Tag: UNIPORT

  • UNIPORT, firm partner on new discipline

    UNIPORT, firm partner on new discipline

    The University of Port Harcourt (UNIPORT) is partnering a firm, FMC Technologies Inc. to start  a Master’s degree in Subsea Engineering. It is to help develop local manpower for the extraction of petroleum from the sea.

    The curriculum, the firm said, would be developed in collaboration with industry experts to prepare students for work in the offshore oil and gas sector. The university said it would start accepting applications for the  programme later this year.

    Michael Hunt, the firm’s Country Manager, said: “FMC Technologies is dedicated to developing the Nigerian workforce for technical leadership and management roles in the oil and gas industry. This collaboration represents a major milestone in furthering the development of the highly-skilled Nigerian workforce. Students will play a key role in the future of the oil sector.”

    The Vice-Chancellor, Prof Joseph Ajienka, described the partnership as a milestone for the university and the oil and gas industry. “We are very pleased to cooperate with FMC Technologies in this effort. Given the facilities and experience of the company, we are confident that the Master’s degree in Subsea Engineering will add tremendous value to our services,” he said.

    Upon graduation, Hunt said students would be opportune to work in the energy industry, including potential employment with FMC Technologies.

    FMC Technologies is the global market leader in subsea systems and a leading provider of technologies and services to the oil and gas industry.

  • ICPC’s anti-corruption unit in UNIPORT

    The Independent Corrupt Practices and other Related Offence Commission (ICPC), has inaugurated eight-member committee of Anti-Corruption and Transparency Monitoring Unit (ACTU) in the University of Port Harcourt (UNIPORT).

    The commission which also organised an induction seminar for members of the committee a day before the inauguration, said the directive for ACTU establishment at UNIPORT is placed the institution at the vanguard of corruption prevention.

    Speaking at the event which was held at Ebitimi Banigo auditorium of UNIPORT, University, chairman ICPC Rivers State chapter, Mr. Ekpo Nta said ACTU is expected to conduct preliminary investigation into petitions received.

    Ekpo Nta who was represented by the commission’s director of Corruption, Monitoring and Evaluation Department  Mr. Banabas Baba-Gaji, said the committee will not only investigate petitions received but will make recommendations to management and ICPC for further action.

    He urged the committee which has been trained on how to carryout preliminary investigation to use the power vested in ACTU to eradicate the corruption in areas where they have been assigned to operate.

    He noted that ACTU was borne out of the ICPC’S belief that members of an organisation are in a better position to understand or identify loopholes through which corruption thrives.

    “ACTU is not a police station; it is not a spying agent, it was instituted in the UNIPORT to enhance management activities. ICPC is more than ready to partner with the university to make the Nigerian public service, especially UNIPORT the pride of our nation.

    “Most importantly, ACTU members are expected to pay particular attention to the preventive and educational/public enlightenment duties. We will pursue a robust and vigorous moral rearmament and gross socialisation which is part of ACTU’s mandate.”

  • Exposing illegal bunkering, oil theft in the Niger Delta

    Exposing illegal bunkering, oil theft in the Niger Delta

    A report on oil theft called “Private Gain, Public Disaster: Social Context of Illegal Oil Bunkering and Artisanal Refining in the Niger Delta,”  details how the economic sabotage could be reduced to the barest minimum, since completely wiping them out would be an impossible task, writes BISI OLANIYI in Port Harcourt

    Crude oil was first discovered in commercial quantity in 1956 at Oloibiri in Ogbia Local Government Area of Bayelsa State, with Nigeria now losing huge revenue through crude oil theft/illegal bunkering, illegal refining and pipeline vandalism, leading to the pollution and degradation of the environment.

    The activities of oil thieves and illegal bunkerers, made the Federal Government of Nigeria to put in place the Joint Military Task Force (JTF), now codenamed Operation Pulo (Oil) Shield, with its operatives combing the creeks of the Niger Delta, but the criminals, backed by powerful persons, are still beating the security personnel, who at times collude with the oil thieves.

    A University of Port Harcourt’s (UNIPORT) Professor of Economic History, Ben Naanen, and Patrick Tolani, who is the Chief Executive of Oxford, United Kingdom-based Redeemers Relief Agency International, in their new book: “Private Gain, Public Disaster: Social Context of Illegal Oil Bunkering and Artisanal Refining in the Niger Delta,” which is the report of three years of research on oil theft in Nigeria, which they conducted, exposed illegal bunkering and refining, especially in the region rich in crude oil and gas and how they could be reduced to the barest minimum, since completely wiping them out would be an impossible task.

    The presentation of the research report, which took place at the Ebitimi Banigo Auditorium of UNIPORT, was chaired by the Pro-Chancellor and Chairman of the Governing Council of the university, Gesi Asamaowei, an engineer.

    The Bayelsa State’s Commissioner for Environment, Iniruo Wills; a member of the House of Representatives from Rivers State, Dr. Dakuku Peterside, who represents Andoni-Opobo/Nkoro constituency was represented by Benebo Alabraba; the Southsouth Zonal Operations Controller of the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), Mrs. Onyebuchi Sibeudu,  and many eminent personalities were also in attendance.

    Asamaowei, in his remarks, urged the Federal Government and the security agencies to frontally tackle illegal bunkering and refining of crude oil in the Niger Delta.

    The UNIPORT’s Pro-Chancellor also stressed that more attention should be focused on agriculture, rather that wholly depending on crude oil, which is non-renewable, describing the 122-page book as well-researched.

    Naanen, who is also a Trustee of the Port Harcourt, Rivers State-based Niger Delta Environment and Relief Foundation (NIDEREF), while speaking on the occasion, disclosed that the project started in 2011 and was almost abandoned, in view of the cost implication, while the research resumed in 2013.

    He noted that the research focused on Rivers, Bayelsa and Delta States, notorious for illegal bunkering and refining of crude oil, with Akwa Ibom State not considered, in spite of currently having the highest production of crude oil, but offshore, while the illegal activities take place onshore.

    Naanen, the pioneer General Secretary of the Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People (MOSOP) and the former Chairman of the MOSOP Provisional Council, also stated that the research was risky, in view of the involvement of militants and cultists in the theft of crude oil and illegally refining it or sold to international buyers.

    The UNIPORT don (Naanen) said: “Nigeria loses more crude oil than any other country in the world – more than seven per cent of daily production. The Federal Government of Nigeria and the oil companies suffer huge financial losses, an estimated $6 billion per annum. Oil theft especially victimises the poor.

    “To reduce illegal bunkering and illegal refining, the socio-economic origin of oil theft must be addressed through a decisive attack on poverty, particularly through job creation, targeted at the youths, who are involved in oil theft.

    “The pipelines should be protected through community-based surveillance. A special judicial mechanism should be established to expedite prosecution of oil theft cases.”

