News
Bloated Ex-Militants’ List Threatens Amnesty
Fears over the sustenance of the Amnesty Programme for Niger
Delta ex-combatants/youths are growing higher by the day unless the state
governments, Joint Task Force teams as well as the SSS and police with the LG
administrations in Niger Delta finetune their strategies to rid the scheme of
fake persons.
The Amnesty programme office has also canvassed a special
training for the ex-agitators on special skills of securing oil and gas
facilities with a view to engaging the youths after graduation into a Pipeline
Security Contract to curbing vandalisation and theft in the Niger Delta region.
These are emerging from the speech of the Special Adviser to
the President on Amnesty programme, Hon Kingsley Kuku while defending the 2013
budget of the programme in a meeting with the Senate Committee on Niger Delta
in the National Assembly, Abuja
Hon Kuku in a heart to heart talk with the senators said
that even with the new enrollment of about 3,642 ex-militants in its batch 3,
overwhelming number of acclaimed ex-militants were continually pushing their
way to the programme, by creating pockets of violence and calling for
recognition and attention.
According to the Special Adviser, the state governments and
the local administrations had also failed to stand on their feet to ensure that
this programme outlives its mission by using its offices to bar fake candidates
from hijacking the system.
He also pointed out that if the security agencies, JTF, SSS
and police in the states had taken their intelligence work seriously , the
issue of fake claimants would hardly arise.
Kuku made it clear that a major crisis faces the programme
if thousands of youths keep springing up every now and then to claim right of
enlisting into the training. This he said translates to huge extra funding and
more security expenditures to curb the disturbances by the restive youths.
The SA expressed the fear that such huge unexpected funding
could easily ‘destroy’ the lofty ideas and mission of the ‘presidential amnesty
programme.’
Responding to questions from the senators on how the
programme seek to ensure that the ex-agitators did not go back to the creeks
after the trainings, Kuku said the programme was not only training them but
also evolving schemes which could engage them meaningfully.
The Presidential Adviser also noted that the programme was
planning to train the ex-militants on security to enable them secure oil and
gas facilities.
This he said would give the youths who know their environs
more to secure the pipelines and save NNPC and the multinational companies,
huge funds expended on security which had yielded little results.
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