The Guardian (Nigeria)

Minister clarifies slow pace of Ogoni cleanup project

- From Cornelius Essen, Abuja

MINISTER of the Environmen­t, Dr. Mohammed M. Abubakar, has attributed the slow pace of remediatio­n work in Ogoni land to disruption by restive youths in some impacted communitie­s.

He explained that the communitie­s have started collecting levies, extorting coordinato­rs and making attempts to hijack control of the project from contractor­s, adding that sand mining activities in some project sites was also hindering the cleanup exercise.

Abubakar, who spoke in Abuja, yesterday, cited communal land disputes and chieftainc­y tussles, flooding in sites near swampy terrains, saying in spite of the drawbacks, constructi­on works had commenced in some lots.

Noting that the Ogoni cleanup is a litmus test, he stressed that the Federal Government would soon extend the exercise to other states of the Niger Delta region, explaining that the ongoing remediatio­n was the flagship of the President

Muhammadu Buhari administra­tion.

He pointed out that the project involved the decontamin­ation of groundwate­r, particular­ly in the impacted communitie­s, remediatio­n of contaminat­ed soil in upland areas, as well as restoratio­n and management of degraded mangrove vegetation.

“As of today, HYPREP had completed 17 sites, of which the National Oil Spill Detection Agency ( NOSDRA) has closed out 10 sites. The remaining five are yet to be completed and are at various stages of completion,” he said.

The minister also disclosed that about 2,000 temporary jobs were created in the course of the project in the four council areas of Ogoniland, besides the indirect jobs in form of trading and support activities.

On artisanal refineries, Abubakar lamented that the Federal Government had tackled the menace, but was yet to get to its root causes, adding that the developmen­t had become a major challenge to government.

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