Editorial
FG, Niger Delta And Oil Thieves
In Nigeria’s oil rich Niger Delta the problem of illegal oil bunkering has become an issue too heavy to ignore. It may not be strange but its frequency and sophistication recently have become worrisome.
Last week the Joint Military Task Force (JTF) arrested 21 Ghanaians and five Nigerians for illegal bunkering in Rivers State. The security men also recovered 250,000 tonnes of crude oil from their impounded vessels. Also another 1.3 million barrels of stolen crude was recently discovered by security agencies.
Unfortunately, these discoveries may be mere tips of the iceberg considering the overwhelming pillage of the nation’s oil resources in the Niger Delta. Statistics coming from the industry as losses in recent times cannot be accepted.
Records have it that for over 50 years of oil exploration and exploitation in the Niger Delta, the menace of oil thieves and vandals have not been as high and persistent as it is today. During the pre-amnesty period few years ago, criminals infiltrated the ranks of genuine militants to feast on oil installations.
So brazen in style, not even the presence of security agents could check the trend. In fact, allegations were rife that there was connivance between security men and the crude oil thieves, which necessitated intermittent swapping of security teams in the region.
Even so, persistent attacks on the oil industry resulted in the nose-diving of the nation’s economy. Recent reports reveal that unabated crude oil theft, estimated at 150,000 barrels daily, denies Nigeria a whopping $6 billion a year. Meanwhile, there are reports that the nation’s oil export was on the decline.
According to the coordinating Minister for the economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, citing Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC’s) figures, Nigeria loses 17 per cent crude oil production to thieves which translates to one-fifth of the nation’s revenue target.
While the Niger Delta hosts an army of unemployed youth, people of the region now contend with incessant oil spills arising from both negligence of the multinationals and accidental consequences of illegal bunkering. Even foreigners join in the fray.
The pathetic reality is environmental degradation, pollution, fire, sudden death, insecurity and un-imaginable poverty. With the increasing number of local refineries, the situation has further degenerated as many people die from kerosene explosion, and damage to vehicles.
We are of the opinion that unless oil robbery was confronted head-on Nigeria may never get the true benefit of her oil and gas industry. This cannot be taken lightly, especially when the country depends on oil as a major earner.
However, the recent directive by President Goodluck Jonathan that security be beefed up in the region to safeguard oil facilities is a step in the right direction. Even more encouraging is the fact that some state governors have elected to offer additional security through provision of special taskforces against illegal bunkering, crude theft and pipeline vandalism.
It is important that this matter be handled with all seriousness to avoid the resurgence of full scale militancy in the region again. Already, money from the crime has raised the spate of criminal unrest in parts of the region in ways that must stop.
So, when we call for an end to the trend, we mean total stop. The authorities should not only clamp-down on the local boys and continue to turn blind eyes to some former military officers and politicians from other parts of the country who steal crude with the active connivance of some people in authority, this theft must be stopped.
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