Niger Delta
Ayade Seeks Support For Anti-Deforestation
The Cross River State Gov
ernor, Senator Ben Ayade, has called on the Federal Government and the international community to support the anti-deforestation efforts of the state government to preserve and manage its rich forest resources rather than work against the construction of the superhighway by his administration.
Ayade, who made the call while inspecting over 22 truck loads of timber impounded by the anti-deforestation task force of the state, also called on both the local and international non-governmental organisations (NGOs), the Federal Ministry of Environment and other stakeholders to show their true love for the state by focusing on how the anti-deforestation task force can be adequately funded to checkmate the obnoxious activities of illegal loggers.
According to the governor, “The anti-deforestation task force needs money for advocacy, they need money for intelligence, they need money to be at the forests, they need to arrest these illegal loggers, they need to drive all the night and through the forest, they need fuel, and all forms of logistics to sustain the task force. Cross River is doing this at a huge burden.”
Ayade explained that “it was based on this reality that the state made a choice to construct the superhighway to help expand opportunities, harness all the solid mineral deposits throughout the state, using the superhighway to the deep seaport at Bakassi.”
Reacting to what he described as cheap blackmail and bad politics being orchestrated by some Cross Riverians and fuelled by some international NGOs as well as persons who hitherto benefited from illegal exploitation of the forests, Ayade stated: “You cannot claim to love Cross River more than us, you cannot afford to care much more for our forests than we do, hence the need to stop playing this cheap politics.”
He said: “In fact, all those who have been arrested so far for destroying our forests and taking away timbers are all non-Cross Riverians. This is to tell you the level of advocacy. And this is coming from people outside the state, doing what they are doing. The Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) is the key issue, so the Federal Government must realise that besides the superhighway, the amount of forests depletion and loss is massive and on a criminal scale.”
Friday Nwagbara, Calabar
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