Uche Nworah, How Not to Resolve The Niger Delta Crises
How Not To Resolve The
Niger
Delta Crises
 
By Uche Nworah
 
Despite the army of million dollar salary earning
crises managers and PR executives in the employment of the oil companies operating
in the oil-rich Niger Delta region of
Nigeria
, It is still baffling that the oil companies did not see the current crises coming.
If they did, it is either they underestimated the power and might of the Ijaws in
being able to take their destiny into their
own hands, or the shylock executives
of Shell, Chevron, Agip, ExxonMobil and the rest of the greedy foreign oil exploration
companies operating in the region have also been heeding the counsel of false oracles.
 
Now the conflict is threatening to spill out
of proportions just like the oil and flames spewing forth from the many burst oil
pipelines and wells scattered around the Niger Delta region. The story and plight
of the Ijaws as well as the other indigenes of
Nigeria
’s oil producing communities is not new to the world, but the world seemed to have
taken only a scathing and perfunctory notice when Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight members of his Movement for the Survival
of Ogoni People (MOSOP)
paid the ultimate price in 1995.
 
Perhaps Saro-Wiwa’s struggles and death should have been a wake-up call for all
who have been milking the cow to death, and
feasting alongside the vultures
in the region of death but avarice appeared to have taken the upper hand. The judgements
of the Nigerian governments starting from the federal and state governments to the
local governments were beclouded, they refused to listen.
 
Of serious concern is the way the Nigerian government
have gone about managing the crises, there has been an almost befuddling passivity
on its part with regards to the Niger Delta crises. To think that the government
has not yet considered a constructive Marshal Plan to resolving the crises which
is threatening Nigeria’s chief source of revenue, and which could potentially undermine
the current socio-economic reforms in place makes one to wonder what the members
of the federal executive council discuss at their weekly meetings. While flagging
off the election campaign for the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in Port
Harcourt recently, President Obasanjo admitted the neglect of the region by successive
governments, according to him “Let us say the truth there
had been neglect of this region in the past. Neglect at the community, local, State and Federal levels. There have been neglect at the oil company levels, don’t let
us deceive ourselves”. To the disappointment of his listeners, there was no outline
of planned solutions and strategies towards a resolution.
 
From pictures beamed around the
globe by publications as the National Geographic
and reports by organisations such as the ‘Chop Fine report’ by
Human Rights Watch, one could easily see that the Movement for the
Emancipation of the Niger Delta People (MEND), the Niger Delta
Peoples Volunteer Force (NDPVF) and the several other militia groups
operating in the region have a case, and they sure mean business. When pictures
of the balaclava clad, A-K 47 totting militia men first emerged in 2005 alongside
the pictures of the first set of kidnapped oil workers, Nigerians and some members
of the international community scoffed at the boys and rubbished their antics, some
others simply went about their business in the anticipation that it was a one-off
incident and ill wind that would eventually blow away. However, we are now into
the second year and the kidnappings rather than abating have increased in intensity.
The militia men have become more daring serving the world media daily doses of their
kidnapping exploits. Lending his views to the Niger Delta conflict, Sabella Ogbobode
Abidde, A prominent Ijaw indigene and Washington based public analyst called on
all Nigerians especially Niger Deltans to intensify
their protests against the injustice in the region, quoting Elie Wiesel, Mr Abidde
said that “there may be times when we are powerless to prevent injustice, but there
must never be a time when we fail to protest”. “The time to vigorously protest this
blatant injustice is now. The time has come” he concluded. Echoing similar views,
Victor Dike, author of
Democracy and Political Life in Nigeria
warned that “without social justice there may be no peace in the Niger Delta
and economic growth and development will continue to elude the region. He charged
political leaders to work harder for peace in the Niger Delta because "without peace,
growth is impossible."
 
