The explosion by Niger
Delta militant, they claim, has caused extensive damage to all the houses in
the village besides ruining their farmlands and other means of livelihood, only
for the company, working for the state-owned oil company Nigerian National
Petroleum
Corporation, NNPC, which constructed the pipeline, to simply evacuate
its equipment after the incident and leave.
Women of Obotim Nsit, a
community in Nsit Ibom Local Government Area, Akwa Ibom State, have vowed to
protest nude to summon the wrath of the gods against the federal government and
a gas company whose pipeline was blown up in the community by the Niger Delta
Avengers on Sunday, July 24, 2016 for abandoning them to their fate after the
destructive incident.
Head of the host community,
where NNPC gas pipeline control valve is located, Eteidung Okon Aaron Ukpong,
told journalists that the explosion destroyed nearly 2000 houses in the
community.
Besides shattering the
villagers’ means of livelihood, he said the people have become susceptible to
untold danger and insecurity, as their homes now stand on shaky foundations
with the roofing sheets weakened by harmful chemical effects of the gas
emissions.
Mrs. Dorothy Nkanta, women
leader of the community, who corroborated the claims of the village head, was
aghast at the alleged lack of concern of their plight showed by government and
Seven Energy Gas Company before and after the explosion.
While stressing that the
explosion destroyed their cassava farms, oil palm and other economic trees,
Nkanta lamented that “unfortunately, Seven Energy came and evacuated their
equipment from the site not minding the losses the community have recorded.
“That means that they do
not care about the disaster they have brought to us after taking our land to
lay their pipeline and locate their control valve. They are not bothered about
the health hazards and general calamity the emissions from their pipeline have
brought to our land.
“What have they said is our
offence for giving our land out for them to do business? Is this the kind of
reward we should receive from government and the gas company for the good thing
we did for them?”
She threatened that the women
would protest naked if they nothing is done about their plight.
“But I want to warn that
they should not provoke us to go naked on the streets for them else, it will
not be well with them,” she said.
“We need compensation for
the losses we have recorded as a result of that gas pipeline explosion and for
the degradation of our land since that gas pipeline control valve was installed
at the Asang Community High School, else, we will go naked on the streets to
provoke the gods of our land to action against these people, who have suddenly
turned our enemies.”
The village head, Ukpong,
added that the problem started in 2008, stressing that “the people’s worry is
that while they were all along trying to contend with the health hazards they
were subjected to by the chemical emissions from the gas pipeline since it was
installed in 2008, the explosion of July 24, 2016 has come to worsen things for
them by completely destroying their means of livelihood and shelter, even as
the state and federal governments and Seven Energy Gas Company managing the
pipeline have showed no concern for the plight of the people.”
Before the explosion, he
said since 2008 when the company laid the pipeline, the people no longer record
good yields from their farm lands due to harmful chemical discharges from the
pipelines into the soil.
He confirmed that Seven
Energy Gas Company, the outfit in-charge of the gas pipeline for the NNPC,
indeed, came to evacuate its equipment after the explosion not minding the
havoc the explosion had caused the community in terms of devastation of
farmlands, lives and people’s houses.
“We thought initially that
the laying of the gas pipeline control valve at Asang was a blessing, only for
it to become a curse to the community.
“Since 2008 that the gas pipeline
control valve was located at Asang Community High School, Obotim Nsit, our
people started having health challenges due to harmful chemical emissions from
the pipeline just as our sources of drinking water got destroyed.
“Besides, our farmlands have
become degraded and no longer record good yields as a result of harmful
chemical spills on the land. Even the roofs on our houses no longer last beyond
one year because of leakages caused by harmful effect of chemicals from the gas
pipeline.
“And now, the explosion,
which occurred on July 24, 2016, has come to cause complete destruction of our
farms, our houses and investments and the attitude of government towards us
after we recorded the magnitude of losses, is an indication that the location
of the gas pipeline control valve and the gas pipeline passing through our
community generally, is a curse rather than a blessing”, the Eteidung insisted.
He, therefore, urged both
the state and federal governments to send their agencies to assess the
magnitude of distress the pipeline explosion has brought to the people of the
community with a view to compensating them.
In response to an earlier
inquiry on the complaints by communities about the effects of their attacks on
the environment, spokesperson of the militant group, Brig Gen Mudoch Agbinibo,
empathized with the people, but said it was an unavoidable corollary they would
have to bear in the spirit of the struggle to liberate them, Vanguard reports.
face your militant husbands to stop destruction
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