Connect with us

Niger Delta

AK47-Wielding Teenagers Invade Farmlands With Cattle In Edo

Published

on

Leaders of seven communities in Edo State have called on the state government and security agencies to save them from those they termed criminal herdsmen terrorising their land..
The leaders who complained that their farmlands have been besieged by herders whom they accused of kidnapping, killing, raping and destroying their farms, called on Governor Godwin Obaseki to order his Joint Military Task Force to lead vigilante groups to comb the area and flush out the criminals from the land for safety of the people.
The affected places were Orhionmwon Local Government Area including Ologbo-nugu, Umoghun-nokhua, Orogho, Owuo, Urhehue, Evboesi and Evbonogbon.
They are at the border of Edo and Delta States by River Ethiope, off Benin-Abraka Road. The people lamented that their farmlands have also been destroyed by the herdsmen
Narrating his experience to newsmen, a victim, Gaius Osifo, who hails from Evboesi, said his three farms were destroyed, and he can no longer access them for fear of being killed by the herders.
Osifo said, “on January after the new year celebration, I decided to go to my farm. “I went with bamboo to work in my barns but when I arrived, I discovered that the herdsmen had destroyed the yams I harvested. I had to quickly take my motorcycle and ran back to the village so that I wouldn’t be attacked.
“They could have killed me. I went home to tell my people what had happened. The next day, I went with other farmers to the farms to gather what was left. We reported the matter to our Enogie, Duke. Ever since the incident happened, we have not been going to the farm. They ate the tubers of yam, the ones they did not eat, they cut them into pieces. I now find it difficult to feed and don’t have money since I cannot harvest anything to sell.
“There was a time we drove all the herdsmen in Evboesi away and I believe this set came from a neighbouring community or Delta State. “They ate our plantains and other cash crops.
“Since I was born, I have never seen this kind of thing in our farms. My father cultivated here for many years before I took over after his death. I don’t know who brought these herdsmen. For now, I only pray to God to help us as nobody can go to the farm to harvest plantain.
“Nobody can harvest cassava to make garri. We have abandoned the remaining crops that we are yet to harvest. I went to Abudu to report to the police, but they said I should go to Ugo to also report to the police there. I showed them the pictures of the destroyed farm and crops. The police promised to call me, but I have not heard from them.
“We want government to come to our aid and provide security. The crops they destroyed in my farm are over N3m.”
In a save our soul letter signed by 12 elders from the seven communities to Governor Godwin Obaseki, the people said they are scared for their lives as the herdsmen now threaten their ancestral homes.
In the said letter, they said their farmlands from centuries ago, stretched from Benin-Abraka Road to Ugo- Oben – Jesse Road, all under Ugo and Iguelaba police divisions, claiming that for about four years now, some fierce-looking herdsmen accompanied by AK47- wielding teenagers have invaded the land with hundreds of cattle. They alleged that the incidence has left their crops devastated as the cattle were fed with the produce comprising yams, plantains, cassava and more.
“We took pains to identify the owner of the cattle whom we found to be a Fulani merchant based in Warri. “In our latest contact with him, he disowned the cattle and herders now in our farms, insisting that they are cattle rustlers with stolen cattle from Kogi State. “He said he has since taken away his herders and cattle from our neighbourhood, adding that those now terrorising us are common criminals. They reported.
“We are now forced to cry to our governor as the bandits have started killing our people, raping our wives and daughters.
They outlined some mayhem unleashed upon the community to include; killing of a father and his 3 children at Evbonogbon, abduction of three women from Ologbo-nugu; tortured and raped, abduction and raping of seven other women from Evbonogbon among others.

