*I agonise over these destructions *Says economy is on its knees
*How Kachikwu secured interim truce *No love lost relationship among militants
Obviously perturbed by the
activities of the Niger Delta Militants, NDA, President Muhammadu Buhari
last night went spiritual, pleading with them in God’s name to have a
change of heart over their destruction of oil and gas installations in
the region.
The president who stated that there were many factions of the Niger
Delta Militants also said that the groups were armed with sophisticated
weapons and that the economy was on its knees following the bombing of
gas pipelines.
He also pleaded with friends and associates of the militants to reach
out to them for, stressing that
Nigerians do not have any other country
to call their own other than Nigeria.
The president spoke at the breaking-of-fast dinner with leaders and
chieftains of his political party, the All Progressives Congress (APC)
at the Presidential Villa, Abuja. He said: “I honestly don’t know how
many factions of the militants there are in the Niger Delta compared to
the north east where you have only the Boko Haram “The technology being
deployed by the militants to destroy oil installations is high tech, the
way they can go on high sea and international waters and target oil
installations is a national problem. It is affecting development.
“No insurance company will want to insure installations that will end
up being blown up and no banks will want to finance such
installations. “Those of you who have friends among the leadership or
even the militants themselves should plead with them in the name of God
Almighty to take it easy.
“We need to stablise to create employment, we need to stabilise the
economy, I agonise over these things. We are in a very difficult time,
so we have to organise ourselves. Anybody that says he has any other
country than Nigeria should go out and see.”
Earlier, the national chairman of the APC, Chief John Oyegun
expressed satisfaction with the actions of the government so far, saying
that Nigeria needed a dogged leader like the president. “Any meaningful
development requires strong and determined leader. Things must change.
Those things don’t come easily. Nigeria is clearly a difficult nation to
govern. “Corruption is fighting back and change does not come easily.
The way we do things must change. Our prayer is for God to give you the
courage, wisdom and strength to set the new standard for the country”,
he said.
Apart from Oyegun, other party leaders who attended the event
included former Vice-President Atiku Abubakar; a former Speaker of the
House of Representatives, Alhaji Ghali Naaba; the party’s Deputy
National Chairman (South), Segun Oni; former Bayelsa State Governor,
Timipre Sylva; Tony Momoh and Senator Osita Ozinaso. Also present were
the Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Babachir David Lawal
and former Minister of Labour, Hassan Lawal.
Dialogue, ceasefire: Buhari baffles militants
Meanwhile, President Buhari was said to have kept the Niger Delta
Avengers, NDA, and other militant groups in the Niger Delta region in
suspense since he returned from his short vacation in London, last
Sunday. Findings by Saturday Vanguard showed that the militants, who
agreed to an interim ceasefire brokered by the Minister of State for
Petroleum, Dr. Ibe Kachiwu, and his top secret negotiators, were
confused about the game plan of President Buhari.
The two-week ceasefire proclaimed by the Federal Government on June 6
expired June 21, two days after Buhari returned from his vacation and
militants expected government to officially announce an extension, but
it has kept mute on the matter six days after the
expiration. Correspondingly, the Federal Government has not come out
with a framework for an all-embracing dialogue with stakeholders and
militants, a development that has further confounded the situation.
The scrapping of the Joint Task Force, JTF, in the Niger Delta, as
part of efforts to ensure better protection of pipelines in the region
and tackle insecurity and its replacement with ‘Operation Delta Safe’,
as well as planned redeployment of police officers in the region for
their failure to stop bombing of oil installations, have also sent
tongues wagging.
Militants, who bowed to Kachikwu’s logic, are suspecting that they
may have been hoodwinked, while those opposed to their antics want
Buhari to order the military to battle them to submission as was done to
Boko Haram. .
