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Akintokunbo
A Adejumo
akinadejum@aol.com
Some
time during Abacha’s infamous, brutal,
sadistic and despotic tenure in Nigeria,
the combined Nigerian armed forces and
the Police launched an assault on the
Niger Delta, shortly after Ken Saro-Wiwa
was executed. One of the British TV
stations (I forget which one) showed a
documentary of the assault. All I could
say was that this documentary reminded
me of the genocide in Rwanda. Whole
villages were destroyed, dead bodies
were lying around and the Nigerian
soldiers were shown to be at their
brutal best. People were displaced and
there were clips of indescribable
sufferings perpetrated by Nigerians on
Nigerians. I was in tears most of the
documentary and came to the conclusion
that while we Nigerians tend to think we
are a civilised and sophisticated
people, we were no different from the
Hutus and Tutsis of Rwanda in the way we
regard human lives. I was thoroughly
ashamed.
Then during Obasanjo’s quasi-democratic
administration, the Odi massacre
happened in 1999, unfortunately for him,
when he had just assumed office. Now
what we have is the Yar ‘Adua
administration doing the same evil, if
not worse. For the past 2 weeks or more,
the Nigerian armed forces, through the
Joint Task Force (JTF) finally decided
to push through a military offensive,
ostensibly aimed at curbing and breaking
the Niger Delta militants, but in fact
waging a genocidal war against other
Nigerians. Only God knows how many
innocent Niger Deltans have been killed
within those two weeks and how many more
will be killed, not to talk of
displaced. And don’t forget the JTF had
been fighting militants in the area for
the past one year or so. And the
militants are fighting back, so this is
not just an operation to secure the area
in order for the oil to start flowing
unimpeded again, but a real internecine
war going on.
At this juncture, I would like to say
that like many other Nigerians, I
strongly condemn this tactics of the
Nigerian Government. Niger Deltans,
militant or civilians, at the last
count, are Nigerian citizens, and we
should tell the Yar ‘Adua Government
that its action is abominable and
unforgivable. The
military must fight within reasonable
limits, and this is crux of the matter;
the military are not fighting within
reasonable limits. Innocent people are
being killed and whole villages are
being sacked because of the activities
of a few people, and this tragic. If the
Nigerian government thinks the Niger
Delta crisis can be addressed with
maximum military force, it may end up
inviting bigger sophistication from the
militantst.
It is a shame on the Federal Government
of Nigeria and a shame on the Nigerian
people, most of who are insulated and
far from the war-front.
Having said this, we now have to seek
ways of ending this shame and genocide.
However, we must recognise and admit
that everybody on both sides of the
fence will have to share the blame in
this crisis.
I will concede that any responsible
government in the world can not just sit
passively by and watch while law and
order breaks down in any part of its
territory or tolerate any act which will
see a disintegration of its sovereignty
or territorial integrity. This is
precisely what the Nigerian Government
has a responsibility for as entrenched
in the Constitution. It is the
methodology that is being adopted that
is the problem. Knowing our soldiers,
who are quite, trigger happy and crude
in their tactics, innocent lives will
inevitably be lost. As Frederick
Forsythe wrote in one of his novels, The
Dogs of War, African soldiers tend to
close their eyes when firing their guns,
thereby just shooting indiscriminately
at anything and everything in sight.
Nigerian soldiers are not exempt from
this trait.
From stories and pictures that have been
seeping out of the war-zone (and this is
a war-zone in the real sense of the
word) the horrors of the JTF operation
in the Niger Delta is explicitly one of
a harrowing disaster, as we are moving
towards a full-scale war, which reminds
one of the Biafra War. It will further
disenfranchise that section of Nigeria
and is a positive (if I can put it that
way) move towards disintegration of the
country. How can we look at our brothers
and sisters of the Niger Delta in the
eye and say “You are Nigerians”?
However, we have been asking for it for
decades. We have never really addressed
the problem of the Niger Delta, and all
past governments have been indifferent
to the plight of this area of Nigeria
which is the source of the wealth of
Nigeria. And what with several
government officials from the Speaker of
the House of Representatives, Dimeji
Bankole, saying the JTF are merely
keeping the peace to one Hon. Balla
Na’Allah quoted in the newspapers as
saying that Nigeria should sacrifice 20
million Nigerians for the rest 120
million people, we are in a very
unfortunate situation. That means the
whole purpose is to preserve the source
of the oil and who gives a damn about
the Ijaws and other Niger Deltans? Let
the oil flow to oil the
Abuja
machinery of corruption.
