Opinion
Way Out Of Niger Delta Crisis
The Niger Delta in the South-South geo-political region of Nigeria has become increasingly associated with menace of volatility and insecurity, commonly known as the “Niger Delta Crisis”. Over the years, many studies have been carried out as much as many interpretations and recommendations, yet the crisis has continued to linger if not exacerbated. This scenario has become worsened by the growing consciousness among the indigenous population who have gone beyond demands for infrastructural development are now claiming ownership of the oil properly in the area and thus demanding control of it.
In recent time, the crisis has assumed some criminal dimensions such as kidnapping of children, foreigners, oil workers etc.
It is unfortunate that inspite of the total condemnation of these criminal acts both by the citizenry and the government, armed group operating under various names such as Egbesu Boys, Movement for the Emancipation of Niger Delta (MEND) Ijaw Youths Vanguard (IYV) Niger Delta Youth Coalition (NDYC) and Niger Delta People Volunteer Force have thrown the entire region into state of anarchy. This indeed has become one of the major challenges facing the Nigerian State. Infact, the chairman, Senate Committee on the Niger Delta and Conflict Resolution, Senator David Brigidi in the Punch Newspapers of October 17, 2007 claimed, that Nigeria lost an estimated 58.3 billion between 1998 and 2007 to Niger Delta crisis.
There is no gainsaying that life in the Niger Delta has become a concrete reflection of the Hobbessian state of nature characterised by fear. As Thomas Hobbes hypothesised about England in his days, every Niger Delta man or woman now lives with a twin brother, himself and fear.
The question is how do we solve this age long crisis in the Niger Delta? How do we rebrand the image of this oil rich region and make it a place of opportunities?
Research has shown that peace in the Niger Delta depends on collaboration among the Nigerian government, the oil companies and the host communities. The government should concede to an ideal federal constitution based on division of jurisdiction among the component units. This will resolve the issue of resource control and give the people the opportunity to appropriately channel the course of their development and destiny.
Meanwhile, the state should discontinue summoning the meetings of Niger Delta stakeholders, but should rather device means of relating directly with the alienated and dispossessed class who form the bulk of the militants and other social threats. Most of the said stakeholders and community elites are mere opportunists who see the crisis situation as an opportunity for personal aggrandizement.
Unemployment is another important agent that sustains and increases the crisis in the Niger Delta. The federal and state governments should embark on genuine massive employment of youths and check ghost worker syndrome. If this seems impossible, unemployed youths should be provided a special bursary scheme to sustain their livelihood, while they keep looking for permanent employment. It is when these and other such positive social rehabilitation and empowerment schemes are put in place that the government can have the justification to adopt violence to deal with the Niger Delta crisis.
The oil companies on their part, should operate with the standard obtainable in their own countries by being environment and community development-friendly. The recent compensation paid to the families of Ken Saro Wiwa and others by Shell Petroleum Development Company is a step in a right direction.
On the part of the indigenous population, we need to give peace a chance now that the state and federal governments are beginning to show greater concern. It is indeed a truism that continued violence can never allow government development programmes to kick off nor to endure. The recent NDDC master plan and the newly created Niger Delta Ministry should be given adequate opportunity to demonstrate government plans for the Niger Delta communities. There is no doubt that response to these options will indeed contain the Niger Delta Crisis. And the earlier this is done, the better for all f us.
Uranta is a political scientist resident in Port Harcourt.
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