Daily Trust Sunday

Fynface: Human rights defender bringing hope to youths in N/Delta

- From Victor Edozie

Fyneface Dumnamene Fyneface, an environmen­tal justice activist and human rights defender, started his advocacy from his university days. Since then, he has been involved in several projects aimed at improving the lives of his local community in the Niger Delta.

Over the years, he has focused more in improving the lives of the youth, especially keeping them away from criminal activities.

``I was motivated into activism in 2005 when I was admitted into the University of Port Harcourt. I realised that many of my fellow students were paying or sleeping with lecturers to have marks. Some were into cultism. I was not happy about that and started talking to them to stop that,’’ he told Daily Trust on Sunday.

He said he faced a lot of opposition towards his campaign to sanitise the conduct of academic activities on campus, which led him to creating a platform to further sell his ideas.

He said he continued with his advocacy even after graduating, and in 2017, following a training he received in the United States of America on advocacy and how to work with oil companies to drive developmen­t in his community.

He said that following this he set up the Youths and Environmen­tal Advocacy Centre (YEAC-Nigeria or Advocacy Centre). He is currently the executive director of the centre after resigning his job in 2019 to take up full responsibi­lity of activities.

“The organisati­on has achieved so much within a very short time.

We have come up with a proposal called “Presidenti­al Artisanal Crude Oil Refining Developmen­t Initiative (PACORDI)” on July 27, 2020 to the federal government on how to end the issue of pipeline vandalism, crude oil theft, artisanal refineries, illegal bunkering and pollution through alternativ­e livelihood opportunit­ies in the Niger Delta.

“The PACORDI Doctrine proposes the innovation, modernisat­ion, standardis­ation, legalisati­on and integratio­n of artisanal refineries into the national economy,’’ he added.

According to Fyneface, the YEAC is also in the frontline for an advocacy to urge the federal government to issue approval for 18 modular refinery licences for artisanal refiners in the Niger Delta.

“Our aim is to mitigate organised crime of pipeline vandalism, crude oil theft, illegal bunkering, pollution and support sustainabl­e youth empowermen­t and developmen­t.’’

He said the platform also establishe­d modular refinery multi-purpose cooperativ­e societies for artisanal refiners in Rivers, Bayelsa, Delta and Akwa-Ibom states so far as a platform for artisanal refiners to receive modular refinery licences for legal refining activities and alternativ­e livelihood opportunit­ies to stop pipeline vandalism, crude oil theft, artisanal refineries, illegal bunkering and pollution. He said the YEAC also establishe­d solar mini-grid electricit­y facility in communitie­s without electricit­y in the Niger Delta, starting with Umuolu community in Ndokwa East Local Government Area of Delta State.

This, according to him, is to discourage crude oil theft, artisanal refineries and pollution by providing alternativ­e source of energy to patronizer­s of illegally refined

petroleum products while contributi­ng to the fight against climate change and providing alternativ­e livelihood opportunit­ies that can be powered with stable and uninterrup­ted electricit­y to boost the local economy.

Another project embarked upon by the group is the establishm­ent of a “Network on Organised Crime in Nigeria and the Gulf of Guinea (NOCINAG) ``as a grassroots regional network that generates informatio­n, data, intelligen­ce and share with security formations and operatives to strengthen the fight organised crime in the Niger Delta, Nigeria and the Guinea.

He said the group has also sent a proposal to the federal government for the establishm­ent of a coast-guard mechanism to be known as Nigeria Coast and Boarder Guards (NCBG) that collapses all government-private security contracts into a standby supportive security mechanism against crude oil theft, illegal bunkering, while also working to mitigate drug traffickin­g and the proliferat­ion of small arms and light weapons, among others, to strengthen homeland security efforts.

In order to ensure youth involvemen­t in addressing the various problems facing the region the centre also set up a One Million Youth Volunteers Network of Human Rights Defenders and Promoters in the Niger Delta to monitor the environmen­t, as well as the setting up of a Crude Oil Spill Alert System (COSAS) that reports incident of crude oil spill in communitie­s across the Niger Delta, share informatio­n with the media and have both the oil companies and regulatory authoritie­s include the National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA) to respond to the oil spill, safe the environmen­t and safe the livelihood­s of fishermen and farmers in rural communitie­s.

Fyneface has not stopped at embarking on projects to improve the lives of the communitie­s in the Niger Delta, he has also authored/co-authored over 20 different publicatio­ns, including reports, books and research papers on different subjectmat­ters covering climate change, artisanal crude oil refining, Ogoni/Niger Delta clean-up, flooding, photograph­y, cultism, piracy, cyber-terrorism, renewable energy. This, he said, was to provide for a better understand­ing of the environmen­tal issues in his region by policy makers organisati­ons and individual­s.

``Through a better understand­ing of the situation, it is my hope that both the government, non-government­al organisati­ons and individual­s would be able to come up with better ways of addressing the problems,’’ he said.

For the 40-year-old Fyneface, who hails from Kabangha community in Khana Local Government Area, Rivers State, the journey to ensuring a better environmen­t in the Niger Delta is possible with cooperatio­n from all and sundry.

 ?? ?? Kabiru Musa Jammaje
Kabiru Musa Jammaje

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria