Bayelsa
Elders Council (BEC) rose from an emergency meeting yesterday in
Yenagoa, the state capital, and urged the Federal Government to tread
cautiously on the issue of renewed bombing of oil facilities in the
Niger Delta.
The meeting, which had in attendance the
council’s chairman, Chief Francis Doukpola, royal fathers Joshua
Igbagara, Jonathan Kubor, Richard Seiba and Chief Thompson Okorotie,
Prof. Ayabaemi Spiff, Prof. Francis Sikoki as well as Mr. Charles Dorgu,
condemned, in very strong terms, bombing of the facilities and appealed
to the perpetrators to desist from such act.
The elders noted that a nation grappling
with economic challenges cannot afford to face further economic woes
due to destruction to oil facilities.
In a communiqué issued at the end of the
meeting, signed by Doukpola and Okorotie, the BEC appealed to President
Muhammadu Buhari to direct security agencies to go after the
perpetrators so as to bring them to book under the rule of law.
The BEC further advised the government to
adopt a carrot and stick approach in its negotiation with host
communities to bring about sustainable solutions to the problem.
On the anti-corruption war, it threw its
weight behind the Buhari administration, adding, however, that it was
concerned about the way some Nigerians, including Ijaws, are being
handled in the process.
“The council is deeply pained at the
re-activation of oil and gas pipeline bombings and vandalism. We
strongly appeal to the perpetrators to desist from the dastardly act
forthwith in order to avoid the inevitable damage this would cause the
economy of our states and the Nigerian state, especially at this time
when the country is grappling with ridiculous oil price regime.”
The elders council, however, appealed to
the president to direct security agencies to go after the perpetrators
only with a view to bringing them to justice under the rule of law. In
so doing, security operatives would not destroy innocent communities in
the process of fishing out the perpetrators.
“The Federal Government should observe
restraint while making pronouncement on the matter and should consult
widely with relevant stakeholders when major decisions concerning the
amnesty programme are to be taken.”
Meanwhile, former leaders of the defunct
Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND) from the six
Niger Delta states denied recent bombing of oil and gas facilities in
Delta State.
Speaking under the
Leadership Peace and Cultural Development Initiative (LPCDI), led by
Pastor Rueben Wilson (aka General Pastor), they faulted claims that
former militants were behind the attacks and said criminals carried out
the action.
According to the former MEND leaders,
though the Federal Government has launched its investigation, claims
against former militant leader, Chief Government Ekpemupolo and other
leaders are not true and misplaced.
General Pastor insisted that those behind
the attacks were criminal elements, who out to disrupt the peace in the
region and pit the Federal Government against the people of the region.
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