Politics

Rep Faults Siting Of NLNG’s Ship Yard In Lagos

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Leader of the Rivers State House of Assembly, Hon. Martin Amaewhule (right), presenting to the House an Amendment Law on Kidnapping in Rivers State at the sitting of the House in Port Harcourt, recently.
Photo: Chris Monyanaga

The member representing
Bonny/Degema Federal Constituency in the House of Representatives, Hon. Randolph Iwo Oruene Brown, has criticised the concluded plans by the Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas Limited to site its proposed ship yard building in Lagos State rather than site it at the key operational base in Bonny Island in Rivers State.
Hon Brown who stated this through his political pressure group, “Advocacy 2015’’, expressed disappointment over the planned relocation describing it as a gross violation of the Nigerian content Act of 2000 and a great injustice on the people of Bonny Kingdom and Rivers State in general.
According to him, ‘’ This is a clear violation of the Nigerian Content Act 2010 sections 25-27 and the psychological contract of the good people of Grand Bonny Kingdom and the entire Niger Delta region.
The People of Bonny and Rivers State are deeply concerned that a project of this magnitude that would have a direct positive impact on the socio-economic well-being of our people will be sighted elsewhere.
Bonny Island, despite her strategic role in the Nigerian project has not yet been connected to the national grid, even as the potential for economic sustainability has been increasingly threatened by the continuous exploitation and degradation of our environment with gas flaring and emissions from other industrial sources’’, he said.
He reminded that the people of Bonny Kingdom where relocated from their ancestral homes for the purpose of the construction of the NLNG facility, and have since continued to live peacefully in spite of the pain of vacating their ancestral land and the sacrifice for the economic well being of the nation.
The lawmaker said it is sad to note that the plans have already been designed and concluded, adding that it is not only unjustifiable but morally wrong and totally unacceptable by the people.
He also said that, the proposed project, if cited as planned will not only rob the state and local government of opportunities, it will further increase unemployment level and untold hardship.
Hon. Brown however called for the immediate
reversal of the proposed plan by the management of NLNG to site the
shipyard project away from where they have significant operations.
“The people of the Niger Delta have been neglected for too long. The gas is from this region; our environment is the most exploited and degraded, our ecosystem destroyed. Yet we are the most marginalised people in the scheme of things. Further, it is quiet disheartening that whilst our people bear the risk of the everyday pollution, from gas flaring and emission from other industrial sources, the management of NLNG will contemplate to indulge in such an irresponsible act to site a project of this magnitude that will ameliorate the plight of our people’’ away from where they have major operation.
“The people will resist by any means necessary the plans by NLNG and their partners to further impoverish the people of Rivers State’’, he said.

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