In my article, “The Niger Delta and
Nigeria” published in August 2008, I had
this to say “To my mind, we can no
longer dodge the issues surrounding the
Niger Delta, even as slow and indecisive
to take positive action as the Yar’Adua
Administration is; we can no longer
evade the issues of Northern
underdevelopment and it’s real
underlying causes, and not shifting the
blame to other parts of Nigeria; we can
no longer shy away from the fact that
Nigeria is not a united country, though
we all seem to love being called
Nigerians. One thing is certain;
Nigerians want change, we want something
different; we do not want a government
which wastes, mismanages and steal the
oil money and neglect where the oil
money is coming from. We do not want
that anymore. The truth is that for
decades, it is the Northern elite, NOT
the Northern common man and woman, who
have been benefiting from the oil wealth
of Nigeria, more than any other region
in Nigeria, while the Niger Delta have
been short-changed, abused and neglected
for the same length of time. Even my own
unproductive state of Oyo benefits more
from the oil than the people of
Bayelsa State, it would seem.
Nigeria is sitting on a keg of
gunpowder, especially with the Niger
Delta and all the issues surrounding it.
Things are degenerating very fast in
this region and only sincere, focused,
impartial and committed leaders will be
able to defuse these problems, or else
there will be no North, South, Niger
Delta or indeed, Nigeria for anybody to
call their own”.
This is as simplistic as I can put it.
And the problem is not a simple one,
neither is the solution. Our leaders
have refused to take a holistic approach
to the problems of the Niger Delta;
hence things have degenerated to this
point. It has always been like sitting
on a keg of gunpowder.
So who are to blame? Everybody, I would
say. And this is why the problem is not
simple. I have already highlighted
partially some of the culpability of our
leaders, past and present. At present,
there are several delegations
representing the Niger Delta (and
non-Niger Deltans too) trying to appeal
to several Western countries (most of
who incidentally have an interest in
that region) to put pressure on the
Federal Government of Nigeria to put a
stop to the assaults. This is a good
move, but I do not see it yielding much.
Why did they leave it so late?
The blames should rest on the following,
apart from the Federal Government of
Nigeria, which carries the major
proportion of the blame: The leaders –
Governors and governments of the Niger
Delta States, the militants, the people
itself, the oil companies and the rest
of Nigeria.
Perhaps very poignant are the roles of
the Niger Delta leaders – governors,
ministers that hail from the area, their
traditional chiefs, civil servants, etc.
I don’t need to dwell too long on this,
but look at the crop of governors that
have been ruling this area for decades
now. Look at Ibori; look at Odili; look
at Alamieyeseigha, look even at Agagu of
Ondo State. What have these leaders done
for their states except steal their
money during their respective eight
years in power? They also routinely used
the militants to further their political
interests and then discard them after
the elections. Ibori was the chief
hostage negotiator during Obasanjo’s
regime; collecting money from the
Federal Government, the oil companies
and the militants all at the same time,
and that excludes dipping his dirty
hands in the state’s treasury. Ibori it
was, who was recently fingered in ex-EFCC
chief, Nuhu Ribadu’s interview, as
trying to bribe him (Ribadu) with $15
million dollars (can you imagine?) to
stop investigating him for corruption.
And it is the same ex-convict Ibori now
walking around free in Abuja, a power
behind the throne of President Yar
‘Adua, spreading his tentacles all over
the Federal Government apparatus. It is
reported that he’s just bought a new
private jet. And he is a leader in the
Niger Delta.
And Peter Odili? The man is now afraid
to enter
Port Harcourt,
a city he ruled and lived in for eight
years, and that he virtually destroyed,
while using militants to carry out his
evil deeds to stay in power. He was said
to have had to refund over 200 billion
Naira after his failed Presidential bid
in 2006, when Ribadu put his file on
Obasanjo’s desk and told Obasanjo that
over his dead body will he (Ribadu) let
Odili become Nigeria’s next president.
All his power projects in Rivers State
are nothing more than scams to milk the
state dry to finance his Presidential
ambitions. He even has a court
injunction not to arrest or molest him.
So he is still under immunity. And he
still is a leader of the Niger Delta
today.
The Niger Delta Development Corporation
(NDDC) is another avenue that had been
used to milk the money meant for
development of the area. The place is a
bedrock of corruption, but many people
are afraid to point this out for fear of
offending some sensibilities. Over the
years, billions of Naira has gone into
that organisation, with very little
shown for it. A top official of the NDDC
was even exposed recently when he burnt
millions of naira to make “juju” to help
him stay in his position. And he was a
Niger Delta leader.
Is Vice-President Goodluck Jonathan not
from the Niger Delta? I would like to
really know what effect his position has
had to alleviate the problems of his
area. Rumour has it that he has become
something of a lame duck, being
prevented from even having regular
access to his boss, the President, a
situation similar to when General
Oladipo Diya was second in command to
Abacha and had to get permissions from a
lowly Major to see his boss.
Ex-Governor DSP Alamieyeseigha, a near
illiterate, was feted and celebrated
when he was released from prison for his
corrupt excesses as a governor who
disgraced Nigeria in Britain with his
antics of jumping bail disguised as a
woman to return to Nigeria. Today, he is
still being widely regarded as the
Governor-General of the Ijaw nation and
calls the shots in Bayelsa State
politics.
And now, what are Timipre Silva,
Emmanuel Uduaghan, Rotimi Amaechi and
cohorts doing for their people?