NDA re-organizes
NDA, which found itself in a dilemma over the new tactics employed by
government had come out to distance itself from a purported ceasefire
agreement with government, declaring that it would resume hostilities
any time the state of affairs becomes intolerable. Its spokesperson,
self-styled Brig Gen Mudoch Agbinibo, said, on June 21, day the two-week
ceasefire ran out: “The NDA High Command never remembers having any
agreement on ceasefire with the Nigeria Government.”
Many had rumored that Dr Kachikwu met with representatives of NDA at
Government House, Asaba, when he visited the state on June 15, but the
militant group clarified that it sent no representative to the
meeting. In its reaction 48 hours later, the group said: “We condemn in
its entirety the continuous linking of the Niger Delta Avengers to any
meeting in Delta State Government in Asaba with Minister of State for
Petroleum Resources.”
It added: “ We tell the whole listening world that the Niger Delta
Avengers will not be part of any dialogue deal that will not only bring
about the ‘peace of our time’ but ‘peace with honour’.” The next day,
June 18, following the signals emanating from official quarters, the
group re-echoed: “We once again, restate that we are not going to be
part of any dialogue and peace that will achieve only ‘the peace of our
time.’ What the NDA wants is ‘peace with honour,’ which will enter the
genuine framework in setting up the short, medium and long term action
plan to the restoration of the essence of quality human life in the
Niger Delta.”
Brewing fury
Another militant group, the Ultimate Warriors of the Niger-Delta,
which gave a clear notice of the militants’ frustration with Buhari’s
approach, in a statement, by one of its coordinators, Sibiri Taiowoh,
June 21, said: “Two weeks of ceasefire had gone without any tangible
effort by the government. No roundtable dialogue has kick started;
instead, government officials are quarrelling over critical issue of
national importance.” Pointing that its patience was running out, the
group said:
“The Ultimate Warriors of the Niger Delta would only be part of a
dialogue process that is approached with almost transparency and
sincerity. These we have not seen in the past week of government
ceasefire, which we wholeheartedly embraced.”
On former militant leader, Government Ekpemupolo, alias Tompolo, and
calls to defreeze his bank accounts, the militant group asserted: “Count
us out of any claims of de-freezing of corrupt politicians’ account or
stopping prosecution of some set of people under investigation. It is
none of our business, but serve justice honestly to all men, selective
injustice will be resisted vehemently.”
The group, which claimed to have over 10,000 agitators in its fold
and affiliation with a foreign militia, said it was waiting for the next
line of action to strike.
We are all Avengers
It warned: “So if you (Buhari) think that Avengers and its affiliate
groups are Ijaws, you are being deceived. We are all Avengers, including
some of your soldiers and security agents; all those you oppress,
deprive and exploit in the Niger Delta region are the Avengers.”
“We are of several units in the region and we have commanders,
willing soldiers across the region, who are waiting for the next line of
action to strike. Our mission is to drive government attention to act
fast because dialogue-upon- dialogue has failed us. We will ruin the
Nigerian oil wealth until Nigeria is restructured to reflect a true
government of the people,” it said.
The group declared: “The Ultimate Warriors of the Niger Delta is
asking for devolution of powers so that the geopolitical zones can
become autonomous and manage the resources within their territories.
This is the kind of dialogue that we want for lasting peace to reign.”
“If you make the peaceful change that we seek impossible, we will make
you understand that violent change is inevitable. If you (Buhari) like
call all the Tompolos of this world, call all the Boyloafs, MEND and
other ex-militants leaders in your payroll together for dialogue, it
will not stop us from grounding oil and gas operations in the Niger
Delta.
“These people have expired, but we would listen to them and the
stakeholders anyway when we begin to see concrete action on the part of
the federal government after a tripartite meeting of all agitating
groups, stakeholders, the IOCs, foreign mediators, and the federal
government. “But when the chips are down, and you make the peaceful
change that we seek impossible, all those in your payroll as
ex-militants, our brothers abroad, who have acquired expertise in
various fields and are very much with us now, would join forces to make
the violent change possible,” it said.
