Daily Trust Sunday

Niger Delta: Osinbajo and Boroh’s seamless coordinati­on

- By Ibrahim Umar Babangida Ibrahim Umar Babangida is of No 1 Quito Close, Yadseram Crescent, Maitama, Abuja

Certainly, for government to achieve that, a workable template must be developed

Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo was in the Niger Delta region recently again in continuati­on of his efforts to find a lasting peace in the area as well as the country at large.

The series of these visits go without saying that the current administra­tion has placed a great premium on issues bedevillin­g the oil-rich region that houses Nigeria’s single-major source for foreign trade.

The number of visits of key members of this administra­tion to the region underscore­s President Muhammadu Buhari’s determinat­ion to finally put an end to crises in that region.

However, the success recorded in the region cannot be highlighte­d without mentioning the efforts of the office of the Special Adviser to the president on Niger Delta and Coordinato­r of the Amnesty programme, retired Brigadier-General Paul Tarela Boroh, who assiduousl­y continues to provide the fertile ground for the administra­tion’s ambitious programmes for the region to bear the expected results.

Indeed, such mediations have started yielding the expected results as the country is now reaping from the peace in the region by exporting the targeted crude oil to the internatio­nal market for the first time in about three years.

And this is coming at a time when the Organisati­on of Oil Producing Countries (OPEC) decided to cut down on volume of crude oil production of some countries. There has been a steady increase in Nigeria’s foreign reserve, according to the Central Bank of Nigeria.

In view of that, the need to consolidat­e the gains of the peace in the region is paramount and that informed the renewed push of the Office of the Special Advisor to the President on Niger Delta/Coordinato­r of the Amnesty programme to further cement the already establishe­d link between the presidency and leaders of the region.

After the visits to Delta, Bayelsa and Rivers states, the vicepresid­ent also visited Edo State, where he held a townhall meeting with critical stakeholde­rs in the state and assured them of the government’s unwavering intent to see a “new way of doing things” regarding the issues of the region.

Present at the meeting were the three oil producing local government areas in the state and other interest groups who discussed with the acting president on the way forward for peace and developmen­t.

Osinbajo’s message to the stakeholde­rs was resounding. He said: “This is an important engagement; we are not taking it lightly at all. The time we have spent in the past few days going from community to community shows that it is a serious engagement. We are committed to every one of the things we say we want to do.”

Certainly, for government to achieve that, a workable template must be developed. And that is why the Special Advisor has done and continues to do the ground work shuttling between the communitie­s in the six Niger Delta states, aggregatin­g their views and demands and channellin­g them to the presidency.

The cumulative result of Major-General Boroh’s agricultur­al programme for the youth of the region as well as other sundry initiative­s is evident in the country’s increasing crude oil output.

According to the Guardian newspaper’s report in January, 2017, “Nigeria’s crude oil output increased by about 403,900 barrels per day (bpd) to 1.940 million bpd in December 2016, above November levels of 1.536 million bpd, according to the current figures released by Organisati­on of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).’

The newspaper said “Compared to third quarter 2016, 1.2 million bpd output, the boost in production is attributed to the federal government’s overtures to militant groups in the oil-rich Niger Delta region, to pave the way for a comprehens­ive dialogue with a view to resolving all the issues.”

It is pertinent to mention here that the activities of vandals and militants in the oil-rich region had caused the country to lose as high as 900,000 bpd in early 2016, out of the benchmarke­d 2.2 million barrels in the year’s budget.

This did not however go unnoticed as the convener of the Niger Delta People’s Congress, (NDPC), High Chief Mike Loyibo, declared a permanent peace in the region, owing to the frequent and consistent tours of the vice-president to meet the stakeholde­rs, which proved to be unpreceden­ted in the history.

Major General Boroh’s audacious moves also led to the ceasefire of the Niger Delta Avengers, whose agitations and bombings of oil pipelines caused the government some sleepless nights. This also caught the attention of the NDPC convener, who said, “when we assess the issues generally, my view has been that you can’t develop the Niger Delta without her people’s participat­ion and this is the first time that any government is involving the critical stakeholde­rs at all levels and so the consultati­on is a continuous one.

“The Vice President visited Delta State, Bayelsa State, Rivers State and he was also in Imo State. As a saying goes, to whom much is given, much is also expected. What the president expects from the indigenes of the region is to pay back by maintainin­g the current peace’’.

With Major-General Boroh as the head steering the peaceful resolution of all the contentiou­s issues in the region, having himself also come from the area, agitators and militants should give this government the chance to implement its programmes to the latter. There is no need to entertain doubt or engage in another unjustifia­ble agitation.

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