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N200m Royalty Tears Ubima Apart
The sum of N200million expected to be paid as royalties by an indigenous oil firm, All Grace Energy Limited, to Ubima Community in Ikwerre Local Government Area of Rivers State, is about to cause another round of crisis in the community.
Inside sources said that a group, Patriotic Youth of Ubima (PYO) has threatened to shut down the operations of the oil firm over non-implementation of the subsisting Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the community for five years.
The threat followed the company’s inability to carry out its corporate social responsibility (CSR) for over five years in Ubima.
The youths lamented that the company has failed to award scholarship and pay other entitlements due the community since it commenced operations.
The President of the Patriotic Youth of Ubima, Wisdom Chimankpa Igwe and other leaders of the community said that even with persistent harassment and intimidation, the people would not relent in agitating for their rights.
They also said that the PYU, through its lawyer, had written to the Community Development Committee (CDC) to explain to the youth and community leaders the level of implementation of the MoU, adding that they were yet to receive response from either the company or the community leadership.
The youths alleged that majority of them were roaming the streets in the community without job while the company has continued to employ people from outside the community and state.
They accused the company and community leadership of using security agencies to intimidate and harass youths agitating for their rights.
The youths claimed that the CDC had prevented them from coming together because of their alleged secret dealings with companies operating in the community.
They alleged that the CDC confirmed that out of N200million the company was due to pay the community, it has only paid N50million, which they claimed, has not been accounted for.
They regretted that the company, with the huge revenue generated from the community, has succeeded in impoverishing Ubima with no single project to boast of, and warned that the youths would, henceforth, take their destiny in their hands.
When contacted, the CDC Chairman, Barrister Mono Okono, advised the youths not to take laws into their hands, and confirmed that the CDC had received the sum of N50million out of N200million.
Okono advised the youths to apply dialogue, warning that get-rich quick syndrome was not the best way to achieve peace and development.
He said the leadership of the community was doing everything possible to resolve the lingering issues, adding that he was not part of those who signed the MoU with the company.
According to him, “the MoU had been signed before I took over the leadership of the community in 2015”, adding that the CDC has no part to play in the looming crisis.
“The CDC cannot interface with the company, rather a separate body known as MIC is the only body empowered by the MoU to interface with the company”, he said.
He also explained that the company’s financial and technical partners were in court over an internal matter, which according to him, means that one party cannot implement what is in the MoU.
Also contacted, the company’s Community Liaison Officer (CLO), Mr. Dandison Onuah, who dismissed the threats by PYU, warned that the youths cannot dictate to him or his family what happens in his land.
Onuah stated that he was one of the rightful owners of the land where the oil firm was located and carrying out its business.
According to him, “I am the rightful owner of the land, somebody who does not own anything cannot dictate to me.
“Ubima community has an organised leadership. We have Ogbakor Ubima headed by a legal practitioner. We have Community Development Committee (CDC) also headed by a legal practitioner. Those touts cannot dictate to us”, he noted.
He said the company has no obligation to listen to the PYU, describing them as non-existent trouble-makers bent on destabilising the relative peace in the community.
By: Ike Wigodo