Sea Commandos threaten to boycott dialogue
On its part, Niger Delta Sea Commandos, NDSC, threatened to shun what
it described as government’s “kangaroo” peace talks over alleged breach
of the ceasefire by the military. It said in a statement by so-called
Major Osama: “We gave conditions for foreign participation for whatever
dialogue the government is proposing, but until now, nothing has been
done about it. We are watching situation with our two eyes open.”
“What is playing out now is political jamboree, a situation where the
government is looking for an easy way to resolve the current upsurge.
The government is looking for an avenue to induce some of us and divide
the rank of the militants. “Besides, the government is interested on how
to identify the masked up faces of militants as to fight back. That
will be dangerous and there is no easy way out to Niger Delta demands,
if they go that way, such short-cuts will be a waste of time and
energy,” it said.
IPDI flares up
Meanwhile, Ijaw People Development Initiative, IPDI, a
non-governmental organization in the region, weekend, said. “The
directive to transfer police officers currently serving in Niger Delta
region to the north in an exchange of those police officers in the north
to Niger Delta is an attempt by President Muhammandu Buhari not to turn
Nigeria to his personal estate.”
National president of IPDI, Comrade Austin Ozobo and spokesperson,
Daniel Eziekel, in a statement, asserted: “It is wrong for Buhari to
accuse police officers in Niger Delta of incompetency because they could
not end bombing of oil installations by the Niger Delta Avengers. If
that is the case, Buhari should explain to the world why the so-called
competent police officer in the north has not ended Boko Haram’s massive
attacks and incessant killing of innocent people in the north.”
“Buhari should note that transferring lazy police officers of the
south to the north will not make any difference, he should stop
deceiving the public, we are aware of his hidden agenda of deploying
northern police to the Niger Delta region “How can you deploy police
officers who cannot fight Niger Delta Avengers to fight heavily equipped
Boko Haram insurgents in the north? We know the deployment is for a
special reason. They want to relegate power to the military in the name
of deceiving the public as coup. They do not want power to be shift to
the Yoruba because of Buhari’s health. The deployment is to keep people
silent and kill anybody that will raise alarm over such evil agenda,”
IPDI claimed.
Groups disagree on dialogue with militants
Some Niger Delta groups, however, urged President Buhari to utilize
the opportunity of the break in fighting achieved by Dr Kachikwu and his
team to consolidate on peace in the region, saying that using
diversionary tactics at this period could worsen the situation, but the
Niger Delta Patriotic Front, NDPF, vehemently differed with the
suggestion.
NDPF’s Director of Information, Mr. Joel Tamarakepreye, said:
“Nigerians should not be deceived as the cowardly NDA does not have the
capacity to sustain their current madness, hence its insistence in
forcing down the throat of Nigerians the reality of an on-going
negotiation, which conclusion is a so- called political solution.”
It said the agenda was to arm twist government to direct the Attorney
General of the Federation to “discontinue the criminal trial of Tompolo
and his band of ex-NIMASA executives and also Colonel Dasuki.” “Is it
not laughable and a clear pointer to the political agenda of the
cowardly NDA that the unconditional release of Colonel Dasuki is a major
line item in their demands? What relationship does the trial of Colonel
Dasuki has on the Niger Delta demands for a fair deal from Nigeria?
No consequential negotiation so far
“The Niger Delta Patriotic Front knows that currently there are no
meaningful negotiations going on with any group in the Niger Delta,
other than the usual discussions and lamentations that the people have
for many years been engaging themselves, the Nation and the world for
solutions to their economic and environmental challenges,” Tamarakepreye
asserted.
He added: “The cowardly NDA and their cowardly sponsor should be men
enough to face the reality of the outcome of their killings of Nigerian
Army personnel and destruction of oil and gas infrastructure and leave
General Boyloaf, Ayiri and Timipre Sylva out of their meaningless and
non-existing negotiations.”
