Ijaw Youths Dare Naval Chief to Name Those Involved in Oil Theft
Ijaw Youths Dare Naval Chief to Name Those Involved in Oil Theft
The Ijaw Youth Council (IYC) has asked the Chief of Naval Staff, Vice
Admiral Usman Jubrin, to spare the nation the “rhetorics and cover up”
in his threat to expose oil companies and security operatives involved
in oil theft, daring him to name those culpable.
The IYC wondered why companies involved in economic sabotage against
the nation and supposed highly placed Nigerians involved in the
unwholesome act cannot be exposed by the naval chief, saying the threat
was a mere smokescreen to give the impression that the navy is
effective.
The group in a statement signed by its spokesman, Mr. Eric Omare,
insisted that the declaration by the Chief of Naval Staff is nothing but
the usual rhetoric of government and security agencies to confuse
Nigerians on the problem of oil theft.
“We wish to state for the umpteenth time that the people involved in
the business of oil scam are top politicians, serving and retired
military personnel, oil company executives and their foreign
collaborators, while the Niger-Delta locals are used as artisans. The
involvement of these high profile persons in the business of oil theft
is the reason the government and security agencies have not been able to
summon the courage and political will to bring oil theft to a stop.
“The resultant effect of this government’s dereliction of duty and
security agencies complicity in oil theft is massive despoliation of the
Niger-Delta environment. Today, the flora and fauna of the Niger-Delta
and the people’s source of living are gone as a result of decades of oil
pollution and recently partly due to the activities of oil thieves and
the crude modus operandi of security agencies who usually spill the oil
into the environment in the process of destroying materials used for oil
theft, when they choose to take action
“Though the security agencies may be celebrating this pedestrian approach of burning camps and spilling oil as a success in the fight against oil theft, in actual sense, it has caused more damage to the Niger-Delta environment than the problem it is trying to address.
“Though the security agencies may be celebrating this pedestrian approach of burning camps and spilling oil as a success in the fight against oil theft, in actual sense, it has caused more damage to the Niger-Delta environment than the problem it is trying to address.
“Therefore, the IYC again calls for the urgent constitution of the
federal government reviewed community-based oil facilities surveillance
programme which would ensure that each community takes responsibility
for the protection of oil facilities in their community, with the
involvement of critical stakeholders in the Niger-Delta as was done with
the amnesty programme. The IYC strongly believes that nobody can
protect oil facilities better than the Niger Delta people and their
communities,” the statement said.
The IYC stressed that though the meeting of the naval chief with chief
executive officers of multinational oil companies on how to tackle the
menace of oil theft in the Niger-Delta is welcomed, the council is not
impressed by the mere threat issued by the Chief of Naval Staff,
stressing that he should rather take drastic steps by arresting those
known to be involved in oil theft.
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