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Why FG Didn’t Resettle Bakassi Returnees – NEMA
After six years of displacement of Nigerians from the Bakassi Peninsula, it is now known that the Federal Government could not resettle the Bakassi returnees because of the inflationary number of persons to be resettled that rose from 36,000 to three million.
The South-South zonal co-ordinator of Nigerian Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), Mr Emenike Umesi who made this known in an interview with journalists in Port Harcourt Wednesday, said government finds it difficult to identify and resettle the genuine Bakassi returnees because of this development.
Umesi said that an all-embrassing approach was being worked out for the total rehabilitation of the returnees, noting that the genuine Bakassi returnees were fishermen and women. He said government was doing everything possible to re-integrate the returnees to the society to continue their traditional trade and occupation.
According to him, the agency recorded about 20 disaster cases in the South South zone and had concluded plans to supply new measures in risk reduction within the zone this year.
The NEMA zonal co-ordinator who was reviewing the agency’s activities of 2010 said the agency would continue its intervention/awareness programmes and would respond adequately to disaster areas.
He noted that apart from intervention programmes, the agency would continue its advocacy meetings across the states in the zone this year, describing 2011 as eventful for the South-South zone.
Umesi said “the agency responded to about 20 disaster cases in the zone, listing such cases as communal crisis, flood and seasonal disasters such as fire.
He explained that the agency would in 2011 continue to assist victims of crises with relief materials to include well as rehabilitate them.
He said NEMA planned to embark on post-disaster scheme for Boja community in Cross River State that was ravaged by communal clash. Already, he said the agency had started rehabilitation of victims of the Ayakrouo crisis in Burutu local government area of Delta state.
On solution to the Bakassi returnees, he said, “we are meeting with most of them on how to assist them. The genuine Bakassi refugees are fishermen and we are working to getting them tools to assist their trade.”
He advised the people to embrace peace and dialogue at all times to avoid communal crisis, even as he warned against careless handling of fire.