The Nigerian government attempted to contain
the crises in 2006 when it announced that the government would spend billions of
naira to construct bridges and flyovers across the Niger Delta area. The announcement
itself which is a warped PR idea shows that the government is not fully in touch
with the realities on the ground in the Niger Delta region. Although the government
defended its decision by claiming that the effort would
help provide local jobs,
the announcement hardly addressed the
core issues at the heart of
the Niger Delta crises such as resource control, poor living standards of the indigenes
of the oil producing communities, gas flaring, oil spillages and other ecological
disasters that have plagued the region as a result of the activities of the oil
exploration companies. The Nigerian government’s proposals to build bridges and
flyovers across the
Niger
delta region stems from a poverty of thought and have not strategically addressed
the core issues hence the insurgencies and unrests in the region have not abated.
 
Perhaps this may be a good time to either review
the modus operandi or scrap totally the Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC).
Though set up with the best of intentions, the organisation has however become a
nesting ground for corrupt government officials whose penchant for diverting allocated
funds meant for the development of the Niger Delta region for personal use has meant
that the communities in question increasingly wonder where the billions of naira
the commission claims it has invested in the region have gone to. The sleaze culture
in the commission was epitomised by its former chairman, the exiled runaway and
billionaire fugitive
Professor Eric Opia who took the commission to the cleaners when it was still known as the Oil Mineral Producing
Areas Development Commission (OMPADEC). Its immediate past and current executives
have also been known to be nursing political ambitions, placed into context in a
country where candidates for governorship elections require hundreds of millions
of naira in campaign funding, it may not be difficult to fathom the sources of the
electoral war chests of the likes of Onyema Ugochukwu and Mr. Emmanuel Aguariavwodo,
both former managing directors of NDDC.  Ugochukwu is the Peoples Democratic
Party (PDP) gubernatorial candidate in Abia state in the coming April/May general
elections,   while Aguariavwodo, the immediate past managing director resigned
his appointment to vie for PDP’s gubernatorial ticket in Delta state. The former
Executive Director, Finance and Administration of the NDDC, Timi Alaibe has now
been confirmed as the new managing director taking over from Aguariavwodo, and Alaibe
is also known to be eying the government house of oil-rich Bayelsa state, the home
state of impeached governor
D.S.P Alamiesegha.
 
The recent comment credited to
Nigeria
’s Vice President Atiku Abubakar is worrisome, he alleged that the Nigerian government
has placed orders for weapons and ammunitions worth over $2 billion which it plans
to use to quell the Niger Delta insurgency. While accepting that the statement should
be cautiously received considering the raging feud between President Obasanjo and
the vice president, it has to be said still that should this be true, then it must
be worrying news to all those who have been following the Niger Delta crises.
 
The Obasanjo government would be doing itself
a disservice if it proposes to use violence against its citizens because memories
of the Odi and
Zaki Biam massacres are still
fresh in the memories
of Nigerians. Such an approach will escalate violence in the
region because violence begets violence. The government should still explore dialogue with all the stakeholders, an option that it doesn’t seem to have considered very
much in the past. The Nigerian government should also understudy
America
’s situation in
Iraq
before going ahead with its proposals. It is not always the man with superior weapons
that win wars. The Niger Delta militia are at home in the creeks of the Niger Delta
and would not be easy prey for the federal troops the government is planning to
send into the region. The government should think twice before embarking on this
road to perdition which spells doom for the innocent citizens living in Niger Delta
communities, the militants and the federal troops that may be paying with their
lives fighting an unjust war just like US soldiers in
Iraq
.
 
To the credit of the Niger Delta militants,
they have not embarked on large scale execution of kidnapped oil workers most of
whom they eventually release except in exceptional circumstances. The released oil
workers have also come out to their defence maintaining that they were well treated
while under captivity thus showing the human side of the militants, a side that
is amenable to dialogue. It is this human side that the Nigerian government should
be exploring unless the Obasanjo government wishes to add to its
catalogue of human rights abuses
and injustices against the Nigerian people.
 
The Long Harmattan Season
by the author is slated for release in March 2007. February 2007.
info"uchenworah.com