Business
Ogoni Clean-Up, Not Political Jamboree – HYPREP
The Project Coordinator of Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project (HYPREP), Dr Marvin Dekil, says the ongoing clean-up of oil spill impacted sites in Ogoniland in Rivers State has nothing to do with politics, contending that the commencement of the exercise at a time when the general elections are fast approaching is a mere coincidence.
Dekil, who gave this clarification while giving an update of HYPREP’s activities to newsmen in Port Harcourt last Saturday said the clean-up exercise was never a political jamboree as insinuated in certain quarters but a genuine commitment to clean-up the heavily polluted Ogoniland in accordance with the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Report.
According to him, the commencement of remediation work at some impacted sites in the four Ogoini-speaking local government areas of Rivers State marked the beginning of the clean-up of impacted sites in the entire Niger Delta region.
He disclosed that 16 contractors who passed through a rigorous procurement process had so far been introduced and handed over 16 slots and sites out of the 21 contractors and companies which successfully won the contracts for the clean-up exercise, adding that the agency had divided the impacted sites into three broad categories, namely, category A, complex, category B-less complex and category C- sites that require further investigations.
“The work of remediation in less complex sites does not require utilisation of Integrated Contaminated Social Management Centre (ICSMC). We have since commenced feasibility studies for both (ICSMC ) and Centre of Excellence. We are adopting international bidding process to get the best of expertise and technology for the construction of both facilities,” he said.
Dekil further hinted that the handover of sites for clean-up to contractors was generally successful as work was currently going on at those sites but regretted what he described as an isolated criminal case in K-Dere Community in Gokana Local Government Area last Tuesday where the agency’s bus was set ablaze through a petrol bomb, insisting that the police were on the trail of the perpetrators of the act.
“The HYPREP team was never attacked and neither were they prevented from carrying out their duties,” he said, assuring that security measures had been put in place to forestall future occurrence.
He said HYPREP was not shutting out indigenous contractors from the clean-up exercise, stressing that some of them would soon be part of the exercise, even as he stated that the agency was building the capacity of the local people to benefit maximally from the project.
Dekil said the body was interfacing with Ogoni leaders and youths under the aegis of the Movement for the Survival of Ogoni People (MOSOP) and the National Youth Council of Ogoni People (NYCOP) to ensure that the clean-up project was successfully delivered without much hiccups.
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NAFDAC Decries Circulation Of Prohibited Food Items In markets …….Orders Vendors’ Immediate Cessation Of Dealings With Products
Importers, market traders, and supermarket operators have therefore, been directed to immediately cease all dealings in these items and to notify their supply chain partners to halt transactions involving prohibited products.
The agency emphasized that failure to comply will attract strict enforcement measures, including seizure and destruction of goods, suspension or revocation of operational licences, and prosecution under relevant laws.
The statement said “The National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) has raised an alarm over the growing incidence of smuggling, sale, and distribution of regulated food products such as pasta, noodles, sugar, and tomato paste currently found in markets across the country.
“These products are expressly listed on the Federal Government’s Customs Prohibition List and are not permitted for importation”.
NAFDAC also called on other government bodies, including the Nigeria Customs Service, Nigeria Immigration Service(NIS) Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON), Nigerian Ports Authority (NPA), Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA), Nigeria Shippers Council, and the Nigeria Agricultural Quarantine Service (NAQS), to collaborate in enforcing the ban on these unsafe products.
