– Niger Delta monarchs have presented 6 must-do items to the federal government that would restore peace to the region– The monarchs meet with government officials on how to find a lasting solution to the problems in the Niger Delta region– Kachikwu, minister of state and petroleum resources, says huge amount of funds had been deposited in the Niger Delta in the past decade– He wonders why the region had not been developedTraditional rulers and stakeholders from the Niger Delta states on Thursday, August 25, presented six must-do items to the federal government that wouldrestore peace to the region, The Punch reports.In a joint text that was signed by the monarchs and read at the headquarters of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation in Abuja by the Bolowei of Gbaramatu Kingdom, Chief Wellington Okirika, the traditional rulers listed outthe six items which the federal government should do in order to build confidence and stop the destruction of the country’s oil assets by militants in the region.Traditional rulers from Niger Delta region have presented 6 must-do items tothe federal government that would restore peace to the region.Their terms come on the heels of ceasefire pronouncement by the Niger DeltaAvengers and many other militant groups in the region on August 21, 2016.They said:“Having acceded to the call for a ceasefire by the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Dr. Ibe Kachikwu, on August 4, 2016, the buck has therefore now been passed to the table of the Federal Government as driven by the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources – a representative of the Federal Government.“For the purposes of building confidence in the system, we wish to state here that as a matter of urgency the Federal Government should appoint/constitute a Federal Government dialogue team; release the 10 innocent schoolchildren arrested by the Nigerian Army on the 28th of May, 2016 in Oporoza and others in detention on trumped up charges.“Return the Golden Sword, being the symbol of authority in the Gbaramatu traditional institution; return the three traditional council speed boats in custody of the Nigerian Army; cessation of hostilities perpetrated by the military in the Niger Delta region; and equally important, the Federal Government should make a categorical statement about the opening of the Maritime University, Okerenkoko, Delta State for academic activities in the 2016/2017 session.”Responding to the demands of the traditional rulers, Dr Ibe Kachikwu, minister of state and petroleum resources, thanked the monarchs for coming to the headquarters of the NNPC and the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources to meet with government officials on how to find a lasting solutionto the problems in the Niger Delta region.However he stated that it was sad to note that despite the ceasefire agreement, some militants still went ahead to blow up oil installations in Nembe Creek.The minister said:“The ceasefire announcement by the NDA is very key. But what is more important is that when we say we will have a ceasefire, that ceasefire first and foremost must hold. I was reminded that on Monday, which is a day after the announcement, we had an attack on Nembe Creek and we lost another 150,000 barrels and some gas in the Agip facilities.“So, there are still some splinter elements who despite the ceasefire, continued to attack the efficacy of that ceasefire. And it is the inability to stay steadfast on what had been resolved that usually brings in what you call the military intervention, because the reality is that no matter what we say, there is a limit to which the Federal Government will sit back and just see its assetsbeing attacked while oil production continues to go down.”Kachikwu also stated that huge amount of funds had been deposited in the Niger Delta in the past decade, but wondered why the region had not been developed.He said: “In the course of all these analysis over the last few months, if you look at the amount of money that has been put into the Niger Delta over the last 10 years, it is over $40bn. This has come from derivation, oil companies’ investments, etc, and it is over $40bn. But as I go to the creeks, I see no singleinfrastructure that you can point to and say this is the result of this investment.”The Niger Delta Avengers (NDA)on Sunday, August 21, declared a ceasefirewhile indicating its readiness for negotiation with the federal government.The group accused of attacking oil installations in the Niger Delta region of the country, said in a statement it trusts the outcome of a negotiation team being planned by Ijaw leader, Chief Edwin Clark, and other elders of the region.With this ceasefire, the group allegedly sponsored by some notable Nigerianswho have also come out to deny the claims, may also reconsider its plan to declare independence from Nigeria on October 1.
No comments:
Post a Comment