    Naanen, an indigene of Bodo-Ogoni in Gokana Local Government Area of Rivers State, also lamented that Nigeria’s economy is dangerously dependent on crude oil, while stating that the consequences of oil theft are grave and widespread.

    Nigeria has total length of crude oil pipelines of 4,350 kilometres, which must be protected against oil theft and vandalism.

    The first Port Harcourt refinery, with capacity of 60,000 barrels per day (bpd), was inaugurated in 1965, while the second refinery in Port Harcourt has the capacity of 150,000 bpd.

    The Warri refinery in Delta state, inaugurated in 1978, has capacity of 125,000 bpd, while the refinery in Kaduna, which was put in place in 1980, has capacity of 110,000 bpd and it is linked to Niger Delta oil fields by 600 kilometres of pipelines, but designed to process imported heavy crude oil.

    Only 20 per cent of the total crude oil allocated to the four refineries for domestic consumption is utilised, making Nigeria to depend on imported petroleum products and artisanal refining to fill the gap.

    In 2012, according to the report, crude oil contributed 96.8 per cent of Nigeria’s total export earnings, 60.5 per cent of gross government receipts and 37 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), yet the country loses to crude oil theft, more than $6 billion worth of its crude oil production or 6.25 per cent of its total export value.

    Crude oil, the strategic backbone of the Nigerian economy, is what large scale oil thieves target at disconnecting, with the nation bleeding painfully and tragically from the pipelines, with the country appearing helpless and unable to curtail the danger.There does not seem to be adequate appreciation of the danger, not even among the top oil bureaucrats at the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources, the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and the Department of Petroleum Resources (DPR), among other stakeholders.

    Crude oil theft has international dimension, while artisanal refining locally also calls for concern.

    The theft of crude oil or illegal bunkering in national parlance and its corollary – artisanal refining – are fundamentally social problems.

    An artisanal refining unit is a simplified petroleum distillation unit, which is conceptualised like a crude school science project. It can also be likened to the production of the local dry gin, commonly called “Ogogoro.”

    The aim of artisanal refining is to boil barrels of stolen crude oil with naked fire in a metal constructed sealed tank. The crude evaporates and passes through two parallel pipes, connected to the tank through a wooden constructed cooling water bath. The refined product then drips out slowly into a container at the other end, with different products emerging at different intervals.

    Delta State has the highest number of artisanal refining sites, according to the researchers, and they can be easily seen in creeks, forests and villages.

    It was also revealed that it takes about three days to get up to five drums of refined petroleum products. After the refining processes, the products are filled into rubber and metal drums for transloading and storage, from where they are transported to their final destinations.

    Since most of the artisanal refining sites are located near the creeks, the refined products are usually transported through the waterways to the neighbouring towns and villages, while transportation of large volume of crude oil to mother ships offshore is done by the use of barges.

    The barges and Cotonou boats are usually anchored within the creeks, where they are filled with the required volume of crude oil, before they are transported and transferred into the mother ship, which can be in the coastal waters of Ghana or Benin Republic.

    It is unlikely to visit jetties within any of the communities involved in illegal bunkering, without seeing piles of drums and rubber containers used for transporting the petroleum products.

    Most of the locally-produced petroleum products (through artisanal refining) are transported to the cities, where they are probably mixed with the regular products and sold in conventional filling stations. The dominant product is diesel.

    Since the tolerance of diesel engines in high, it is usually not easy to detect locally-refined diesel from the regular product.

    In Port Harcourt, the researchers observed that the main point of entry for the locally-refined products is the Akpajo Sandfill Jetty, stressing that most of the refined products coming from Bodo-Ogoni in Gokana LGA and the neighbouring communities are brought to the Akpajo Sandfill jetty, where buyers from the Port Harcourt city and other parts of Nigeria assemble to buy and resell to members of the public.

    A major driving force of the thriving illegal bunkering business in Nigeria is market demand. There is a huge local and international market for the crude oil stolen from Nigeria.

    While the stolen crude oil is sold in countries within the West African sub-region and Europe, the locally-refined petroleum products are mostly sold in the local villages and towns, but now getting to Onitsha in Anambra State and Lagos.

    The researchers disclosed that the weekly boat that sails from Ekeremor in Bayelsa State to Onitsha, usually carries illegally-refined petroleum products, while a drum of locally-refined diesel goes for N7,000 in the creeks and as much as N12,000 to N15,000 in the cities.

    The involvement of women in the whole process of illegal bunkering and artisanal refining is more or less secondary, because they are generally not involved in obtaining crude oil or in the refining process.

    Women, however, play pivotal roles in the transportation and marketing of the refined products, as well as cooking and provision of sexual services for the predominantly male operators.

    Children, mostly orphans and aged between 10 and 13, also work in the illegal bunkering sites and run errands at the camps, while absentee owners of illegal refining sites always appoint managers to run the operations.

    The JTF estimated in 2010 that there were 1,500 illegal refining operations in the region, with Bodo Creeks in Gokana LGA harbouring over 1,000 youths, who were directly involved in illegal refining, which might have been higher now.

    The JTF claimed that in 2012, it destroyed 4,349 illegal refining units.  Illegal bunkering business represents a substantial informal economy, whose value has never been captured, since it is regarded as illegal.

    The study reveals that there are three main sets of actors involved in illegal bunkering: those who compromise the pipelines by breaking and installing taps on them to procure crude oil for sale; those who buy the crude oil for export and the local operators who process stolen crude oil into low quality fuels for the domestic market, with the three sets of actors referred to as oil thieves or illegal bunkerers.

    Rivers, Bayelsa and Delta States account for 80 per cent of Nigeria’s onshore oil production and a predominant proportion of crude oil theft.

    The researchers held consultations with the people and leaders of Niger Delta communities, while over 200 persons directly connected to the illegal siphoning of crude oil and artisanal were interviewed, while top officials of the leading International Oil Companies (IOCs), NNPC, the regulatory agencies, the JTF, police, navy and other security agencies in the Niger Delta and Abuja were also spoken with.

    Naanen and Tolani also interviewed oil dealers in Europe, especially in Rotterdam, Aberdeen and London, as well as the people involved in the transportation and marketing of illegally-refined petroleum products in the Niger Delta and end users of the products, while direct observations of the refining processes were also made at many sites.

    Urine samples were taken by the researchers from the youths directly involved in refining and copies of questionnaire were also given to them to assess their health status, while fish samples were collected from two heavily-impacted sites in Rivers and Bayelsa states and one less impacted site, to test the level of contamination of sea food and the potential effects on human consumers.

    The samples were analysed at accredited laboratories in Nigeria and the results interpreted by an independent expert.

    The researchers said: “Illegal bunkering and artisanal refining are rooted in the grim economic and social circumstances of the Niger Delta. Poverty is endemic and unemployment is high. Nigeria loses $6 billion to oil theft annually. 28,000 people receive incomes directly or directly from illegal bunkering.

    “The illegal bunkering economy has an annual value of $9 billion. Those who export 80 per cent of the stolen crude oil are not poor people. They are connected to the political and military establishments, as well as the oil bureaucracy.

