Opinion
Pipeline Leakages And Fire, Past 25 Years
The most recent alarm about leaking pipeline raised by community members this month was in Omoku in Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni Local Government Area in Rivers State. A clergyman operating an orphanage close to the scene of pipeline leakage made a pathetic appeal for an immediate intervention by appropriate authorities, in the interest of many children in the orphanage. There had been similar reported cases in various parts of Rivers State; neither must all such reported cases of pipeline leakages be associated with oil bunkering or sabotage. In this case of Omoku leakage, there is present danger, apart from several people moving away from the scene. It is sad that in the past 25 years there have been numerous cases of pipeline leakages and fire in Nigeria. October 18, 1998, it was reported that 1,082 persons died at Jesse, Delta State, as a result of pipeline fire. June 25, 1999, 15 persons were reported to have been burnt alive at Akute-Odo, Lagos. February 7, 2000, 17 persons died in Ogwe, Abia State, from pipeline fire, and March 20, same year and close to Isioma, Abia State, no fewer than 20 persons died in similar sad incident. June 21, 2000, 28 persons were burnt to death at Okuedjeba near Warri, in Delta State.
July 11, 2000, nearly 300 people reportedly died from pipeline fires in Warri, Delta State, and on 23 July 2000, 40 people died at Afrokpe near Sapele, Delta State, with another 15 persons the next day in a second blast. Then November 30, 2000, about 60 people died when a damaged pipeline exploded near Lagos. Total of six pipeline fire in 2000 alone! November 15, 2001, 15 people died in a fire caused by an oil leak at Umudike, Imo State; but in the whole of 2002, there was no such tragedy. Then June 19, 2003, 125 people died by a pipeline explosion in Ovim, Abia State. September 16, 2004, 60 people died in pipeline blast in the outskirts of Lagos; and December 22, 2004, 27 persons died as villagers scooped fuel from a damaged pipeline at Ilado near Lagos. May 30, 2005, a pipeline burst into flames after a gang tapped into it to illegally siphon off fuel in the town of Awokan, killing six persons. December 20, 2005, militants blew up a Royal Dutch Shell pipeline, about 50 kilometres southwest of the Southern oil centre of Port Harcourt, killing 8 people. Then May 12, 2006, about 200 people were reportedly burnt alive in an inferno at a beach near Lagos; same May 12, 2006, a ruptured gas pipeline ignited, killing villagers collecting fuel in the southern village of Ilado, Lagos. It was estimated that the total number of people that died in that inferno was more than 200.
December 26, 2006, a day after Christmas, it was reported that hundreds of persons were killed by fire as a pipeline exploded in Abule Egba, Lagos. It was alleged that some of the victims of that sad incident were in festive attire, celebrating a boxing day as a Christmas holiday. One year after, another December 25, 2007, Christmas day proper, 47 people were reported to have died at a village near Ikate on Atlas Cove, Mosimi line in Iru Council of Lagos State. Between 2008 and 2018, records of pipeline fire are being verified for compilation, but the above history of pipeline fires in Nigeria is shocking enough. It is needful that urgent and prompt attention should be given to cases of pipeline leakages reported by indigenes of rural communities, by appropriate authorities, without waiting for disasters to occur. The tendency to associate broken or leaking pipelines to oil bunkering or sabotage, and perhaps suspect villagers in such vicinity as being responsible for any illegality, may not always be the case. While illegality and sabotage may not be ruled out in cases of damage to pipelines, what should demand immediate attention and action, is to ensure that fire which can put human lives in jeopardy, does not erupt from leaking pipelines.
With the most recent incident in Omoku (ONELGA) as a case study, the observation has been that rapid response and action rarely follow reports or alarm about a leaking pipeline. It is a sad habit to consider the status or outward appearance of a messenger first, before considering what importance to attach to the message being conveyed. Neither must a village woman who saw crude oil gushing out from the soil as she was harvesting cassava in her farm, be accused of bursting a pipeline with her hoe! Even when cases of oil spill are reported from the grassroots and channelled through a local government chairman or any public notary, there is always a tendency to bring some politics into such matter. Such political twist comes in the form of recriminations and accusations about collaborations by local indigenes in illegality of oil thieves. People of the Niger Delta region have had enough of sad experiences of natural resources that should have been a blessing to them. Rather, they suffer in silence.
It is sad to observe that in the past 25 years, apart from cases of pipeline fire disasters and increasing terrorism, banditry and gangsterism, land-grabbing is another looming disaster in the Niger Delta region. A Land Use Decree of 1969, may have been necessitated by a strategy to win the Nigeria Civil War (1967 – 1970), under a military regime. As Land Use Act by a democratic federal government, all land in the states remains vested under authority of state Governors. What we find in Rivers State, for instance, is a situation where real estate developers are creating looming crises in communities, with land belonging to families being acquired and sold through means and agents that rarely mean well. It is needful that Rivers State government should give urgent attention to this phenomenon of land acquisition through means akin to gangsterism, to say the least. The situation has come to the point of describing the phenomenon as land-grabbing, whereby communal and family lands are being shared and sold at prices and terms determined by speculators. Surely, the situation is tense in some communities, neither should the possible future consequences of land sales be ignored.
Pipelines bearing and conveying mineral oil products pass through various communities in the Niger Delta areas of Nigeria. The Petroleum Industry Act has not addressed all the plight and concerns of communities which bear the harsh brunt of the oil industry. Let not politics and economics of greed make the plight of oil-producing communities worse by exposing them to looming hazards, ranging from fire and death, to animosities in communities.
By: Bright Amirize
Bright Amirize is a retired lecturer from Rivers State University, Port Harcourt.
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