And the traditional rulers who take
money from the oil companies (and even
from the Federal and state governments)
meant for community development projects
but instead either pocket the whole lot
or share it with the militants or their
own family members?
The militants have spoilt their own case
by their activities. It is no rumour
that kidnapping by the militants has
become a criminal pastime rather than
political pressure by them. They use
kidnapping to make money. Ex-MEND
leader, Asari Dokubo is now a
billionaire. He was used by many Niger
Delta Governors to perpetuate themselves
in power and then sold down the river to
Obasanjo. He should count himself very
lucky to be alive today to enjoy his
wealth.
It is also known that foreign oil
company workers regularly collude with
the militants to stage fake kidnappings
so that their companies will pay the
ransom and then they (the oil workers)
get a cut from the ransom. The same
scenarios apply to some unscrupulous
politicians and businessmen in the area.
And the militants are only too willing
to do this.
Therefore whatever goodwill and sympathy
that the militants might be accorded by
both the international community and
their fellow Nigerians have gone. Some
hostages have been killed inadvertently
and this has definitely not endeared
them to anybody. A large proportion of
their activities are now clearly
criminal and not political.
The Niger Deltans, militants or no
militants, are not opposed to sharing
the oil with other Nigerians; all they
are asking for is that they are
compensated for the destruction of their
lands and rivers adequately, in order
that they will not become displaced or
extinct. All they asking are that the
future of their children is guaranteed
under a Nigeria that appreciates their
almost 100 percent contributions to its
wealth. I do not subscribe to the
popular call these days that Nigeria is
stealing from the Niger Delta. Niger
Deltans, as far as I know are still
Nigerian citizens, holding Nigerian
passports. The Vice –President of
Nigeria is a Niger Deltan, and there are
enough Niger Deltans in government to
ensure that this region is well
represented nationally. They also have
their leaders. What they are not getting
is fairness and equality in the
distribution of Nigeria’s wealth or
dividends of democracy, as we like to
call it.
All Nigerians have enjoyed the benefits
of Niger Delta oil for decades in one
way or the other, be it through
education, scholarships, good roads in
their areas, jobs, healthcare,
electricity, etc. The Niger Delta is our
problem and we all have to share the
blame for what is happening there now,
much as we must also find a solution to
it.
The Government of Nigeria is not the
only side culpable; we all are, though
as the government, they must be held
ultimately responsible. However, it is
apparent that they cannot do it alone.
Other ways, bloodless ways, must be
sought to resolve the problem, and this
calls for cool heads, intelligent
discussions and realistic and positive
actions instead of a war that will
further erode the thin unity of the
country or push us further towards the
precipice of disintegration.
I remember last year that there was talk
of setting up a Government peace
committee or something like that, to be
headed by Professor Ibrahim Agboola
Gambari, former Under-Secretary-General
of the United Nations for the Department
of Political Affairs
(until the protest which forced the
Government to reconsider his choice to
head the committee)? What happened to
this committee? Why did the Federal
Government back out of it?
What are the alternatives? The
international community, especially
those who have an interest in Nigeria’s
oil, must intervene to ensure peace and
justice returns to the area. However, I
am not overly optimistic about
international (US and UK especially)
intervention because of their vested
interests in Nigeria’s oil.
The Federal Government must halt its
incursion into the area and call for a
sincere peace talk that will REALLY
address the problems in this area. The
militants, having really lost any
integrity of purpose, must be ready to
discuss with the government. The oil
companies must also play their parts in
this. The delicate situation in the
Niger Delta must not be allowed to blow
into a full scale civil war. It will
affect all Nigerians and the
international community too.
And the Niger Delta leaders must really
be honest and sincere with their people
and with the rest of Nigeria in deciding
how they want to bring development and
progress to their people. As at last
count, I do not see them doing anything
to bring succour to their people. I am
not from the Niger Delta, but as fellow
Nigerians, they are my people, and I am
sure, I and many other Nigerians share
their pains and sufferings.
We must bring an immediate peaceful end
to the current situation. I do not
subscribe to Nigerians killing Nigerians
in the name of oil or under the guise of
territorial integrity or keeping law and
order.
Akintokunbo Adejumo lives and works in
London, UK. A graduate of the
University of Ibadan, Nigeria (1979) and
University of Manitoba, Canada (1985),
he also writes on topical issues and has
been published in newspapers and
internet media including
Nigeriaworld.com, Nigeria Today Online,
Nigerians In America, Nigeria Village
Square, Champions Newspaper,
ChatAfrik.com, African News Switzerland,
New Nigerian Politics, Gamji.com,
Codewit.com, Nigerian Horizon.com,
Nigerian Muse.com, etc.
He is also the Coordinator of CHAMPIONS
FOR NIGERIA, (www.championsfornigeria.org)
an organisation devoted to celebrating
genuine progress, excellence,
commitment, selfless and unalloyed
service to Nigeria and Nigerians.
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