movement of a large number of security operatives, particularly men of the Nigerian Army and Navy at the waterways.

    Spokesperson for the Joint Task Force (JTF) Lt. Colonel Onyeama Nwachukwu, confirmed that troops were indeed deployed.

    He said the move was to warn trouble makers of the JTF readiness to tackle any threat to peace.

    Tompolo and Okah attributed the fresh threat to impersonators.

    Okah blamed the threat on “a group of people in Northern part of the country.”

    Tompolo told The Nation in a telephone chat yesterday that the author of the threat was an impostor and a criminal using the name of the group without permission.

    Comrade Paul Bebenimibo, who spoke for him said: “The MEND founded by Tompolo has been disbanded; whoever is making this fresh threat must be a criminal aiming to use the name of the group for selfish purposes.

    “They did not receive the backing of High Chief Ekpemupolo before the issuing that statement.”

    He advised security agents to be on the alert for criminals who have hijacked the group and are now using its name to foment trouble.

    Another statement signed by Commander Azizi, who claimed to be speaking for the Henry Okah-led MEND, said the embattled warlord was not in any way connected with the threat.

    He said: “I have been mandated by Mr. Henry Okah to issue a statement condemning the alleged publication credited to MEND, which is not from us (MEND-Okah).

    “Jomo Gbomo is no longer in existence as he was part of the old breed command; all authentic statements from MEND are issued through our spokesperson Comrade Azizi.”

    Azizi said that despite his situation, “Okah is not associated with the publication, adding that “neither did he in anyway issue such directives to anybody to kill or destroy infrastructures in the Niger Delta region or any part of the country.”

    Okah, according to him, warned that plots to bomb locations in the Niger Delta region would be resisted.

    “We (MEND-Okah) are strongly warning any group or persons by any name from the North that any attempt to bomb our region will not be tolerated which may automatically result to war.”

  • Why I equipped hospital -Tompolo

    FORMER leader of the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) Chief Government Ekpemupolo (Tompolo) has donated some hospital equipment to the Ogulagha Cottage Hospital in Burutu Local Government Area of Delta State.

    Making the donation through his Tompolo Foundation, Ekpemupolo said it was to enhance good health service delivery in the rural oil-rich community.

    Joyous beneficiaries of the gesture said the donation was the first of its kind made to the hospital that was built by Shell Petroleum Development Company and donated to the state government as part of their corporate social responsibility.

    Speaking through Comrade Paul Bebenimibo, executive secretary of the foundation, he said the gesture was the beginning of good things to be achieved by the foundation.

    “This donation is in line with the purpose of why the foundation was founded; to give assistance to the less privileged; andput smile on the faces of the people who have been marginalised and to enhance the living standard of Niger Deltans.

    “We hope to reach out to more communities as we try to eradicate poverty from the area, we want to improve the standard of education, we want to empower the youths, we want to motivate teachers to put in their best and we want good health delivery,” he said.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Tompolo security firm may sack 4,000

    •Oil firms, NNPC jittery 

    Oil companies in the Niger Delta are getting worried over the Federal Government’s refusal to renew pipeline surveillance contracts awarded to former militant leaders.

    It was gathered that only Oil Field Surveillance Limited (OFSL), owned by Government Ekpemupolo, alias Tompolo, is not operating.

    Sources told our reporter that the company is to lay off over 4,000 workers in the New Year owing to the latest development.

    Oil industry experts said attacks on oil facilities and illegal bunkering activities could spike this year, if OFSL lays off its workers.

    A source at an oil multinational in Warri said: “The situation is really dicey at the moment because of this situation.

    “We know that staff of the surveillance companies are those responsible for a large chunk of attacks on our facilities.

    “In the past two years since the award of this contract there have been a semblance of sanity, especially in the Bayelsa/Delta axis where Tompolo’s boys are working.

    “While it is not our place to tell the Federal Government what to do in this regard, a lot of us (oil industry operators) feel that it is better to maintain the balance because of the success we are seeing in Delta State.”

    When contacted, Tompolo’s media aide Paul Bebenimibo neither confirmed nor denied report of the mass retrenchment.

    He said: “The handwriting is on the wall for all to see, OFSL has been paying thousands of workers for several months without receiving money from the Federal Government and you do not expect the management of the company to continue to lose money.”

    Comrade Rex Anighoro, spokesman of Alhaji Asari Dokubor, one of the contract beneficiaries, said he was on the road when our reporter contacted him.

    The Federal Government had recently slammed Dokubor, blaming his scatting criticism of President Goodluck Jonathan on the non renewal of his contract.