    “Concerted international action to check the Nigerian crude oil theft is not feasible, because the stolen crude oil represents a minor fraction of international crude oil traffic and does not present any credible threat to the world’s economy and international security.”

    The researchers said: “The notion that individuals and the people of local communities can engage in self help, by tampering with strategic national assets, such as the oil facilities, simply because they are located on their land, is fundamentally flawed.

    “There are also those who tend to believe that coming from the Niger Delta is all it takes to live a comfortable life, because the region produces crude oil. What the youths need is the opportunity to develop their potential and grow, not pampering. The state and the oil companies have to make a creative use of the resources of the region to create the opportunity.”

    While giving further insight into the menace of crude oil theft, Naanen and Tolani pointed out that some people have probably not thought about, in respect of the relationship between illegal bunkering and poverty is that persons who steal the larger volume of the crude oil for export, are not poor people.

    They said: “They are driven primarily by the imperative of capital accumulation. These are operators who can muster the financial capital necessary for a high risk illegal international business, as well as the political capital to protect the business. These are not ordinary men.

    “They are connected to the apex of Nigerian political, military and business establishment. They are known to the people who should know them, as they are not ghosts. Yet, there has been a systematic official refusal to reveal the identities of these supposedly mysterious oil barons and make them face the law.

    “This refusal speaks loud about the official identities of most of these illegal bunkering kingpins. Nigeria loses about 145,000 barrels of crude oil per day to oil theft-related incidents, which is more than the production of many individual oil exporting nations.”

    The researchers also noted that politically, the capture of oil revenues had become the driving force for political contestations in Nigeria, with illegal bunkering aiding the process, while Nigeria is passing under the control of persons with varying measures of legal and illegal interest in the oil and gas industry, a political trend they described as “petrocracy.”

    In combating illegal bunkering, they stressed that the Federal Government and the IOCs had tried many measures, ranging from criminalisation, advocacy and pipeline surveillance to the deployment of JTF personnel, which they said had not yielded the tangible results, in view of lack of implementation.

    On the high level political and military structures, three categories of operators were identified in the illegal bunkering and artisanal refining business: the tapping or bunkering point owners, who drill holes in the pipes and siphon crude oil for sale; the big players who buy the stolen crude oil from the bunkering point owners and export it and the artisanal refiners who purchase the stolen crude oil or occasionally steal it directly and process it into low quality fuels for the local market in the Niger Delta region and beyond.

    Artisanal refining is now undergoing structural changes, featuring concentration and centralisation, making possible oil theft on an industrial scale. The huge storage steel tanks being constructed  and other requirements, including security insurance in case of arrest, require considerable starter capital of about N1 million.

    A major implication of this change is that many of the small operators of the past now work for the powerful “big boys” and financiers, who can muster the capital requirement and necessary law enforcement contacts for the protection of the business.

    Workers and other people with legitimate livelihoods are investing in the illegal businesses of artisanal refining and bunkering, in order to provide for themselves an additional and more rewarding income stream.

    The industry is also undergoing technical innovations, while expanding its commodity chain. Well paid specialists now drill the holes and install valves on them for siphoning crude oil from pipelines.

    In Bodo-Ogoni, the researchers gathered that the fee for drilling a tapping point is between N250,000 and N300,000, part of which goes to the operatives of the JTF, with the changes giving the illegal bunkering and refining business the grounding for sustainability.

    It was also confirmed that the nationals who are mostly involved in moving stolen Nigerian crude oil are mainly non-English speaking, while it is common to sight Lebanese, Cameroonians, Pilipino, Romanians, Thais and Ghanaians, with the recipient refineries of crude oil stolen from Nigeria being in the United States of America, Brazil and the Gulf of Guinea.

    Among the many initiatives recommended by the researchers to mitigate illegal bunkering and refining, three specific areas that require immediate action were emphasised, including addressing the socio-economic foundation of illegal bunkering, through the attack on poverty and job creation targeted at the youths, who must be made to come out of the creeks.

    Also imperative is pipeline protection, through community-based surveillance programme, which will replace the present private contractor surveillance system, since the ineffectiveness of private contractors, according to the researchers, is glaring, with some of them implicated in the theft of crude oil.

    They noted that with community-based surveillance, the people of the various Niger Delta communities would take over the protection of the pipelines, while in exchange for the role, they would receive development support from the IOCs, through the Global Memoranda of Understanding (GMoU).

    The third approach is to ensure speedy prosecution of oil theft cases, by setting up a special judicial mechanism, exemplified by special courts.

    Naanen and Tolani said: “Nigeria has no excuse importing refined petroleum products. The country should control the petroleum products’ market in the ECOWAS (Economic Community of West African States) sub-region, as a way of diversifying the economy, creating quality jobs and earning foreign exchange.

    “There should be policy reform to promote cottage/modular refineries that will contribute to addressing the local supply disequilibrium, build local capacity in the downstream sector and empower the local communities through job creation. Emphasis must also be placed on good governance.

    “The ten per cent community equity, recommended in the Petroleum Industry Bill (PIB), will create a sense of belonging in the Niger Delta. However, the management of the fund will be problematic. Effective and agreeable management mechanism should be designed. Otherwise, the fund will fuel crisis in the communities.”

    The Federal Government of Nigeria must show strong political will to tackle the menace of illegal bunkering and artisanal refining, in order to move the nation forward.

  • UNIPORT VC inaugurates rapid response committee

    UNIPORT VC inaugurates rapid response committee

    University of Port Harcourt (UNIPORT) Vice Chancellor Prof. Joseph Ajienka has set up a high-powered rapid response committee to prevent the outbreak of the dreaded Ebola Virus Disease (EVD).

    The committee members comprises of medical experts and professionals, who will adopt effective enlightenment procedures and global best practices to contain the disease on the campus.

    Members of the committee are: Deputy Vice Chancellor (Administration), Prof. Ethelbert Nduka, who will monitor the committee’s activities and Professors Kio Abo and Vincent Idemyor, of the Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences.

    Others are: Dr. Williams Wodi, of the Information Unit in the Vice Chancellor’s Office; Dr. Ken Umeadi, of the Health Services Department; Dr. Glory Amadi, of the Department of Educational Psychology, Guidance and Counselling; Doctors Christian Oriji and Dine Bari Badey, of the Department of Sociology.

    At the inauguration yesterday in Port Harcourt, Prof Ajienka said universities, being the factories for knowledge, should also be in the forefront of the fight against epidemics, including EVD.

    The academic said gathering and disseminating appropriate information on the Ebola virus and its mode of transmission should be left in the hands of people with the requisite expertise.

    He urged the members of the committee to devise functional measures to contain the disease and ensure that the rumour mill does not overrun vulnerable members of the university community.

