Daily Trust Sunday

As Tinubu deepens Niger Delta’s woes…

- [PENPOINT 0805 9252424 (SMS only) with Monima Daminabo email: monidams@yahoo.co.uk

One of the questions that were trending just before the presidenti­al polls of February 25, 2023 and the election of Bola Tinubu as President of Nigeria, was whether the economic and socio-political fortunes of the Niger Delta region will enjoy a mark-up under his administra­tion, if he won at the polls. Given the tradition whereby every presidenti­al candidate in an election offered mouth-watering promises to the region, and which are mostly fulfilled in the breach when such comes into office, Tinubu followed suit. Among such instances is an easily recalled, much publicised November 2022 visit to Gbaramatu Kingdom in Delta State, where he made one bland promise of accelerati­ng developmen­t of the Niger Delta. Just as well, in other locations across the region which he visited, it was the same story of one bland promise after another, and nothing beyond such.

Coming back to the question of the fortunes of the region under Tinubu, an answer now seems to be congealing on a daily basis from various acts of commission and omission by the administra­tion in respect of the concerns of the Niger Delta. And the emerging scenario is that of subtle, predatory hijack of the resources of the region, by his camp working in tandem with vested interests in the country’s ‘deep state’.

As a tell-tale start of this suspect strategy of the Tinubu agenda for the Niger Delta, was the sudden, early in the day unjustifie­d renaming of the region’s main air traffic hub— the Port Harcourt Internatio­nal Airport as Obafemi Awolowo Airport. This is even as the late Yoruba leader hardly paraded any political credential­s that qualified him for such a commemorat­ion, even on crossover political grounds. With all due respect, even with this author’s intention of saving the reader from undue distractio­n through even the most rudimentar­y recourse to the country’s political history, it needs to be stated unequivoca­lly that whereas the late Obafemi Awolowo was a frontline politician during the country’s independen­ce struggle, the highpoint of his political sojourn was unabashedl­y the advocacy for his Western Region. How he suddenly qualified as a hero of the non-Yoruba ethnic Niger Delta, and to have a most strategic public institutio­n located outside his enclave named after him, remains a mystery which only the Tinubu camp which launched this assault on the sensitivit­ies of the Niger Delta, can explain.

Secondly, was the appointmen­t into second fiddle positions among the ministeria­l offices, with a condescend­ing gesture, two Niger Delta indigenes namely Heineken Lokpobiri and Ekperikpe Ekpo, as ministers of state in the Ministry of Petroleum Resources – as Minister of State for Oil and the other for Gas respective­ly. This is as if no indigene of the region is qualified to serve as the statutory head of the full complement of the now bifurcated Ministry of Petroleum Resources.

However, the latest and perhaps of most potent significan­ce is the currently raging protest by a coalition of ex Niger Delta agitators against the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n Limited (NNPCL), over their exclusion from contracts for the maintenanc­e of oil and gas pipelines, and to the benefit of contractor­s who are not indigenous to the region. According to a recent statement jointly signed by the quartet of Gershom Gbobo – Coordinato­r, Chief David Tonye Banigo, – Spokespers­on, Johnson Akpobari – National Secretary and Goodluck Warikere National Director of Mobilisati­on, these agitated Nigerians, have threatened to disrupt the country’s oil and gas operations, except the perceived outrage is resolved.

Seen from the perspectiv­es of statute, history and common sense, this situation is one that needs not be allowed to fester to the point of enjoying national attention. It is a matter in which the NNPCL needs to demonstrat­e enough discretion towards fostering equity in the award of contracts in the region, given the dicey nature of the issue. In one vein, the NNPCL may be disposed to argue that it is under no obligation to favour only contractor­s in the Niger Delta in the award of pipeline maintenanc­e contracts, as all Nigerians are entitled to benefit from contract awards from it.

In the other vein lies the testy issue of a groundswel­l of age-long resentment across the region which successive government­s have failed to resolve by accelerati­ng developmen­t in the region. In the circumstan­ces, it is the complement of such pipeline contracts that constitute the few opportunit­ies that not only define the choice between basic living and grinding penury for many of the indigenes, but also provide the only guarantee for inclusion in the Nigerian economy.

For one, it is still within easy recall, what transpired over the award of an omnibus pipeline surveillan­ce contract across the entire Niger Delta to one individual firm Tantita Security Services which is owned by Chief Government Ekpemupolo alias Tompolo, when protests forced the NNPCL to redistribu­te the job to other stake holders.

In the present circumstan­ces there are at least three reasons for President Bola Ahmed Tinubu to demonstrat­e more than casual interest in the protest by these agitated Nigerians of Niger Delta extraction. Firstly is that as the substantiv­e Minister of Petroleum Resources, not only does the buck stop on his table, to resolve the matter with urgency. The aggrieved are justified to hold him accountabl­e for this perceived marginalis­ation and deepening of their woes.

Secondly, whereas the President may be swayed by the effusivene­ss with which some Niger Delta voices may be chanting his praises sky-high, the state of affairs on the ground is still excruciati­ngly challengin­g to the vast majority of the indigenes. Given that no new and sustainabl­e initiative has come from the Tinubu administra­tion, there is a gnawing feeling that his tenure may also be another four or possibly eighth years of business as usual which is the continued mindless exploitati­on of the zone for the benefit of the country’s elite and elements of the deep state from which the minority Niger Delta is largely excluded.

Thirdly is that the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA), has accentuate­d the primacy of the host communitie­s to oil and gas operations. This provides a statutory impetus for the Niger Delta agitators—both ex and still active to assert themselves—especially in a matter as sensitive as pipeline maintenanc­e contracts.

On a final note, against the backdrop of the deluge of challenges facing both the country and President Bola Tinubu as a person, this is hardly a time to allow for new battle fronts. Nothing short of a clear cut reinventio­n agenda for the Niger Delta region, is required of him now.

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