Opinion
Resolving The Niger Delta Question
A public affairs commentator, Usman Alabi in his article on Niger Delta question, wrote that “the Niger Delta question stares us in the face and it will keep haunting us as a nation until it is addressed”.
Usman was simply stating the obvious. Apart from the way and manner youths of the Niger Delta present their grouse, any sane leader should concern himself with the legitimacy of their demands with a view to considering how a solution could be proffered.
Thursday, December 1, 2016 afforded me the grace to access the plight of the inhabitants of the Niger Delta region. Apart from taking an optical exploration into the terrain, lives and times of the Niger Delta people, through a media documentary, the Niger Delta Women Social Forum (NDWSF) organised by Gender and Development Action (GADA), with support from the Dutch Embassy, provided a good platform for a panorama of the 16-point agenda of the Niger Delta leaders to the Federal Government.
Beyond this 16-point agenda, however, lies a big question mark. Will this catalogue of needs, even if attended to, provide the requisite solution to the Niger Delta question? For sure, the region has suffered insecurity for long, and has been grossly exploited by the oil exploring companies over the years. But were these without any form of compensation even though it could be adjudged grossly inadequate?
What were the reasons behind the establishment of the Niger Delta Development Basin Authority, the Petroleum Trust Fund, the Niger Delta Development Commission and the Ministry of Niger Delta by various past administrations? A member of the Senate Committee on Niger Delta Affairs, Senator Peter Nwaoboshi, once said that “a lot of money has been voted for the execution of projects but very little is seen on ground”.
In addition to previous developmental agencies established to address the Niger Delta question, the administration of former President Olusegun Obasanjo, in the year 2000, established the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC) with the sole mandate of developing the oil rich region.
In September 2008, late President Umaru Yar’Adua announced the formation of a Niger Delta Ministry, with the NDDC as a parastatal under the ministry. This was largely in response to the demands of the Niger Deltans, most notably the Ijaws and Ogonis, who vehemently fought against environmental degradation and pollution from oil activities.
From past experiences, one is poised to think that the Niger Delta question can better be addressed from within. It is not in doubt that the region has witnessed money flow through the pipes laid underground without a grasp of it, a reason for which its youths turned restive over night with new titles as “pipeline vandals”.
The crave and craze for a firm grip of the inestimable wealth passing through the pipes have been suspected to constitute over 80 per cent of the reason behind the pollution of our environment for which much c1amour is made for its clean-up.
I am fascinated about the clauses on economic development and empowerment as well as the inclusive participation of the Niger Deltans in oil business as featured in the presentation to the President. Seven months down the line, one is yet to see the government’s response as it partains to the inclusion of the Niger Deltans in the determination of their economic decisions.
Sidelining the goose that lays the golden egg from the control and management of the eggs, is tantamount to jeopardizing the fate of the eggs. If what is being catalogued constitutes the aches and pains of the Niger Delta, then it is necessary to get it involved in the management of its resources, and you can be sure of the proverbial dog that is not tempted by the bone hung round its neck.
Sylvia ThankGod-Amadi
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