  • Ogoniland…All we are saying: give us new lease of life

    Ogoniland…All we are saying: give us new lease of life

    At a consultative meeting on August 8, the people of Ogoni spoke with one voice, demanding nothing but the full implementation of the UNEP Report, writes Bisi Olaniyi, Port Harcourt

    Ogoni is one of the ethnic groups in the Niger Delta. Rich in crude oil and gas. But Ogoni is, ironically, poor. Besides, its environment is degraded.

    Oil exploitation started in Ogoniland, which consists of four Rivers State’s Local Government Areas –Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme– in 1958. Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC) is the major operator.

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo, in October 2006, initiated the United Nations Environment Programme’s (UNEP’s) environmental assessment of Ogoniland, as a result of many years of pollution, neglect, marginalisation and environmental degradation. The initiative was well supported by the late President Umaru Yar’Adua, while the 262-page main report was issued on August 4, 2011 and received in Abuja by President Goodluck Jonathan on August 12, 2011.

    MOSOP President Legborsi Saro Pyagbara said: “As a response to the continuing destruction of the Ogoni environment, unparalleled military repression and horrendous human rights abuses in Ogoniland, that attended the prosecution of the non-violent struggle of the Ogoni people, the United Nations responded by creating the position of the Special Rapporteur on Nigeria in 1997 and appointed Mr. Soli Sorabjee to the position. In his report to the 48th session of the then United Nations Commission on Human Rights in March 1998, the Special Rapporteur recommended that the Nigerian government should undertake an independent  environmental study of Ogoniland.

    This was the setting that led to the invitation extended to UNEP in October 2006, within the context of the Ogoni-Shell Reconciliation Process, to carry out the environmental assessment of Ogoniland.  The UNEP released its report on 4th August, 2011. As a response, the government set up HYPREP, which has failed in all ramifications to address the issue of remediation and restoration of the Ogoni environment.”

    On receiving the UNEP report, President Jonathan set up a Presidential Implementation Committee (PIC), headed by the Minister of Petroleum Resources, Mrs. Diezani Alison-Madueke.

    In Ogale-Eleme, Eleme LGA of Ogoniland in Rivers state, the UNEP report reveals that the water contains cancer-causing Benzene, which is 900 times the World Health Organisation’s (WHO’s) standards for water contamination, thereby requiring urgent attention.

    UNEP also states that the sustainable environmental restoration of Ogoniland will take up to 20 years to achieve and will need coordinated efforts on the part of government agencies at all levels, declaring that effective environmental restoration in Ogoniland cannot be achieved with the current institutional capacity and framework, while recommending that the Federal Government should establish an Ogoniland Environmental Restoration Authority.

    The UNEP report notes that full environmental resporation of Ogoniland will be a project, which will take 30 years to complete, after the ongoing pollution has been brought to an end, while recommending the creation of an Environmental Restoration Fund for Ogoniland, with initial capital of $1 billion, which it says should be used only for activities dealing specifically with the environmental restoration of Ogoniland, including capacity building, skills’ transfer and conflicts’ resolution, while insisting that the management of the fund should be the responsibility of the Ogoniland Environmental Restoration Authority.

    The Federal Government, rather than taking steps to implement the far-reaching recommendations contained in the UNEP report, decided on July 20, 2012 to establish HYPREP, which will cover all pollution sites in the Niger Delta and other parts of Nigeria, with an Ogoni, Mrs. Joy Nunieh-Okunnu, appointed as its National Coordinator, which Ogoni people immediately kicked against.

    A former Chairman of the MOSOP Provisional Council, Prof. Ben Naanen, of the University of Port Harcourt (UNIPORT), during the 20th Ogoni Day on January 4, 2013 at Bori, declared that SPDC would not be allowed to return to Ogoni for crude oil exploitation.

    According to Naanen, who is also the pioneer General Secretary of MOSOP, the Ogoni people would prefer another International Oil Company (IOC) with environment consciousness and good corporate social responsibility records to the SPDC and that the new oil company would be expected to be sensitive to the needs of the Ogoni people and would be able to honour agreements.

    The SPDC, on July 1, 2014 in Abuja, at the meeting of the House of Representatives’ Committee on Environment, accused the Federal Government of Nigeria of stalling the implementation of the UNEP report.

    Shell had earlier stated that the initial capital of $1 billion for Ogoniland’s environmental restoration was ready, but could not be released without legal framework and structures on the ground for judicious utilisation of the fund, which UNEP said should be used only for activities dealing specifically with the environmental restoration of Ogoniland.

    On August 4, at a seminar in Bori, to mark the three years of the release of the UNEP report, MOSOP accused President Jonathan of aiding environmental terrorism in Ogoniland, in view of his administration’s refusal to implement the recommendations contained in the UNEP report on the environmental assessment of Ogoniland, three years after its release.

    The umbrella organisation of Ogoni people noted that since August 4, 2011, when the UNEP report was released, nothing was done by the Federal Government to ensure the full implementation of the recommendations, while Ogoni people had been dying from pollution and environmental degradation, caused by the activities of Shell.

    Ogoni people also urged President Jonathan, who hails from Otuoke in Ogbia Local Government Area of Bayelsa State in the Niger Delta region, to as a matter of urgency, declare a state of emergency on Ogoni environment.

    The President of MOSOP, Legborsi Saro Pyagbara, expressed displeasure that the Federal Government recently raised billions of naira to fight terrorism and support the victims of terror, but unconcerned about the plight of the Ogoni people.

    The seminar, which was attended by many eminent Ogoni people and their friends, had as theme: “Ogoni, UNEP Report and the Search for Environmental Justice,” with Prof. Lucky Akaruese as guest speaker, while the UNEP report on the state of Ogoni environment was described as a death sentence, passed on the Ogoni people.

    MOSOP president hinted that the marginalised people had decided to be marking August 4 annually as Ogoni Environment Day, stressing that the peace-loving people would soon march on Abuja, to protest against the non-implementation of the recommendations contained in the UNEP report.

    Pyagbara said: “We have always come together at the community level, at the national level and at the global level to promote awareness and positive action on this (UNEP) report, which had raised concerns about one of the most pressing environmental challenges of our day. The ongoing environmental terrorism being committed against the Ogoni people by a government with a slumbering conscience, a government which has demonstrated in all sense that it cares little about our survival as a people. A government that has vowed to promote a set of negative actions for the continued destruction of our environmental resources to deprive us of its environmental services and use.

    “Today, Ogoni is facing multi-dimensional environmental issues that require integrated and collective action, yet the Federal Government has no plan to deal with the environmental crisis in Ogoniland. Today, while they gather in Abuja to raise funds in the name of national security, the environmental insecurity in Ogoniland and other parts of the Niger Delta, arising from ongoing environmental terrorism merits no intervention for the restoration of the degraded ecosystems and provision of support for the victims.

    “Today, no single recommendation in the UNEP report has been implemented by the Federal Government of Nigeria, as required by the study. The attempts so far have been a diversion from the recommendations. Indeed, its signature HYPREP (Hydrocarbon Pollution Restoration Project) has failed woefully, just as we predicted from the beginning.

