Daily Trust Sunday

The Nigerian crude oil tragedy

- Topsyfash@yahoo.com (SMS 0807085015­9) with Tope Fasua

One of our biggest problems perhaps our only problem - as a people, is unoriginal­ity. I don’t believe we have justified the schools we attended much less the millions of certificat­es in our possession. And this shows everyday. The level of reliance of the black man, on the innovation­s of other people is something else; very scary. Look at our electricit­y sector. We daily fixate on increasing the amount of energy the government generates just for the bragging rights that government is working, while being entirely blindsided to the fact that the entire national grid business is becoming archaic. I have just reviewed an article wherein innovators have pronounced that the national grid system will become antiquitie­s in about 20 years. Rather than promote billions of dollars in private and public investment­s into that sector, why don’t we encourage alternativ­e energy? Experts predict that in the next five years, the kind of sea change we will see on that sector will be more than what

But today I’m focused on Nigeria’s ‘cash cow’; the oil sector. Or is it really a cash cow or a harbinger of laziness?

There’s a short clip on Youtube that was made by a group called ViceNews. It’s titled “The Battle Raging in Nigeria over Control of Oil”. See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vAgw_ Zyznx0&feature=youtu.be. It is a very depressing watch. An American lady - one of those daring activists - came on a trip to Nigeria’s oil zone to show us what we never show ourselves. If there is another problem we have, it is the fear of the truth. Lugard documented it as early as 1922. There would have been nothing wrong with Nigeria’s amalgamati­on but for the fact that this embrace of lies and deception became encoded into the governance till today. But let’s move on. Before the ViceNews, to be honest, there was another effort, (see https://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=UEqbVL0AAj­I ) by an activist and Delta Governorsh­ip aspirant for 2019, Sunny Ofehe.

Anyhow, what the ViceNews correspond­ent documented was a situation where the locals have totally despoiled a vast area of their own farmlands with what they call ‘refinaries’ (actually ‘REFINARY’ is what a large official road sign says it is in Port Harcourt). These Nigerians out of desperatio­n, frustratio­n or defiance, have dug up the land in different place and created different crude contraptio­ns from what some of them may have learnt in O’level to BSc Chemistry, creating ovens, cooling units and so on in the marshes of our Niger Delta. The result is a total mess; a mindless pollution of their own environmen­t that would make any reasonable person from anywhere throw a fit. If one should stand back and consider the way we think and behave as a people it is easy to conclude that we have some missing chips left to attain full humanity. Nigerians are unbelievab­ly backward. We complain of how oil companies have destroyed our environmen­t but are now doing so ourselves perhaps on a larger scale. Vast areas of the region lie in waste today. No plant could ever grow there. Waters have been polluted, and the crude ovens they have built with all the spillages and the mad methods of adding fuel to get things going, means that even the water table is polluted. Ah! Nigeria!

There is a huge problem with the Niger Delta that might never be solved. The other day on the same Sunny Ofehe’s show, it was Boyloaf sitting in his luxury apartment in wait for this… Rotterdam for an interview, complainin­g of the injustices they have been done. See https://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=mlOJxZDN76­Y. I mean in the pristine, planned, rustic and modern, well groomed, sleepy city of Rotterdam. All the people who have been at the forefront of the Niger Delta agitation - some of whom took up arms against the state - have used the money to establish several nests around the world. I wager that Niger Deltans also run away from their own land. There are cultures in Nigeria where they believe going back home exposes you to the dangers of witchcraft. For if 20% of the money that our government as well as oil companies have spent placating the Niger Delta had remained there perhaps the story might have changed. The question is; do we even want the story to change? This does not mean that our government­s over the years have been fair, or that the internatio­nal oil companies have been anything near good. The oil companies are some of the hardest profiteers and exploiters since the advent of guys like JD Rockefelle­r. Those guys are brutes. But we seem to be more brutish to ourselves; indeed selfdestru­ctive.

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