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Confusion Over Arrested Militants …They’re Chevron Staff -Ijaw Leaders
Tension and confusion have gripped some communities in the Niger Delta over the purported arrest of five suspected members of the Niger Delta Avengers (NDA) by the military last Sunday in connection with the destruction of several oil and gas platforms in the region.
The Tide investigation has revealed that while the Defence Headquarters has confirmed the arrests, leaders of Gbaramatu, an Ijaw community in Warri, Delta State, have kicked against the rounding up of the persons, insisting that the “suspects’’ were Chevron contract workers on duty at the time.
The Tide gathered that the five persons whose names were given as Samuel Emiko, Alfred Timede, Kelvin Mordi, Henry Arogboritse, and Isaac Edemde, were allegedly on routine patrol of oil facilities along the Utunana flow station in Warri South West Local Government Area of Delta State, when they were picked up by the military.
The quintet, it was learnt, were employed as surveillance guards under the Chevron’s Pipeline and Facilities Surveillance Programme (PFSP) which has been in operation for several years.
The Tide learnt that the PFSP was reportedly contracted to a firm owned by one of the popular Niger Delta ex-militant leaders, which then employed the services of youth from the host communities of Ijaw and Itsekiri.
While three of the workers now in custody of the military were said to be from Omadino, an Itsekiri village in Warri North, the rest two were said to have come from Kokodiagbene, an Ijaw community and hosts to Utunana Flow Station in Gbaramatu Kingdom.
A statement made available to The Tide via email, yesterday, an Ijaw leader and Spokesman of Gbaramatu, Chief Godspower Gbenekama, noted that the kingdom was vehemently against the intimidation and indiscriminate arrest of innocent persons by the military.
The community leader alleged that after the soldiers arrested the suspects with their speedboats bearing the inscription of PFSP and with a Chevron logo on it, they moved to Kokodiagbene, and invaded buildings and tortured some youth in a bid to force them to accept the arrested persons’ membership of the militant group.
He called for the immediate release of the workers, describing the action of the military as a ploy to intimidate the people of Gbaramatu.
Susan Serekara-Nwikhana
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