    “Today, Shell continues to deceive the world with its so-called clean up of Right of Way, yet the assessment of the so-called clean-up remains its trademark whitewash.  In saner environments, the Ogoni environmental crisis would have forced the government to declare a state of emergency on the Ogoni environment, but here, our lives do not count. These double standard must stop. This discrimination must stop. We will wear them down by our capacity to suffer this injustice. Sooner than later, we are going to march down on Abuja to demonstrate our frustrations with the government of Nigeria. We will not give up.”

    The MOSOP president also described August 4, 2011 as the culmination of the struggles of Ogoni forebears, which he said began in 1990 in the Ogoni villages to the hallowed halls of the United Nations in 1998, when the UN Special Rapporteur called for the environmental study of Ogoniland and continued to the 2000s, especially in 2006, when the administration of ex-President Olusegun Obasanjo invited the UNEP team to carry out the study of the Ogoni environment, to August 4, 2011, when UNEP finally released its report.

    Pyagbara said: “This day (August 4) therefore demonstrates the resilience, tenacity, strength and commitment of the Ogoni people to challenge the denigrators of their land and restore its pristine environment.

    “On the negative side, this day clearly demonstrates the failure of the Nigerian government to protect its own citizens from the abuse of corporate power and corporate greed and Shell’s environmental racism in Ogoniland and the Niger Delta as a whole.

    “We want to seize this opportunity to inform the Jonathan–led administration that it is not yet late to take action on the Ogoni matter. We wish to inform him that it is not too late to change his response to the Ogoni environmental crisis.  We therefore call on his administration to declare a state of emergency on the Ogoni environment and design a multi-stakeholder plan of intervention for the clean-up and restoration of Ogoni environment.”

    The MOSOP president also admonished everyone to always think about the Ogoni people and to take inspiration from efforts to claim back their environment and work for a sustainable future, thereby raising their voices for the marginalised people.

    He invited people of goodwill all over the world to continue to contribute to the campaign for the restoration of the Ogoni environment, while urging them to join the movement wherever they may be in the world and raise their voices to encourage action, asking them to take action today to stop environmental terrorism in Ogoniland.

    Pyagbara assured that Ogoni people would continue to demand their rights peacefully and non-violently, while expressing optimism that they would win.

    On August 8, at a consultative meeting on the UNEP report implementation at the Ogoni Peace and Freedom Centre, Bori, Jonathan berated the Federal Government’s Hydrocarbon Pollution Restoration Project (HYPREP), saying it is time for decisive action on the UNEP report.

    Ogoni people, at the well-attended consultative meeting,  requested the full implementation of the recommendations contained in the UNEP report and the establishment of the Ogoniland Environmental Restoration Authority, recommended by UNEP, to ensure the implementation of the report.

    Jonathan, who was represented by the Permanent Secretary of the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources, Danladi Kifasi, lauded Ogoni people for embracing peace and remaining united.

    MOSOP President, however, described the consultative meeting as belated and declared that if the initiative was political, the Federal Government had failed.

    The consultative meeting was also attended by the representative of the Rivers Southeast Senatorial District, Magnus Ngei Abe; a former Chairman of the MOSOP Provisional Council, Prof. Ben Naanen of the University of Port Harcourt (UNIPORT); Rivers Commissioner for Works, Chief Victor Giadom; the Managing Director of Port Harcourt Refining Company Limited, Eleme, Fred Enjugu; the representative of Gokana constituency in the Rivers House of Assembly, Dr. Innocent Barikor; royal fathers and many eminent personalities.

    Jonathan said at the consultative meeting: “The Federal Government, concerned about the plight of the Ogoni people, commissioned the United Nations to carry out and environmental assessment of Ogoniland. The UN released its report on 4th August, 2011. The assignment was borne out of the Federal Government’s desire to mitigate the suffering of the Ogoni people, occasioned by hydrocarbon pollution.

    “After a thorough consideration of the recommendations of the UNEP report, the Presidential Implementation Committee’s (PIC’s) report, the Petroleum Industry’s Action Plan, based on the provisions of the Petroleum Act CAP 350 LFN 2004, the HYPREP establishment was approved on July 20, 2012.

    “While HYPREP has implemented some of the transitional phase objectives, as recommended in the report (UNEP), government recognises and it is very mindful that the programme (HYPREP) has not achieved its full objectives, as envisioned by this administration.

    “Government is mindful that funds meant for remediation and restoration activities in Ogoniland are used for that purpose. However, HYPREP will consider other Niger Delta areas affected by hydrocarbon pollution, by causing the polluters to clean the areas with their own funds. The time for decisive action is now and we call on all relevant parties to join us to tackle and begin to address the challenges ahead.”

    The Nigerian President also expressed optimism that very soon, the Federal Government would be working with the United Nations, the Ogoni communities and relevant Nigerian agencies to pool the collective knowledge and construct a road map to deliver a comprehensive remediation programme, with a focus on the immediate delivery and restitution, while assuring that his administration would not play politics with the lives of the Ogoni people, but deeply concerned about their plight, their environment and the UNEP report.

    While also speaking at the consultative meeting, Senator Magnus Ngei Abe, who is the Chairman of the Senate Committee on Petroleum (Downstream), described the full implementation of the recommendations contained in the UNEP report as a matter of life and death, which could not be toyed with.

    The senator, who is a former Secretary to the Rivers State Government (SSG), maintained that the UNEP report must be implemented the way it is, as promised by the late ex-President Umaru Yar’Adua.

    The UNIPORT Professor (Ben Naanen), said a steering committee on the full implementation of the UNEP report, comprising representatives of the Federal Government and Ogoni people, should immediately be put in place and the Ogoniland Environmental Restoration Authority established.

    A renowned environmentalist, Celestine AkpoBari, accused President Jonathan and the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources of playing politics with Ogoni matters and the peace-loving people, who he said had continued to die on a daily basis, in view of pollution of their environment.

    The Chairman of the Association of Local Governments of Nigeria (ALGON), Rivers state chapter, Oji Ngofa, who is also the Chairman of Eleme LGA of the state, declared that HYPREP failed, because the Federal Government did not take Ogoni people seriously, stating that a time-line to implement the UNEP report must be given by the Federal Government.

    Ex-Rivers Commissioner for Environment, Prof. Roseline Konya, of the UNIPORT, expressed shock that the UNEP team was kicked out of the implementation of the recommendations contained in the far-reaching report, while insisting that UNEP must be involved.

    A former Vice-President of MOSOP, Rev. Abraham Olungwe, declared that if the Federal Government refused to fully implement the UNEP report and treat Ogoni people well, there would be no peace in the four LGAs of Khana, Gokana, Tai and Eleme, while expressing shock that the consultative meeting took place some months to the 2015 elections, with President Jonathan seeking re-election.