    But a Presidential source said the Federal Government may yet renew the contract, at least for the contractor handling the Delta end.

    “There’s no doubt that the contract was a success in Delta State, oil companies and Governor Emmanuel Uduaghan have confirmed this to the President at various times.

    “The problem is the failure of the contracts in Rivers and Bayelsa states.

    The President doesn’t want to be seen as favouring one side over the other. But at the end of the day something has to be done about it,” our source said.

     

  • Tompolo: my dream for N’Delta children

    Former leader of the defunct Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) Chief Government Ekpemupolo, a.k.a. Tompolo, has said his desire to imrove the lives of impoverished children in the region informed the setting up of the Tompolo Foundation.

    He expressed concern about the fate of millions of indigent children in riverside communities, who have to compete with their fortunate counterparts from urban areas .

    Speaking through the Executive Secretary of the Foundation, Mr. Paul Bebenimibo, Ekpemupolo said the uneven playing field has negative impacts on the performances of pupils in their chosen careers.

    He said: “The vision and mission of the Tompolo Foundation is to promote quality education and health care delivery to the less privileged at little or no cost .”

    Ekpemupolo urged Nigerians, organisations and groups to support the foundation to enable him give indigent children and youths a sense of belonging in the society.

     

  • Tompolo’s powers?

    Tompolo’s powers?

    •Was ex-minister, Iheanacho arrested or abducted? What about the alleged stolen petroleum products?

    Former Niger Delta militia leader, Government Ekpemukpolo, alias Tompolo, is in the news again. This time, he is reported to have masterminded the arrest of a former Minister of Interior, Capt. Emmanuel Iheanacho, on allegations of his involvement in the theft of petroleum products. “I was abducted by Tompolo and not arrested and thereafter humiliated like a common criminal at a detention point at the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA)”, Iheanacho told reporters.

    The former minister said that the uniformed armed men numbering about 30 who stormed his Apapa Tank Farm and Marine Road corporate head-office of his business in Lagos and carried out his arrest did not have the backing of the law.

    Iheanacho described the theft allegations as strange, explaining that he is involved in “throughput” business, which allows him under the law to accept petroleum products for storage from an importer who does not own a depot or storage facility, for a fee, upon the importer showing relevant clearance documents from the Nigerian Ports Authority, Customs, Department of Petroleum Resources, NIMASA, the Navy and the Petroleum Products Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA).

    It is a cause for concern that Iheanacho described the manner of his arrest as abduction. Does Tompolo have the powers to arrest him? This question is pertinent against the background of the fact that Tompolo’s company, Global West Vessel Specialist Agency (GWVSA), signed a controversial partnership deal with NIMASA early this year, which was called “Strategic Concessioning.”

    Reacting to public criticism of the agreement, which was seen as displacing the Navy from performing its statutory security roles on the country’s territorial waters, the government had explained that Tompolo’s company would only provide platforms, security boats, equipment and expertise to help in securing the country’s waterways and thereby raise revenue, and that its staff will not bear arms.

    It is, therefore, curious that those who arrested Iheanacho were allegedly in uniforms and armed. Could they really have been Tompolo’s men? If they were, it surely contradicts the stated terms of the so-called “concessioning” deal.

    Iheanacho raised the spectre of kidnapping when he complained that his release was “negotiated” by a team of his lawyers “as a typical case of one held hostage.” We recall that hostage-taking was a major feature of the activities of the Niger Delta militants and hope that this incident is not taking the country back to that ugly past.

    While the public was still puzzled about the nature of Tompolo’s deal with the government, a respected foreign paper, the Wall Street Journal, reported that the ex-militiaman and some of his colleagues had been awarded multi-billion naira pipeline surveillance contracts by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

    It is indeed a grand irony that a former outlaw has transformed into an enforcer of the law, all in the government’s contentious effort to pacify the militants of the restive Niger Delta region.

    This episode involving a former minister has again put the spotlight on the implications of Tompolo’s contracts with the government and the NNPC. How far is he empowered to go in securing the country’s maritime environment and its oil facilities? What is the role of the state security apparatus under the arrangement? Can it be said that the state has relinquished its powers to a private contractor?

    However, the circumstances of Iheanacho’s arrest and detention should be seen beyond Tompolo’s alleged involvement. If it is true, the issue of stolen petroleum products deserves to be addressed, and the culprits punished.