…Cautions S-East on Avengers
The group urged South Easterners not to be deceived by the entreaties
of Niger Delta Avengers, saying: “They should ask themselves how many
Easterners benefited from contracts when they held sway there.” “The
cowardly NDA seek to create a larger platform to unify the Niger Delta
and South East into a single political agenda. Our South East brothers
should know that while there are similarities between our aspirations,
we are competing rivals in the Nigerian market place, and these men that
seek to involve them are not honourable and the Niger Delta region will
not reward them nor return the favour of supporting criminals.
“The Niger Delta Patriotic Front, therefore, calls on all those who
seek to use and divert the Niger Delta struggle to cover up the thieving
and looting leveled against them individually and the corporate
entities in which they have substantial interests to desist from doing
so,” it said.
Kachikwu transitory armistice
No matter how bad anyone wants to paint the efforts of the Minister
of State for Petroleum, one thing is clear; he had through both
conventional and unconventional means, got the militants, including the
dreaded Avengers to stop the bombing of oil and gas installations in the
region. Before he pulled the feat, blowing up of oil facilities was a
daily affair by Avengers and other nascent groups. The last was on June
15 in Akwa Ibom state and it was only a reprisal. Soldiers had allegedly
in breach of the now expired two-week ceasefire, invaded Tebujoh
community in Warri South-West local government area on June 14.
Kachikwu, who was holding preliminary talks with stakeholders in the
region, was in Delta state when the Avengers struck in Akwa-Ibom. The
Delta meeting with some leaders of Gbaramatu Kingdom, represented by
Chief Godspower Gbenekama and Chief Daniel Ekpebide, Chief Ayiri Emami
for the Itsekiri ethnic nationality and Okerenkoko leader, Chief Michael
Johnny, was a revelation for the minister.
Governor Ifeanyi Okowa, Secretary to the State Government, SSG, Mr.
Festus Agas, chairman of the Delta Waterways and Land Security
Committee, Chief Boro Opudu, Director General, Security Matters to
Governor Okowa, Mr. David Tonwe, Commissioner, Oil and Gas, Mr. Mofe
Pirah, and other government officials were at the peace meeting.
Kachikwu got a rare insight into the problems while in Delta since
the state, despite strident denials by the Avengers, is clearly the
centre of operations of the current militancy. Tension rose at the
meeting, but in all, they agreed on peace to reign and concerted efforts
to reach out to the Avengers and other militant groups to stop the
bombings.
Beyond Govt House, Asaba meeting
A source told Saturday Vanguard that Kachikwu did not strike the deal
for break in hostilities in Government House, Asaba, but his presence
in the state, visit to Nigerian Maritime University, NMU permanent and
temporal sites at Okerenkoko and Kurutie; his frank statements on the
situation on ground sealed the temporal ceasefire. His Uyo outing, where
he had a public spat with his colleague, Minister of Transportation, Rt
Hon Rotimi Amaechi, only foreshadowed the pact.
According to our source: “The truth is that Kachikwu has a team of
knowledgeable negotiators working with him and days before he embarked
on his trouble-shooting mission to the region, last week, his group was
in discussion with some contact persons to the Avengers. Nobody owned up
to be an Avenger in the various discussions, but they had link that
could be used.”
“That connection was what was used to get to them to suspend their
attacks for dialogue with government because that is the only way their
demands could be addressed. Dialogue does not mean that government has
accepted their demands, but it is an avenue to talk and reach a
compromise,” the source added.
He asserted:”It was through this unconventional method that
government negotiators got in touch with Tompolo. Yes, they reached
Tompolo, so you can see that they did a lot of behind the scene work.
Tompolo told them that he was not behind Niger Delta Avengers and
assured that he was ready to assist government to fish out the
perpetrators if only to clear his name.”
“The task of getting them to obey a temporal ceasefire was not an
easy one and it was because Dr. Kachikwu gave all the support, but I can
tell you that the militants want President Muhmmadu Buhari to
personally lead the negotiation and show greater diplomacy for the
cessation of hostilities not to snap,” he added.
Source: Vanguard
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