    The President of KAGOTE, the elite Ogoni group, Dr. Peter Medee of UNIPORT, declared that Ogoni people would never embrace HYPREP, but would prefer the full implementation of the UNEP report.

    In a communiqué issued at the end of the consultative meeting, which had in attendance, over five thousand Ogoni people, comprising all sectors of the Ogoni community, including the traditional rulers, farmers, the academia, politicians and the youths, it was resolved that a multi-stakeholder mechanism/steering committee, comprising representatives drawn from the Federal Government, UNEP, Shell and Ogoni people be established.

    The committee, according to the communiqué, would look into the UNEP report and develop a focused engagement and implementation plan, with clearly defined steps.

    The five-point communiqué reads: “That the Federal Government should set up the Ogoni Environmental Restoration Authority, in line with the recommendations of the UNEP Report. More so, with the glaring failure of the HYPREP.

    “That the Ogoni people be included in all stakeholder processes relating to the implementation of the UNEP report, including the proposed multi-stakeholder workshop on the report, which is being planned by the Federal Government.

    “That the Federal Government should commence series of confidence-building measures that will assure the Ogoni people that the Federal Government is sincere and committed to the implementation of the UNEP report and its recommendations.”

    It was also stated in the communiqué that Ogoni people would want the commencement of the implementation of the resolutions of the consultative meeting, within one month.

    Ogoni people are known for non-violent struggle, but they sent SPDC packing from their land since 1993 and they should not be pushed to the wall, especially on the issue of the full implementation of the recommendations contained in the UNEP report, over three years after its release. A stitch in time saves nine.

  • UNIPORT alumni president seeks to reunite members

    The new National President, University of Port Harcourt Alumni (UNIPORT) Association, Mr. Sampson Ngerebara, has called for unity among former students of the school.

    Ngerebara, who was the president of the Rivers State Chapter of the alumni association before his election last month, said his first priority would be to reconcile all aggrieved members, including the immediate past National President Chief Ike Chinwo.

    He also said his administration would reposition the association by reviewing its constitution,  publish the UNIPORT Alumni Association magazine by October, mobilise members, and revisit the Alumni Centre project, among others.

    Ngerebara is a graduate of Electrical Engineering (1985 set).

    According to the election report released by the Public Relations Officer of the association, Chris Orji, Ngerebara defeated Dr Solomon Godknows Ibulubo in the election, which held in Yenagoa, the Bayelsa State capital.

    “The election was conducted by the National Working Committee (CWC) constituted by all National Executive Council Members, including presidents and secretaries of the various state chapters.  Sixteen chapters were at the congress.

    “During the election, Ngerebara won majority votes and was declared the winner, after which he was presented to the council for ratification by the entire members of the congress for ratification,” the statement said.

    The motion for the ratification of the election was moved by Mr. Godfrey Utebor (BOT member) from Delta State, and seconded by Wilson Aggrey, past president of Baylesa State chapter of the association.

  • UNIPORT students protest fee hike

    UNIPORT students protest fee hike

    •Block East-West Road

    Thousands of University of Port Harcourt (UNIPORT) students protested yesterday what they described as “an inhuman increase in school fees and poor infrastructure” at the university.

    The students, who assembled at 6am, blocked the East-West Road, leading to a traffic jam at Chioba Axis.

    The protesters marched on the city with their placards  with various inscriptions, such as  “Cut down our school fees”; “Federal university is not a state university”; Hike in school fees, we no go gree”; “We don’t have good class rooms”.

    The students locked the main gates of the university’s three parks-Choba, Delta and Abuja/University.

    The protesting students took over the main gate of the Choba Park and barricaded the strategic NTA-Choba Road.

    Banks and businesses in the area were hurriedly shut.

    The students, at 8:40 am, moved to Choba Junction on the East-West Road and later to the university’s main gate.

    The police stormed the area in many patrol vans but did not harass the students.

    UNIPORT’s spokesman Williams Wodi said the protesters were not students, insisting that bona fide students are on break after their second semester examinations.

    Wodi said only N5,000 was added to the fees.

     

  • All hail UNIPORT’s ace professor

    All hail UNIPORT’s ace professor

    Academics, friends, associates, other eminent personalities, family members, relatives and students (past and present) gathered at the Ebitimi Banigo Auditorium of the University of Port Harcourt (UNIPORT) for a symposium in honour of a distinguished scholar, Prof. Ozo-mekuri Ndimele, the Dean of the Faculty of Humanities, who recently clocked 50. Bisi Olaniyi in Port Harcourt writes on the memorable event, which confirms how the Professor has touched many lives.

    A doctoral student at the prestigious University of Port Harcourt’s (UNIPORT’s) Department of Linguistics and Communication Studies (LCS), Kasarachi Hayford Innocent, who also lectures in the same department, is physically challenged, but graduated with First Class in Mass Communication from the University +of Nigeria, Nsukka (UNN).

    Two years after graduating from UNN (in 1999) and in spite of the First Class, Innocent could not secure a job. Despite all the efforts he made, he kept roaming the streets, until he came in contact with the Dean of the UNIPORT’s Faculty of Humanities, Prof. Ozo-mekuri Ndimele, who recently clocked 50.

    Ndimele, of LCS department of the university, fondly referred to as “Unique UNIPORT,” saw the potential in the brilliant Innocent and recommended him for employment.

    In spite of his physical challenge, he (Innocent) has authored and co-authored many Mass Communication books, as well as having his academic papers published in local and international journals.

    The gifted scholar (Innocent) also presents a weekly radio programme (Standing Tall) on Love FM, Port Harcourt and he enjoys regularly saying: “Do not allow your background to keep your back on the ground.”

    One of the Masters of Ceremonies (MCs) at the symposium in honour of Ndimele at 50, Jones Ayuwo, also a lecturer in UNIPORT’s LCS department, while anchoring the programme, jokingly said in spite of Innocent’s physical challenge, he has a beautiful wife and lovely children, with everybody bursting into laughter.

    When given the opportunity to speak at UNIPORT’s Ebitimi Banigo Auditorium, during the symposium with the theme: “Language, Linguistics and Communications,” the highly-appreciative Innocent could not hide his joy, for not ending up as a beggar.

    Innocent said: “If not for God and Prof. Ndimele, I would have been on the road begging for alms. Prof. Ndimele is a man of excellence, an academic icon, very supportive, so wonderful and very caring.”

    While proposing the toast, one of the former students of the honouree, Dr. Ngozi Nwigwe, currently a lecturer at the Alvan Ikoku College of Education, Owerri, Imo State, spoke brilliantly and glowingly about his (Ndimele’s) leadership ability.

    Nwigwe stated that: “Prof. Ndimele taught us that hard-work does not kill. He is a good mentor. He has climbed the ladder and he is showing others how to climb the ladder, without destroying the ladder. Prof. Ndimele is not a leader who will climb up and throw away the ladder.”