  • Government Tompolo versus Minister Iheanacho

    Government Tompolo versus Minister Iheanacho

    Man pass man, is one of our local streetwise aphorisms that approximates George Orwell’s averment in the Animal Farm, that, ‘All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others’. I recall also that while growing up, there was one feisty fellow with an ugly face and huge biceps that used to terrorise our neighborhood, who went by the name Man pass man. The guy was a law unto himself, and for a young mind, I equated him with what I have come now to realise is the prerogative of the state – the right to superior violence. In civilianised parlance, it is called the power of the police.

    In the accusations and counter accusations between Government Tompolo and former Minister Iheanacho, the born of contention primarily is whether Tompolo, acting on behalf of the Nigerian Maritime Services Agency (NIMASA), rightfully exercised the power to arrest and detain Captain Iheanacho, summarily. According to the former Minister, Tompolo abducted him and kept him in NIMASA office for a day, before handing him over to the State Security Services (SSS); which immediately released him. The allegation against the former Minister is that crude oil, stolen from the Niger Delta by suspected bandits, was traced to his tank farm; and as such he is suspected to be complicit in the crime.

    As a friend commented when the news broke, the problem is the pedigree of Tompolo, a ‘retired general’ of the Niger Delta militancy, acting now as ‘a police’ of the Federal Government. Prior to the late President Yar’Adua’s historic amnesty in 2009, Tompolo was like my childhood man pass man, albeit at a much higher level. He was not only feared by the ordinary folks, he was a terror against the state; and with other militants successfully challenged the police power of the Republic, before they were granted amnesty.

    Arguably, Government Tompolo has been reformed and is now a by product of President Jonathan’s transformation agenda. It can be assumed that in pursuit of that transformation, Tompolo was handed over a multi billion dollar contract to look after the maritime corridor of the country and of course Nigeria’s crude oil facilities, which he and his former outlaw colleagues were sabotaging to bring the Nigerian state to its knees. Such a transformation is what rankles many, as he bars his ‘new police’ fangs against his first major public victim – former Minister Iheanacho. I agree as some have argued, that such incongruity is fully a made in Nigeria stuff.

    But in his alternate personality, as a NIMASA/Naval police or simply security contractor, the constitution and case laws provide for clear presumption to warrant a lawful arrest, irrespective of who is affecting an arrest. For if the Nigerian police legitimized under section 214 of the 1999 constitution (supplemental), can be held accountable for the exercise of the power of arrest and detention, how can any person rightfully argue that Tompolo’s agency created via an ordinary statute, is presumably beyound any reproach. Now, if Captain Iheanacho carries out his threat to sue NIMASA and Tompolo, the legitimacy of the arrest will be one strong issue that will truly determine the remedy that will be available to him.

    A legitimate arrest can be carried out with or without a warrant of arrest. A warrant of arrest as clearly explained by learned author, Oluwatoyi Doherty in Criminal Procedure in Nigeria (Law and Practice), is usually issued by a Magistrate, when the statute or law provides that such alleged offender can not be arrested without warrant; when a serious offence is alleged to have been committed; and when a summons issued by a Magistrate has been disobeyed. It is usually executed by a police officer for the purpose of bringing the alleged offender to court. On the other hand, an arrest without a warrant can be affected by a police officer, judicial officer or even a private person.

    One recurring requirement for a lawful arrest without warrant is that either the offence is committed before the person making the arrest or there is reasonable suspicion of the commission of an office. In many of the cases quoted by Doherty, the test of reasonableness is the determinant. Where for instance the owner of a property or his agent acts reasonably to protect his proprietary interest, he must with reasonable dispatch take the arrested offender to the nearest police station. Both the Criminal Procedure Code and Criminal Procedure Act generally governing the northern and southern jurisdiction of Nigeria respectively provide for this text.

    The latitude provided under the common law, the Police Act, the CPA and CPC must all however be in tandem with the extant provisions of section 35 of the 1999 constitution on right to personal liberty. I must however say that the constitution and the statues are not incongruous, once the text of reasonableness is met. See sections 35(1)(c) and (4) of the constitution. In Government Tompolo versus Minister Iheanacho, the former Minister alleged that he was abducted by Tompolo and that the intention is to cripple his business. In effect he was alleging premeditated malice, which if he can prove by evidence, will defeat the test of reasonableness, and avail him the eloquent protections of the constitution on fundamental rights.

    The other characteristics of Man pass Man as a local terror or the obvious circumstances that all animals are equal, but some are more equal than others, must worry the larger society. If truly Tompolo has metamorphosed through a Jonathan’s transformation process, it remains to be seen whether the former warlord has acquired the trained instincts of a constitutional police man or the ordinariness of a reasonable man.