Amanyanabo of Twon Brass
Bayelsa State, King Alfred Diete-Spiff, presented the requests to President
Muhammadu Buhari at a meeting the leaders had with him at the Presidential
Villa, Abuja.
The Stakeholders from the
Niger Delta under the aegis of the Pan Niger Delta Forum on Tuesday attributed
the renewed militancy in the region to what they called alienation and lack of
meaningful development of the region.
They said they had
consulted widely and had come up with 16 points that could help the Federal
Government achieve its “quick wins initiative.”
The meeting held behind
closed doors had five state governors, traditional rulers and other
stakeholders from the region in attendance.
According to a 10-page document
presented to the President, the Niger Delta leaders called for “inclusive
participation in oil industry and ownership of oil blocs.”
They asked for what they
called Host Community Content within the Nigerian Content framework across the
entire enterprise chain of the petroleum and maritime sectors.
“The sense of alienation of
Niger Delta indigenes from the resources of their land will continue until
there are affirmative actions that guarantee the involvement of these
communities in the ownership and participation in the oil and gas industry.
“We therefore urge the
Federal Government to enunciate policies and actions that will address the lack
of participation as well as imbalance in the ownership of oil and gas assets,”
the document read.
Diete-Spiff also called for
the awards of pipeline protection contracts to communities and not individuals.
In doing that, he said
communities would begin to see the pipelines as belonging to them and they
would protect them adequately.
He said, “The incessant
breaching and vandalisation of pipelines and oil theft have taken direct tolls
on oil production and supplies with corresponding adverse effects on the
economy of our country.
“Pipeline vandalism also
damages the environment, health and economic activity of inhabitants of
affected areas, as well as complicates environmental cleanup efforts.
“It is therefore our view
that an urgent review be done to pipeline surveillance contracts to give the
responsibility to communities rather than individuals in a manner that ties
some benefits to their responsibility.
“Communities would then see
their responsibility over the pipelines as protection of what belongs to them.”
The stakeholders also
called for the relocation of administrative and operational headquarters of
International Oil Companies to the region.
The stakeholders also
called for the de-militarisation of communities in the region.
“The increased deployment
of military personnel into the Niger Delta has resulted in rise in cases of
invasion of communities, displacement of persons, harassment and other forms of
abuse of human rights. This has continued to escalate tension and insecurity in
the region. We urge that this trend be reversed,” it added.
They added that the fallout
of the ceding of Bakassi to Cameroon had continued to threaten the security of
the southern part of the region.
They said the unresolved
issues arising from the Green Tree Agreement continued to create tension and
plaque the region.
The stakeholders observed
that there was lack of a well-coordinated transparent blueprint for the
development and resettlement of the displaced populations.
“The host communities face
huge abuses and are unable to re-establish their respective means of
livelihood.
“We therefore recommend a
comprehensive resettlement plan including development for the host communities
and displaced populations to reduce the risk of making them into a stateless
people,” they added.
While commending Buhari for
the commencement of the clean-up of Ogoniland as recommended by the United
Nations Environmental Programme, they also urged the Federal Government to
speed up the exercise.
They stressed the urgent
need to restructure and increase the funding of the Niger Delta Development
Commission in order to refocus it as a truly intervention agency.
They also called for
adequate funding and strengthening of the Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs.
On fiscal federalism, they
said, “The clamour for fiscal federalism has continued to be re-echoed by
different sections of the country. The people of Niger Delta region support
this call and urge that the Federal Government should regard this matter
expeditiously.”
Everybody want oil and contract not just Niger-Delta
ReplyDeleteOndo/Ekiti like too no bi only NigerD dey Naija
ReplyDelete