    Ndimele, who was born on August 13, 1963, an indigene of Umueleji, Akirika-Ogida in Etche Local Government Area of Rivers State and the second son in a family of thirteen, was rather grateful to God for giving him the grace to assist people, record noteworthy educational achievements faster and at a younger age, as well as for enabling him to attain the golden age.

    The honouree, a two-time President of the Linguistic Association of Nigeria (LAN), is also an author of many Linguistics and Mass Communication books, which are vital reference materials globally, for academics, students and others.

    The prolific author, writer, publisher and editor (Ndimele) has published both locally and internationally, as well as having over fifty publications in learned journals, spanning comparative grammar, syntax, theoretical linguistics and communication theory.

    A beautifully-decorated birthday cake, prepared by an ex-student of UNIPORT’s LCS department, Miss Beauty Adeyanju, who is about leaving for the mandatory national youth service, but decided to go into entrepreneurship while still in the university and now the Chief Executive Officer of cake manufacturing/training company, was cut by Ndimele, supported by his wife, Joy, and some of the distinguished personalities in attendance.

    The President of the Faculty of Humanities Students’ Association, Joseph Inyama, also presented the honouree with an elegant plague/award of excellence.

    There was a poem on Ndimele, put together and rendered excellently by one of the brilliant students in the LCS department, Bridget Chinonyerem Agumagu, There was also cultural display, fashion show and arts exhibition by students from UNIPORT’s Faculty of Humanities.

    The Dean being celebrated did not pretend, by declaring that: “I am not sure I am a good husband and a good father. I thank my wife for her support and understanding. My wife of 14 years deserves an award for being able to manage me. When I am in my study, I do not like to be distracted. I warned my wife not to enter my study, which she has complied with. I sleep daily at 3 am, except when I have malaria, which will make me to sleep at 12 am.

    “I was the youngest Professor, when I became the Dean of the Faculty of Humanities in UNIPORT. My colleagues are saying if third term as Dean is allowed, I will be asked to continue. Four of us contested in my first tenure, with only one Etche lecturer then. The other votes put together did not come near mine. My second tenure too was by election, but nobody came out to contest against me.

    “After my two years tenure as the Head of Department of Linguistics and Communication Studies, the then Vice-chancellor directed that I should continue indefinitely and I was in office for another four years, totalling six years at the HOD.”

    The Vice-Chancellor of UNIPORT, Prof. Joseph Atubokiki Ajienka, a brilliant Petroleum Engineer, in his speech at the symposium, described Ndimele as a very fine scholar and also a very fine administrator.

    Ajienka, who was represented by the Deputy Vice-Chancellor, Administration, Prof. Ethelbert Nduka, said: “We are gathered here in honour of a very young Professor. We are not gathered here because he is the Dean of the Faculty of Humanities. We are gathered here because of his scholarship. Prof. Ndimele is a very fine scholar and also a very fine administrator. His ideas are very noble and brilliant.

    “We cannot leave this young and bright man (Ndimele) to end as the Dean of the Faculty of Humanities, in a dynamic university as ours. I can assure you that he still has a lot of roles to play and a lot of time in the system. Fifty years is a turning point in someone’s life. You are joining the men of wisdom. We are very proud of you. Prof. Ndimele has been very wonderful.”

    The symposium was chaired by a former Vice-Chancellor of UNIPORT, Emeritus Professor Nimi Dimkpa Briggs, who recently turned 70.

    Briggs, an ex-Chairman of the Rivers State Independent Electoral Commission and currently the Chairman of the Rivers State Economic Advisory Council, in his remarks, described Ndimele as a committed scholar.

    The former vice-chancellor (Briggs) stated: “We are here to celebrate 50 years of one of our great Professors. An important aspect of life in a university is the issue of tutelage. We have someone who ought to be here. Sadly, she is not here. I am referring to the late Prof. Kay Williamson (white woman), who brought up the gentleman we are celebrating.

    “I am here because I respected Kay Williamson deeply and because of that, I have extended that respect to also Ndimele, because he is a true mentee of Kay Williamson. Persons who seek after knowledge are very simple. Whatever they do, they do them seriously. They are committed. Kay was one of the most committed individuals on this campus. An academic takes his seriously.”

    One of the teachers of Ndimele at UNIPORT, Prof. Emmanuel Nolue Emenanjo, now retired, described him as a good academic and administrator.

    Emenanjo disclosed: “Ndimele was one of my students. He is very hardworking. Those of us who were trained by Prof. Kay Williamson, we had to learn hard-work. Ndimele is very cerebral and very creative. He has a very analytical mind.

    “Many things have been said about him (Ndimele), but they did not mention the fact that he is a very lively man. He is full of humour and he can be very noisy, but not without purpose. Lively people can be noisy, but with purpose. He is not noisy for the fun of it.

    “Ndimele is a good academic and administrator. He was handled by very good hands. I am not just his lecturer; I single-handedly supervised his Master’s thesis and I started with his PhD, until I left.”

    The obviously-elated wife of 14 years of the Dean of the Faculty of Humanities, Joy, in an interview, said she was grateful to God for keeping her husband alive.

    Joy said: “I feel so proud having him as my husband. He has been a good husband and a good father. The only problem is that he is always in his study. That does not make him a bad husband or a bad father. He is only concentrating on his job. He would come to attend to us, whenever we needed him, but not always.

    “When it is time to be in his study, you dare not see him or disturb him. There were times if I wanted to be funny, I would go to him in his study and tap his back. He would say: ‘You are disturbing me. You have made me to forget something. Can’t you see I am busy?’ I would respond by saying I tapped your back, not your brain and I would leave. He is very hardworking and always concentrates on his works. He is very caring. I wish him another 50 years, by God’s grace.”

    Ndimele’s wife also expressed gratitude to all the persons behind the grand symposium and for the eminent personalities who spared the time to honour the academic giant.

    The Chairperson of the symposium’s Local Organising Committee (LOC), Dr. Christie Omego, who is a former student of Ndimele and an ex-HOD of LCS department, noted that the scholar being celebrated had helped many persons and deserved to be so honoured.

    Omego stated that: “Prof. Ndimele has been our mentor. The symposium is put together by LCS Department and the former students of Prof. Ndimele. He has helped so many qualified people to be employed and admitted in UNIPORT. He has assisted many academic staff to publish and be promoted.

    “Prof. Ndimele is a very kind man. He is a very good person. If he teaches you and you do not understand, then something is wrong. Many of us have benefitted from him. Besides being a very dedicated lecturer, he is a good administrator. Today, our students graduate and are able to get jobs and have many things to offer, from what they have gained from the department.

    “Prof. Ndimele is very caring and has listening ears. If you have any problem, he is willing to help. He is always there for you. If you need advice, he will give you. He also helps us financially. There are people who are handicapped in one way or another, he will sponsor, even without knowing them and without knowing who their parents are. He has been helping people, both staff and students. We, his former students, are happy celebrating the academic icon.