Continue Reading

Niger Delta

HYPREP Interfaces With Ogoni Church Leaders

Published

on

For the first time in its history, the Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project(HYPREP) has interfaced with Ogoni church leaders drawn from four local government areas of Rivers State, as a way of keeping them abreast of what it is currently doing in Ogoniland and carrying them along in the scheme of affairs.
The meeting, which attracted several church leaders from the Ogoni ethnic nationality was held at Casoni Hotels in Port Harcourt recently.
While the church leaders commended HYPREP for the bold initiative to interact with them for the first time, they urged the Project to involve them in its activities, as they are important stakeholders in the development trajectory of Ogoniland.
To facilitate robust interface and participation with the agency on a regular basis in what is currently going on in Ogoniland, they said mobility was key, and requested for provision of a bus to ease their movement as a group.
They essentially praised HYPREP for the several projects and programmes it is carrying out in the area, and urged it to build an Ecumenical Centre in Ogoniland, to enable the people of God from the area to congregate on a regular basis irrespective of their denominations.
The church leaders also noted that as Ministers of God, they are more in touch with the people at the grassroots, who are mostly peasants, and therefore, lend helping hands to them to cushion the effects of the harsh economic conditions in the country. This, they said underscores the need for HYPREP to carry them along in its empowerment programmes.
The church leaders, who spoke at the event included the Chairman of Ogoni Church Leaders Council and Bishop of the Diocese of Ogoni Anglican Communion, Rt Rev Solomon Gberegbara; the Christian Association of Nigeria(CAN) Representative for Gokana and Area Superintendent of Apostolic Church, Apostle Joseph Leemfe; and the President of Ogoni Ministers, Peace and Advocacy Forum, Venerable Joseph B.Johngbo.
Speaking at the event, the Project Coordinator of HYPREP, Prof Deinibarini Zabbey thanked the men of God for gracing the occasion, and assured them of the readiness of the Project to always carry them along. He said it was intended to seek for their guidance and support.
He explained that HYPREP decided to interface with them considering the important place they occupy in the Ogoni society, and urged them to disseminate relevant information on the activities of the Project in Ogoniland to the people through their respective platforms.
Zabbey used the forum to brief the church leaders on the core mandate of HYPREP, as enunciated in the United Nations Environment Programme(UNEP) Report on Ogoniland, as well as how it has kept faith with the recommendations therein to give the Ogoni people a new lease of life.
He enumerated the several projects and programmes the agency is carrying out in Ogoniland, contending that the Project is even going beyond its mandate by accommodating communities not impacted by oil pollution, especially in the provision of potable water for the people.
Similarly, the Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project(HYPREP) has organised a procurement and business strategy workshop for Ogoni entrepreneurs to enable them to take full advantage of the benefits accruing from the procurement sector of the economy in the country.
The workshop, which took place at the Golden Tulip Hotel in Port Harcourt recently, attracted participants from all walks of life.
Speaking at the occasion, the Project Coordinator of HYPREP, Prof Deinibarini Zabbey said the ultimate goal of the workshop is to ensure that there is a thriving ecosystem in Ogoniland so as to address low community participation in the activities of HYPREP.
According to him, there is the need for Ogoni people to understand the procurement intricacies and nuances in the competitive market of bidding for HYPREP’s jobs and contracts, stressing that the workshop is also intended to address community quota concerns.
Zabbey, therefore, urged the beneficiaries to come together to build business partnerships and clusters, as well as relay and teach others what they had learnt.

Continue Reading

Niger Delta

N40,000 Minimum Wage Disappoints C’River Workers

Published

on

Some workers in Cross River State have expressed disappointment at Governor Bassey Otu’s announcement pegging the new minimum wage for workers in the State at N40,000.
The workers shared their displeasure in separate interviews with The Tide’s source in Calabar.
It would be recalled that Otu, while addressing workers last Wednesday, said that the state Government would pay N40,000 as the new minimum wage to its workers.
The Governor had listed lean allocation from the centre and unfavourable Gross Domestic Product to debt servicing ratio as some of the reasons for the decision.
Eno said the state government would rely on the realities of the time in making decisions towards the implementation of the new minimum wage.
Speaking to the source, Mr Emmanuel Ekanem, a civil servant in the State, described the N40,000 announced by the Governor as “far below” the expectations of workers.
He said such proouncement did not showcase the Governor as a leader who understood the yearnings of his people.
“At a time when a bag of rice is sold between N70,000 and N80,000, declaring N40,000 as minimum wage is terribly poor and unacceptable”, he said.
Mrs Isu Ewe, a judiciary staff, said she was disappointed at the pronouncement, and urged the Governor to take another look at the decision.
“I expected to hear at least N60,000 as the new minimum wage for the workers in the state. The hardship is too much.
“What can N40,000 buy? Workers have school fees to pay, parents to take care of and rent to pay.
“The Governor should really look at the situation of things in the country and do something about the take-home of workers”, she said.
Another civil servant, Mr Edem Enoh, said workers did not expect such pronouncement from the Governor, describing it as hasty.
He urged the State Government to avoid over-dependence on federal allocation, look inwards and devise other sources of income.
“The welfare of the people should be top on the government’s priority list. This pronouncement is hasty and unacceptable”, he said.

Continue Reading

Niger Delta

Edo Recruited 5,000 Workers In Seven Years -Obaseki

Published

on

Edo State Governor, Godwin Obaseki, has said his administration had employed more than 5,000 new workers into the state civil service in the last seven years.
Obaseki disclosed this at the 2024 May Day celebrations at Samuel Ogbemudia Stadium in Benin.
He said the 5,000 workers were recruited based on merit, and not on favouritism.
“Now, you don’t need to know anybody to get government work in Edo”, he said.
According to the Governor, he decided to increase the minimum wage from N40,000 to N70,000 because workers’ welfare remained paramount to his administration.
“But, should the Federal Government decide on a higher minimum wage and decide to make the funds available to states from the savings which they have made from removal of fuel subsidy, Edo will adjust its minimum wage to that”, he assured.
The Governor said he was leaving the state workforce better than he met it, noting that the John Odigie Oyegun Public Service Academy had trained over 10,000 workers.
“From a state which ranked the highest in human trafficking and irregular migration seven years ago, we have become a state with the lowest number of multidimensional poor.
“We have one of the lowest infant and maternal mortality rate and lowest number of out-of-school children in Nigeria”, he said.
Earlier, the Chairman of Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) in the state, Odion Olaye, said the Governor was approached to approve the N70,000 minimum wage for workers.
Olaye, however, urged Obaseki to fulfill his promise of paying the wage award he had promised the state workers to cushion the effect of fuel subsidy removal by the Federal Government.
He also appealed to the Governor to prevail on the local government councils in the State to pay the salary arrears owed from 2017 to 2023, with the improved allocation.

Continue Reading

Trending