    “Prof. Ndimele is a very sociable man. We call him the people’s Dean and godfather. He is a good man and very wonderful. He is resourceful, diligent and dedicated as ever. Since he took over as Dean, we have witnessed a lot of great things in the Faculty. There is now a new format for computing results of students.”

    The LOC chairperson also stressed that everybody was looking forward to when Ndimele would have higher position, which she said would make him to be appreciated the more, describing him as “an academic colossus of our generation.”

    The honouree (Ndimele), in an interview after the event, stated that his heart was filled with joy and quite happy that his colleagues and students felt he had done something good and were honouring him.

    He pointed out that God had kept him going and was especially grateful to the Almighty for being alive, stating that it is essential for people to know who they are, know themselves early enough and pursue their dreams.

    Ndimele said: “I am happy that people have said that I am doing well. I keep forging ahead. Determination is my driving force. I have no godfather. I am my own godfather. God is my helper.

    “Prof. Kay Williamson was a very hardworking scholar, a rare gift to humanity. She was not a Nigerian, but she lived in Nigeria for over fifty years. The last part of her stay in UNIPORT, I stayed with her in the same house. We lived together for 14 years. To live with a white woman for 14 years is not easy.

    “She (Williamson) called me and said I could not stay in the hostel anymore and asked me to stay with her and pursue my PhD programme and said she saw some goodness and hard-work in me. She offered me her books and her library free of charge. Imagine a white woman giving me her books and her library to use at will. That is why I rose very fast to become a Professor before my colleagues. I miss her dearly.”

     

     

     

  • Rivers crisis: Jonathan turned down Rivers’ elders, says Amaechi

    Rivers crisis: Jonathan turned down Rivers’ elders, says Amaechi

    •‘President shunned Port Harcourt centenary, I shunned Nigeria’s’

    President Goodluck Jonathan turned down the request of Rivers State elders to attend the centenary celebration of Port Harcourt City last November, Governor Chibuike Amaechi alleged yesterday.

    He added that the request of the elders to leave him alone also went unheeded.

    According to the governor, because of the president’s action, he also decided not to be part of the events marking Nigeria’s centenary.

    Amaechi spoke at the 70th birthday celebration of a former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Port Harcourt (UNIPORT), Prof. Nimi Dimkpa Briggs. The event was held on the campus of the university.

    The governor said the President disrespected Rivers elders that visited him at the Presidential Villa to invite him for the Port Harcourt celebration, by failing to turn up in spite of the President having grown up in Port Harcourt.

    According to Amaechi, declining the invitation for Nigeria’s centenary was meant to save the faces of the elders whom he said the president should have honoured by attending the Port Harcourt programme.

    “There are some elders who have gone on a delegation to Mr. President to leave this young man (referring to himself/Amaechi), alone but they each time came back disappointed.

    “People are asking why I did not attend the last centenary celebration?, I said, five prominent Rivers men, left here to go and invite the president, when they approached me that they were going to invite the President, I told them, don’t bother your head, the President won’t come, they said no, not after he had seen them.

    “They are Justice (Adolphus) Karibi Whyte, Prof. Tekena Tamuno, Prof. T. K. Alagoa, Prof. Nimi Briggs and Chief Agbaru; they were very well received by our President and when they came back and told me how they went; I was expectant, everybody at the Federal Government told me the President was going to come, but he didn’t come.

    “So I told myself I was not going to attend the Nigerian centenary because Port Harcourt turned 100, the President refused to come even though he grew up here.

    “I did not attend because of you, I wanted to respect your age, I was bothered that Mr. President should have respected you and honoured that invitation.” Amaechi said.

    Speaking of the celebrator, Amaechi noted that he was not a politician but had vested interest in the development of the state.

    He pledged to name one of the new specialist hospitals being built after Briggs for his good will and contributions to the state.

    Briggs was also Chairman, Rivers State Independent Electoral Commission and current Chairman of the state Economic Advisory Council.

    “We will try to immortalise Prof. there is this 100-bed hospital being constructed at the Rivers State University of Science and Technology (RSUST), we are going to name it after him. This is in honour of his 70th birthday and his contributions to the growth and development of the state.

    “We have paid 100 per cent of the cost, it is not a matter of whether it will work or not.

    “We want to name it Prof. Nimi Briggs Hospital,” he said.

     

  • Rivers crisis: Jonathan turned down Rivers’ elders, says Amaechi

    Rivers crisis: Jonathan turned down Rivers’ elders, says Amaechi

    President Goodluck Jonathan turned down the request of Rivers State elders to attend the centenary celebration of Port Harcourt City last November, Governor Chibuike Amaechi alleged yesterday.

    He added that the request of the elders to leave him alone also went unheeded.

    According to the governor, because of the president’s action, he also decided not to be part of the events marking Nigeria’s centenary.

    Amaechi spoke at the 70th birthday celebration of a former Vice-Chancellor of the University of Port Harcourt (UNIPORT), Prof. Nimi Dimkpa Briggs. The event was held on the campus of the university.

    The governor said the President disrespected Rivers elders that visited him at the Presidential Villa to invite him for the Port Harcourt celebration, by failing to turn up in spite of the President having grown up in Port Harcourt.

    According to Amaechi, declining the invitation for Nigeria’s centenary was meant to save the faces of the elders whom he said the president should have honoured by attending the Port Harcourt programme.

    “There are some elders who have gone on a delegation to Mr. President to leave this young man (referring to himself/Amaechi), alone but they each time came back disappointed.

    “People are asking why I did not attend the last centenary celebration?, I said, five prominent Rivers men, left here to go and invite the president, when they approached me that they were going to invite the President, I told them, don’t bother your head, the President won’t come, they said no, not after he had seen them.

    “They are Justice (Adolphus) Karibi Whyte, Prof. Tekena Tamuno, Prof. T. K. Alagoa, Prof. Nimi Briggs and Chief Agbaru; they were very well received by our President and when they came back and told me how they went; I was expectant, everybody at the Federal Government told me the President was going to come, but he didn’t come.

    “So I told myself I was not going to attend the Nigerian centenary because Port Harcourt turned 100, the President refused to come even though he grew up here.

    “I did not attend because of you, I wanted to respect your age, I was bothered that Mr. President should have respected you and honoured that invitation.” Amaechi said.

    Speaking of the celebrator, Amaechi noted that he was not a politician but had vested interest in the development of the state.

    He pledged to name one of the new specialist hospitals being built after Briggs for his good will and contributions to the state.

    Briggs was also Chairman, Rivers State Independent Electoral Commission and current Chairman of the state Economic Advisory Council.

    “We will try to immortalise Prof. there is this 100-bed hospital being constructed at the Rivers State University of Science and Technology (RSUST), we are going to name it after him. This is in honour of his 70th birthday and his contributions to the growth and development of the state.

    “We have paid 100 per cent of the cost, it is not a matter of whether it will work or not.

    “We want to name it Prof. Nimi Briggs Hospital,” he said.